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Author: Joe Hummel III

  • 2002 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    2002 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    2002 Music Hits Chart

    1. A Moment Like This – Kelly Clarkson
    2. Hot In Herre – Nelly
    3. Complicated – Avril Lavigne
    4. Girlfriend – N Sync & Nelly
    5. Sk8er Boi – Avril Lavigne
    6. Can’t Fight The Moonlight – LeAnn Rimes
    7. A Thousand Miles – Vanessa Carlton
    8. Dirrty – Christina Aguilera
    9. Heaven – DJ Sammy
    10. Gimme The Light – Sean Paul
    11. The World’s Greatest – R Kelly
    12. Jenny From The Block – Jennifer Lopez Featuring Jadakiss & Styles
    13. Courtesy of the Red, White, and Blue (The Angry American) – Toby Keith
    14. Goodbye To You – Michelle Branch
    15. The Game Of Love – Santana Featuring Michelle Branch
    16. Young’n (Holla Back) – Fabolous
    17. She Hates Me – Puddle Of Mudd
    18. Can’t Get You Out Of My Head – Kylie Minogue
    19. Starry Eyed Surprise – Oakenfold Featuring Shifty Shellshock
    20. The Middle – Jimmy Eat World
    21. Just A Friend 2002 – Mario
    22. Hey Baby – No Doubt and Bounty Killer
    23. Work It – Missy “Misdemeanor” Elliott
    24. U Don’t Have To Call – Usher
    25. Say I Yi Yi – Ying Yang Twins
    26. Without Me – Eminem
    27. Rapture (Tastes So Sweet) -iio
    28. Hero – Chad Kroeger Featuring Josey Scott
    29. Cleanin’ Out My Closet – Eminem
    30. Gotta Get Thru This – Daniel Bedingfield
    31. Who’s Your Daddy – Toby Keith
    32. Oops (Oh My) – Tweet
    33. A Woman’s Worth – Alicia Keys
    34. In The End – Linkin Park
    35. Ain’t It Funny – Jennifer Lopez & Ja Rule
    36. Luv U Better – LL Cool J
    37. Gangsta Lovin – Eve and Alicia Keys
    38. Lose Yourself – Eminem
    39. Hella Good – No Doubt
    40. I Need A Girl (part 1) – P. Diddy, Usher and Loon
    41. Always On Time – Ja Rule and Ashanti
    42. Escape – Enrique Iglesias
    43. My Sacrifice – Creed
    44. What’s Luv? – Fat Joe and Ashanti
    45. Disease – Matchbox Twenty
    46. Underneath It All – No Doubt and Lady Saw
    47. Underneath Your Clothes – Shakira
    48. Foolish – Ashanti
    49. My Neck My Back – Khia
    50. A Little Less Conversation – Elvis vs JXL
    51. Pass The Courvoisier Part II – Busta Rhymes with Diddy & Pharrell
    52. Days Go By – Dirty Vegas
    53. Rollout (My Business) – Ludacris
    54. Don’t Let Me Get Me – Pink
    55. Objection (Tango) – Shakira
    56. 7 Days – Craig David
    57. Stole – Kelly Rowland
    58. Take Ya Home – Lil Bow Wow
    59. The Rising – Bruce Springsteen
    60. Just Like A Pill – Pink
    61. Down Ass Chick – Ja Rule
    62. Dilemma – Nelly & Kelly Rowland
    63. Youth Of The Nation – P.O.D.
    64. All You Wanted – Michelle Branch
    65. Where Are You Going – Dave Matthews Band
    66. Happy – Ashanti
    67. Feel It Boy – Beenie Man
    68. Still Fly – Big Tymers
    69. The Ketchup Song – Las Ketchup
    70. I Need A Girl (part 2) – P. Diddy, Usher and Loon
    71. Roc The Mic – Beanie Sigel & Freeway
    72. No Such Thing – John Mayer
    73. Don’t Mess With My Man – Nivea with Jagged Edge
    74. Like I Love You – Justin Timberlake
    75. Overprotected – Britney Spears
    76. Wherever You May Go – The Calling
    77. One Last Breath – Creed
    78. Disease – Matchbox Twenty
    79. I Love You – Faith Evans
    80. What About Us? – Brandy
    81. Here To Stay – Korn
    82. I’m Gonna Be Alright – Jennifer Lopez with Naz
    83. Love At First Sight – Kylie Minogue
    84. Why Don’t We Fall In Love – Amerie
    85. Hey Ma – Cam’ron with Juelz Santana
    86. Jigga – Jay-Z
    87. Break Ya Neck – Busta Rhymes
    88. Don’t Say Goodbye – Paulina Rubino
    89. Hands Clean – Alanis Morissette
    90. uh Huh – B2K
    91. More Than a Woman – Aaliyah
    92. Oh Boy – Cam’ron with Juelz Santana
    93. Die Another Day – Madonna
    94. Lights, Camera, Action! – Mr. Cheeks
    95. I’m Gonna Getcha Good – Shania Twain
    96. Standing Still – Jewel
    97. Ordinary Day – Vanessa Carlton
    98. Insatiable – Darren Hayes
    99. The Cowboy In Me – Tim McGraw
    100. Thank You – Lil Bow Wow
  • 2002 Oscars 74th Academy Awards

    2002 Oscars 74th Academy Awards

    2002 Oscars 74th Academy Awards

    • Winners Announced: March 24, 2002
    • Held at: Kodak Theatre, Hollywood, California
    • Host: Whoopi Goldberg
    • Eligibility Year: 2001

    Trivia

    • This ceremony marked the first Oscars held at the Kodak Theatre, which later became the Dolby Theatre.
    • A Beautiful Mind took home four awards, including Best Picture and Best Director for Ron Howard.
    • Denzel Washington won Best Actor for his role in Training Day, becoming the second African American to win this category.
    • Halle Berry became the first African American woman to win Best Actress, for her role in Monster’s Ball.
      “This moment is so much bigger than me. It’s for every nameless, faceless woman of color that now has a chance because this door tonight has been opened.” – Halle Berry 
    • The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring collected four awards, though none in the major categories.
    • Randy Newman won his first Oscar for Best Original Song with If I Didn’t Have You from Monsters, Inc., after 16 nominations without a win.
    • Woody Allen made a surprise appearance to introduce a tribute to New York City filmmaking, post-9/11.
    • Best Animated Feature was introduced as a new category, and the first winner was Shrek.
    • Sidney Poitier received an Honorary Oscar, paying tribute to his groundbreaking career.
    • Cirque du Soleil performed during the ceremony, a unique departure from the traditional musical performances.
    • The documentary Murder on a Sunday Morning won Best Documentary Feature, spotlighting the American justice system’s flaws.
    • No Man’s Land, a drama about the Bosnian War, won Best Foreign Language Film.
    • Best Makeup went to The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring, adding to its list of accolades for the evening.
    • Robert Redford and Arthur Hiller received honorary awards, lauding their contributions to the world of film.

    2002 Oscar Nominees and Winners

    Best Picture:
    A Beautiful Mind – Brian Grazer and Ron Howard, producers (WINNER)
    Gosford Park – Robert Altman, Bob Balaban and David Levy, producers
    In the Bedroom – Graham Leader, Ross Katz and Todd Field, producers
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Peter Jackson, Fran Walsh and Barrie M. Osborne, producers
    Moulin Rouge! – Martin Brown, Baz Luhrmann and Fred Baron, producers
    Best Director:
    Ron Howard – A Beautiful Mind (WINNER)
    Ridley Scott – Black Hawk Down
    Robert Altman – Gosford Park
    Peter Jackson – The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring
    David Lynch – Mulholland Drive
    Best Actor:
    Denzel Washington – Training Day as Alonzo Harris (WINNER)
    Russell Crowe – A Beautiful Mind as John Forbes Nash Jr.
    Sean Penn – I Am Sam as Sam Dawson
    Will Smith – Ali as Muhammad Ali
    Tom Wilkinson – In the Bedroom as Dr. Matthew Fowler
    Best Actress:
    Halle Berry – Monster’s Ball as Leticia Musgrove (WINNER)
    Judi Dench – Iris as Iris Murdoch
    Nicole Kidman – Moulin Rouge! as Satine
    Sissy Spacek – In the Bedroom as Ruth Fowler
    Renée Zellweger – Bridget Jones’s Diary as Bridget Jones
    Best Supporting Actor:
    Jim Broadbent – Iris as John Bayley (WINNER)
    Ethan Hawke – Training Day as Officer Jake Hoyt
    Ben Kingsley – Sexy Beast as Don Logan
    Ian McKellen – The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring as Gandalf
    Jon Voight – Ali as Howard Cosell
    Best Supporting Actress:
    Jennifer Connelly – A Beautiful Mind as Alicia de Lardé-Nash (WINNER)
    Helen Mirren – Gosford Park as Jane Wilson
    Maggie Smith – Gosford Park as Constance Trentham
    Marisa Tomei – In the Bedroom as Natalie Strout
    Kate Winslet – Iris as Iris Murdoch
    Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen/Original Screenplay:
    Gosford Park – Julian Fellowes (WINNER)
    Amélie – Guillaume Laurant and Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    Memento – Christopher Nolan and Jonathan Nolan
    Monster’s Ball – Milo Addica and Will Rokos
    The Royal Tenenbaums – Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson
    Best Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published/Adapted Screenplay:
    A Beautiful Mind – Akiva Goldsman based on the book by Sylvia Nasar (WINNER)
    Ghost World – Daniel Clowes and Terry Zwigoff based on the comic book by Daniel Clowes
    In the Bedroom – Rob Festinger and Todd Field based on the story “Killings” by Andre Dubus
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Fran Walsh, Philippa Boyens, and Peter Jackson based on the book by J. R. R. Tolkien
    Shrek – Ted Elliott, Terry Rossio, Joe Stillman, and Roger S. H. Schulman based on the book by William Steig
    Best Animated Feature Film:
    Shrek – Aron Warner (WINNER)
    Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius – Steve Oedekerk and John A. Davis
    Monsters, Inc. – Pete Docter and John Lasseter
    Best Foreign Language Film:
    No Man’s Land (Bosnia and Herzegovina) in Bosnian – Danis Tanovic (WINNER)
    Amélie (France) in French – Jean-Pierre Jeunet
    Elling (Norway) in Norwegian – Petter Ness
    Lagaan (India) in Hindi and Bhojpuri – Ashutosh Gowariker
    Son of the Bride (Argentina) in Spanish – Juan José Campanella
    Best Documentary – Feature:
    Murder on a Sunday Morning – Jean-Xavier de Lestrade and Denis Poncet (WINNER)
    Children Underground – Edet Belzberg
    LaLee’s Kin: The Legacy of Cotton – Susan Froemke and Deborah Dickson
    Promises – Justine Shapiro and B.Z. Goldberg
    War Photographer – Christian Frei
    Best Documentary – Short Subject:
    Thoth – Sarah Kernochan and Lynn Appelle (WINNER)
    Artists and Orphans: A True Drama – Lianne Klapper McNally
    Sing! – Freida Lee Mock and Jessica Sanders
    Best Live Action Short Film:
    The Accountant – Ray McKinnon and Lisa Blount (WINNER)
    Copy Shop – Virgil Widrich
    Gregor’s Greatest Invention – Johannes Kiefer
    A Man Thing (Meska Sprawa) – Slawomir Fabicki and Bogumil Godfrejow
    Speed for Thespians – Kalman Apple and Shameela Bakhsh
    Best Animated Short Film:
    For the Birds – Ralph Eggleston (WINNER)
    Fifty Percent Grey – Ruairí Robinson and Seamus Byrne
    Give Up Yer Aul Sins – Cathal Gaffney and Darragh O’Connell
    Strange Invaders – Cordell Barker
    Stubble Trouble – Joseph E. Merideth
    Best Original Score:
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring — Howard Shore (WINNER)
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence — John Williams
    A Beautiful Mind — James Horner
    Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone — John Williams
    Monsters, Inc. — Randy Newman
    Best Original Song:
    “If I Didn’t Have You” from Monsters, Inc. – Music and Lyrics by Randy Newman (WINNER)
    “May It Be” from The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Music and Lyrics by Enya, Nicky Ryan, and Roma Ryan
    “There You’ll Be” from Pearl Harbor – Music and Lyrics by Diane Warren
    “Until…” from Kate & Leopold – Music and Lyrics by Sting
    “Vanilla Sky” from Vanilla Sky – Music and Lyrics by Paul McCartney
    Best Sound Editing:
    Pearl Harbor – George Watters II and Christopher Boyes (WINNER)
    Monsters, Inc. – Gary Rydstrom and Michael Silvers
    Best Sound:
    Black Hawk Down – Michael Minkler, Myron Nettinga and Chris Munro (WINNER)
    Amélie – Vincent Arnardi, Guillaume Leriche and Jean Umansky
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Christopher Boyes, Michael Semanick, Gethin Creagh and Hammond Peek
    Moulin Rouge! – Andy Nelson, Anna Behlmer, Roger Savage and Guntis Sics
    Pearl Harbor – Greg P. Russell, Peter J. Devlin and Kevin O’Connell
    Best Art Direction:
    Moulin Rouge! – Art Direction: Catherine Martin; Set Decoration: Brigitte Broch (WINNER)
    Amélie – Art Direction: Aline Bonetto; Set Decoration: Marie-Laure Valla
    Gosford Park – Art Direction: Stephen Altman; Set Decoration: Anna Pinnock
    Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone – Art Direction: Stuart Craig; Set Decoration: Stephenie McMillan
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Art Direction: Grant Major; Set Decoration: Dan Hennah
    Best Cinematography:
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Andrew Lesnie (WINNER)
    Amélie – Bruno Delbonnel
    Black Hawk Down – Slawomir Idziak
    The Man Who Wasn’t There – Roger Deakins
    Moulin Rouge! – Donald M. McAlpine
    Best Makeup:
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Peter Owen and Richard Taylor (WINNER)
    A Beautiful Mind – Greg Cannom and Colleen Callaghan
    Moulin Rouge! – Maurizio Silvi and Aldo Signoretti
    Best Costume Design:
    Moulin Rouge! – Catherine Martin and Angus Strathie (WINNER)
    The Affair of the Necklace – Milena Canonero
    Gosford Park – Jenny Beavan
    Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone – Judianna Makovsky
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Ngila Dickson and Richard Taylor
    Best Film Editing:
    Black Hawk Down – Pietro Scalia (WINNER)
    A Beautiful Mind – Mike Hill and Dan Hanley
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – John Gilbert
    Memento – Dody Dorn
    Moulin Rouge! – Jill Bilcock
    Best Visual Effects:
    The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring – Jim Rygiel, Randall William Cook, Richard Taylor and Mark Stetson (WINNER)
    A.I. Artificial Intelligence – Dennis Muren, Scott Farrar, Stan Winston and Michael Lantieri
    Pearl Harbor – Eric Brevig, John Frazier, Ed Hirsh and Ben Snow
    Academy Honorary Award
    Sidney Poitier
    Robert Redford
    Jean Hersholt Humanitarian Award:
    Arthur Hiller
  • 2002 Grammy Award Winners

    2002 Grammy Award Winners

    2002 Grammy Award Winners

    • Winners Announced: February 27, 2002
    • Held at: Staples Center, Los Angeles
    • Host: Jon Stewart
    • Eligibility Year: October 1, 2000 – September 30, 2001

    Trivia

    • Jon Stewart hosted the Grammy Awards for his second consecutive year, providing his usual blend of humor and wit.
    • U2 emerged as a big winner, bagging four awards including Record of the Year and Song of the Year for Walk On.
    • Newcomer Alicia Keys made a strong impression, winning five Grammys including Best New Artist and Song of the Year for Fallin’.
    • Best Rap Album went to Stankonia by OutKast, featuring hits like Ms. Jackson.
    • The soundtrack for O Brother, Where Art Thou? spotlighted bluegrass music and snagged Album of the Year.
    • Janet Jackson announced the Best Dance Recording, which went to Who Let the Dogs Out by Baha Men.
    • Linkin Park received accolades for Best Hard Rock Performance with their song Crawling.
    • The peculiar Best Spoken Word Album for Children went to Mama Don’t Allow performed by Tom Chapin.
    • The Best Instrumental Composition was awarded to John Williams for his score on Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone.
    • Train’s Drops of Jupiter won Best Rock Song, affirming its status as a radio favorite.
    • Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys fame got his first Grammy for Best Rock Instrumental Performance for Smile.
    • Renowned Indian musician Ravi Shankar bagged the Best World Music Album, adding another feather to his cap.

    2002 Grammy Winners

    Record of the Year:
    Walk On – U2
    Album of the Year:
    O Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack, Various Artists
    Song of the Year:
    Fallin’ – Alicia Keys
    New Artist:
    Alicia Keys
    Female Pop Vocal:
    I’m Like a Bird – Nelly Furtado
    Male Pop Vocal:
    Don’t Let Me Be Lonely Tonight – James Taylor
    Pop Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Stuck in a Moment You Can’t Get Out Of – U2
    Pop Collaboration with Vocals:
    Lady Marmalade – Christina Aguilera, Lil’ Kim, Mya and Pink
    Pop Instrumental:
    Reptile – Eric Clapton
    Dance Recording:
    All For You – Janet Jackson
    Pop Instrumental Album:
    No Substitutions  Live in Osaka – Larry Carlton and Steve Lukather
    Pop Vocal Album:
    Lovers Rock – Sade
    Traditional Pop Vocal Album:
    Songs I Heard – Harry Connick Jr
    Female Rock Vocal:
    Get Right With God – Lucinda Williams
    Male Rock Vocal:
    Dig In – Lenny Kravitz
    Rock Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Elevation – U2
    Hard Rock:
    Crawling – Linkin Park
    Metal:
    Schism – Tool
    Rock Instrumental:
    Dirty Mind – Jeff Beck
    Rock Song:
    Drops of Jupiter – Charlie Colin, Rob Hotchkiss, Pat Monahan, Jimmy Stafford and Scott Underwood (Train)
    Rock Album:
    All That You Can’t Leave Behind – U2
    Alternative Music Album:
    Parachutes – Coldplay
    Female R&B Vocal:
    Fallin’ – Alicia Keys
    Male R&B Vocal:
    U Remind Me – Usher
    R&B Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Survivor – Destiny’s Child
    R&B Song:
    Fallin’ – Alicia Keys
    R&B Album:
    Songs in A Minor – Alicia Keys
    Traditional R&B Vocal Performance:
    At Last – Gladys Knight
    Rap Solo:
    Get Ur Freak On – Missy “Misdemeanor” Elliott
    Rap Duo or Group:
    Ms Jackson – OutKast
    Rap Album:
    Stankonia – OutKast
    Female Country Vocal:
    Shine – Dolly Parton
    Male Country Vocal:
    O Death – Ralph Stanley, from the “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack
    Country Duo or Group with Vocals:
    The Lucky One – Alison Krauss and Union Station
    Country Collaboration with Vocals:
    I Am a Man of Constant Sorrow – Dan Tyminski, Harley Allen and Pat Enright (The Soggy Bottom Boys), from the “O Brother, Where Art Thou?” soundtrack
    Country Instrumental:
    Foggy Mountain Breakdown – Earl Scruggs, Glen Duncan, Randy Scruggs, Steve Martin, Vince Gill, Marty Stuart, Gary Scruggs, Albert Lee, Paul Shaffer, Jerry Douglas and Leon Russell
    Country Song:
    The Lucky One – Robert Lee Castleman (Alison Krauss and Union Station)
    Country Album:
    Timeless – Hank Williams Tribute – Various Artists
    Bluegrass Album:
    New Favorite – Alison Krauss and Union Station
    New Age Album:
    A Day Without Rain – Enya
    Contemporary Jazz:
    M2 – Marcus Miller
    Jazz Vocal:
    The Calling – Dianne Reeves
    Jazz Instrumental, Solo:
    Chan’s Song – Michael Brecker
    Jazz Instrumental Album:
    This Is What I Do – Sonny Rollins
    Large Jazz Ensemble:
    Homage To Count Basie – Bob Mintzer Big Band
    Latin Jazz:
    Nocturne – Charlie Haden
    Rock Gospel Album:
    Solo – DC Talk
    Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album:
    CeCe Winans – CeCe Winans
    Southern Gospel, Country Gospel, or Bluegrass Gospel Album:
    Bill & Gloria Gaither Present A Billy Graham Music Homecoming – Bill and Gloria Gaither and The Homecoming Friends
    Traditional Soul Gospel Album:
    Spirit of the Century – The Blind Boys of Alabama
    Contemporary Soul Gospel Album:
    The Experience – Yolanda Adams
    Gospel Album by a Choir or Chorus:
    Love Is Live! – LFT Church Choir, Hezekiah Walker, choir director
    Latin Pop Album:
    La Musica De Baldemar Huerta – Freddy Fender
    Latin Rock/Alternative Album:
    Embrace the Chaos – Ozomatli
    Traditional Tropical Latin Album:
    Dejame Entrar – Carlos Vives
    Salsa Album:
    Encore – Robert Blades
    Merengue Album:
    Yo Por Ti – Olga Tanon
    Mexican-American Album:
    En Vivo El Hombre y Su Musica – Ramon Ayala y Sus Bravos del Norte
    Tejano Album:
    Nadie Como Tu – Solido
    Traditional Blues Album:
    Do You Get the Blues? – Jimmie Vaughan
    Contemporary Blues Album:
    Nothing Personal – Delbert McClinton
    Traditional Folk Album:
    Down From the Mountain – Various Artists
    Contemporary Folk Album:
    Love and Theft – Bob Dylan
    Native American Music Album:
    Bless the People – Harmonized Peyote Songs – Verdell Primeaux and Johnny Mike
    Reggae Album:
    Halfway Tree – Damian Marley
    World Music Album:
    Full Circle/Carnegie Hall 2000 – Ravi Shankar
    Polka Album:
    Gone Polka – Jimmy Sturr
    Musical Album for Children:
    Elmo and the Orchestra – Sesame Street Characters
    Spoken Word Album for Children:
    Mama Don’t Allow – Tom Chapin
    Spoken Word Album:
    Q: The Autobiography of Quincy Jones – Quincy Jones
    Spoken Comedy Album:
    Napalm and Silly Putty – George Carlin
    Musical Show Album:
    The Producers – Original Broadway Cast with Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick, lyricist and composer Mel Brooks
    Best Compilation Soundtrack Album:
    O Brother, Where Art Thou? – Various Artists
    Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – composer Tan Dun
    Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    Boss of Me – (They Might Be Giants from “Malcolm in the Middle”), songwriters They Might Be Giants
    Instrumental Composition:
    Cast Away (End Credits) – Alan Silvestri (Alan Silvestri)
    Instrumental Arrangement:
    Claude Debussy ‘Doctor Gradus Ad Parnassum’ from Children’s Corner – Bela Fleck and Edgar Meyer (Bela Fleck with Joshua Bell and Gary Hoffmann)
    Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocals:
    Drops of Jupiter – Paul Buckmaster (Train)
    Best Recording Package:
    Amnesiac (Special Limited Edition) (Radiohead)
    Best Boxed Recording Package:
    Brain in a Box- The Science Fiction Collection – (Various Artists)
    Best Album Notes (tie):
    Richard Pryor And It’s Deep Too! The Complete Warner Bros Recordings (1968-1992) – (Richard Pryor); Arhoolie Records 40th Anniversary Collection: 1960-2000 The Journey Of Chris Strachwitz – (Various Artists)
    Historical Album:
    Lady Day: The Complete Billie Holiday on Columbia 1933-1944 – (Billie Holiday)
    Best-Engineered Album – Non-Classical:
    The Look of Love – (Diana Krall)
    Producer, Non-Classical:
    T Bone Burnett
    Remixer, Non-Classical:
    Deep Dish, “Thank You (Deep Dish Vocal Remix)” (Dido)
    Best-Engineered Album – Classical:
    Bernstein (Arr Brohn & Corigliano): West Side Story Suite (Lonely Town; Make Our Garden Grow, Etc )” (Joshua Bell)
    Classical Producer:
    Manfred Eicher
    Classical Album:
    Berlioz: Les Troyens – James Mallinson, producer
    Orchestral Performance:
    Boulez Conducts Varese (Ameriques; Arcana; Deserts; Ionisation) – Pierre Boulez (Chicago Sym Orch)
    Opera Recording:
    Berlioz: Les Troyens – Sir Colin Davis; Michelle De Young, Ben Heppner, Petra Lang, Peter Mattei, Stephen Milling, Sara Mingardo, Kenneth Tarver; James Mallinson, producer (Various Artists; London Sym Orch)
    Choral Performance:
    Bach: St Matthew Passion – Nikolaus Harnoncourt (Arnold Schoenberg Chamber Orch and Wiener Sangerknaben; Concentus Musicus Wien)
    Instrumental Soloist with Orchestra:
    Strauss Wind Concertos (Horn Concerto; Oboe Concerto, etc ) – Dale Clevenger, horn; Larry Combs, clarinet; Alex Klein, oboe; David McGill, bassoon; Daniel Barenboim, piano/conductor (Chicago Sym Orch )
    Instrumental Soloist without Orchestra:
    Britten Cello Suites (1-3) – Truls Mork, cello
    Chamber Music:
    Haydn: The Complete String Quartets – The Angeles String Quartet
    Small Ensemble Performance (with or without Conductor):
    After Mozart (Raskatov, Silvestrov, Schnittke, Etc ) – Kremerata Baltica; Gidon Kremer, violin
    Classical Vocal:
    Dreams & Fables ? Gluck Italian Arias (Tremo Fra’ Dubbi Miei; Di Questa Cetra in Seno, etc ) – Cecilia Bartoli, mezzo soprano
    Classical Contemporary Composition:
    Rouse: Concert De Gaudi for Guitar and Orch – Christopher Rouse, Composer
    Classical Crossover Album:
    Perpetual Motion (Scarlatti, Bach, Debussy, Chopin, etc )” Bela Fleck, banjo (Joshua Bell, violin; Evelyn Glennie, marimba; Gary Hoffman, cello; Edgar Meyer, bass and piano; Chris Thile, mandolin; John Williams, guitar)
    Music Video, Short Form:
    Weapon of Choice – Fatboy Slim featuring Bootsy Collins
    Music Video, Long Form:
    Recording the Producers: A Musical Romp With Mel Brooks – Mel Brooks (with Various Artists including Nathan Lane and Matthew Broderick)
  • 2001 Number One Hits

    2001 Number One Hits

    2001 Number One Hits

    Sidenote: The best-selling song of 2001 was Hanging By A Moment by Lifehouse, which peaked at number two on May 19, 2001.

    November 18, 2000 – February 2, 2001:
    Independent WomenDestiny’s Child

    February 3 – February 16:
    It Wasn’t MeShaggy Featuring Ricardo “RikRok” Ducent

    February 17 – February 23:
    Ms. JacksonOutKast

    February 24 – March 23:
    StutterJoe

    March 24 – March 30:
    ButterflyCrazy Town

    March 31 – April 13:
    AngelShaggy Featuring Rayvon

    April 14 – July 1:
    All For YouJanet Jackson

    June 2 – July 6:
    Lady MarmaladeChristina Aguilera / Lil’ Kim / Mya / Pink

    July 7 – August 3:
    U Remind MeUsher

    August 4 – August 17:
    BootyliciousDestiny’s Child

    August 18 – September 28:
    Fallin’Alicia Keys

    September 29 – November 2:
    I’m RealJennifer Lopez featuring Ja Rule

    November 3 – December 14:
    Family AffairMary J. Blige

    December 15 – December 21:
    U Got It BadUsher (see Jan 16, 2002)

    December 22, 2001 – January 15, 2002:
    How You Remind MeNickleback

    (Data is compiled from various charts including: Billboard’s “Pop,” “Rock,” “Airplay,” “R&B/Dance” and “Singles” Charts. The “Hot 100” is the primary chart used for this list.

  • 2001 History, Fun Facts and Trivia

    2001 History, Fun Facts and Trivia

    2001 History, Fun Facts, and Trivia

    Quick Facts from 2001:

    • World Changing Event: September 11 terrorist attack in New York City
    • The Top Song was All For You by Janet Jackson
    • The Movies to Watch include Shrek, Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone, Monsters Inc, Legally Blonde and Ocean’s 11
    • The Most Famous Fictional Person in America was probably Harry Potter
    • The Most Famous Real Person in America was probably Angelina Jolie
    • The 21st century didn’t begin on January 1st, 2000. It actually began on January 1st, 2001. This is because the first year of a century is the year 01, never 00.
    • Price of Playstation 2: $299.97
      Game Boy Advance: $89.97
      iPod (1st Generation): $399.00
    • The Funny Late Night Host: Jay Leno
      The Controversial Funny Guy: Gilbert Gottfried
    • The Longest English Sentence Written: The longest sentence in a book is believed to appear in the 2001 novel The Rotters’ Club by Jonathan Coe which consisted of 13,955 words.
    • Creepypasta: Although short, horror-themed stories have been told forever, the first Creepypasta story was Ted the Caver on an Angelfire website.
    Top Ten Baby Names of 2001:
    Emily, Madison, Hannah, Ashley, Alexis, Jacob, Michael, Matthew, Joshua, Chris, Topher
    Fashion Icons and Sex Symbols:
    Jessica Alba, Gisele Bündchen, Amanda Peet, Beyonce Knowles, Eliza Dushku, Eva Longoria, Britney Spears, Kirsten Dunst, Kate Hudson, Mena Suvari
    Leading Men and Hunks:
    Russell Crowe, David Beckham, George Clooney, Ryan Reynolds, Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise
    Time Magazine’s Person of the Year:
    Rudolph Giuliani
    Miss America:
    Angela Perez Baraquio (Honolulu, HI)
    Miss USA:
    Kandace Krueger (Texas)

    War On Terror:
    Number of Deaths on the 9/11 attack:

    American Airlines Flight 11 (hit the North Tower, NYC)
    -87 passengers and crew, 5 hijackers

    United Airlines Flight 175 (hit the South Tower, NYC)
    -60 passengers and crew, 5 hijackers

    Total World Trade Center
    – 2,606 people
    1366+ in North Tower
    618+ in South Tower
    18 was the guesstimate pedestrians killed on the street below
    411 emergency workers were killed:
    341 firefighters, 60 police officers, 10 paramedics & EMTs

    United Airlines Flight 90 (Crashed near Shanksville, PA)
    -40 passengers and crew, 4 hijackers

    American Airlines Flight 77 (hit the Pentagon)
    -59 passengers and crew, 5 hijackers
    The Pentagon
    -125 employees

    Nascar Driver Death:
    Dale Earnhart
    Airplane Musician Death:
    Aaliyah
    Splitsville:
    Julia Roberts and Benjamin Bratt
    Nicole Kidman and Tom Cruise
    Enron, due to financial misdeeds
    Arthur Anderson Accounting, due to covering up Enron’s financial misdeeds

    The Scandals:
    Angelina Jolie gave a passionate open-mouth kiss to her brother, James, which made many people almost forget Bjork’s goose dress.

    Barry Bonds hit 73 Home Runs*.
    * steroid use was allegedly involved

    Enron’s accounting scandal cost investors something close to $60 Billion, and their accounting firm, Arthur Anderson, went out of business

    Gary Condit, a Democrat California congressman, had an affair with his intern, Chandra Levy, which was alleged may have also led to her murder. It looked bad, but he didn’t; Ingmar Guandique, a Salvadoran immigrant had killed her.

    Renee Zellweger was in the bathroom when Hugh Grant called her up for her Golden Globe Award.

    US Politics:
    January 20, 2001 (Saturday) First inauguration of George W. Bush

    Back From The Brink:
    The rarest insect in the world is the Lord Howe Island stick insect. It was believed to be extinct since 1920 until some were found again in 2001. In 2006 there were only about 50 of them, but only 2 years later their population increased to 700!

    While on a trip in Kenya, the pilot of an airplane with actor-passenger Rowan Atkinson fainted, so Atkinson took control and flew it, until the pilot recovered.

    Mystery:
    On the evening of September 11, 2001, a man named Henryk Siwiak was murdered in New York City. Since the entire police department was focused on the attacks, very little police investigation took place. Siwiak’s death is the only homicide recorded in New York City on that date. His death remains unsolved and the killer was never found.
    A Little Late:
    The 20 people accused of witchcraft and executed during the Salem witch trials in 1692 and 1693 were all found innocent in 2001.
    World News:
    In the UK, 390,127 people (almost 0.8%) stated their religion as Jedi on their 2001 Census forms, surpassing Sikhism, Judaism, and Buddhism, and making it the fourth largest reported religion in the country.
    Pop Culture Facts & History:
    The longest musical performance in history is currently taking place in the church of St. Burchardi in Halberstadt, Germany. The performance of John Cage’s Organ²/ASLSP (As Slow As Possible) started on Sept. 5, 2001, and is set to finish in 2640.Millions watched Britney Spears dance with a python at the MTV’s Music Video Awards

    Christopher Walken trained as a dancer and tap-dancer before starting his acting career. That’s why he was featured in the Weapon Of Choice music video. The music video won 6 awards at the MTV VMAs in 2001.
    Island in the Sun by Weezer was originally not planned to be on the 2001’s Green Album, but producer Ric Ocasek fought for its inclusion. It is the most-licensed track in the Weezer catalog.
    The character, Machete, as played by Danny Trejo from the B-movie of the same name and the then-fake trailer attached to the Grindhouse (2007) double feature, is in fact the exact same character that debuted (Uncle Machete, also played by Trejo) in Spy Kids (2001).

    HAL from 2001: A Space Odyssey got his name; it’s not IBM minus one. Both Clarke and 2001 director Stanley Kubrick characterized this idea as “utter nonsense! I thought that by now every intelligent person knew that H-A-L is derived from Heuristic ALgorithmic computer”.

    In 2001, 269 newborn baby boys in the US were named ‘Keanu’.

    In 2001 Stan Lee was given the opportunity to ‘re-imagine’ DC’s heroes and he made Batman black, Wonder Woman Hispanic, and The Flash a teenage girl.

    Hidden within the files to the 2001 Spiderman game, there are numerous angry rants targeted towards an employee named ‘Matt’.

    Before the 20th century, people reported mostly dreaming in color. But in 1942, 70% of college sophomores “rarely/never” had color dreams. By 2001 that rate had dropped to 17%. The change is thought to be because of the influence of black and white media in the mid-1900s.

    Ten-year-old named Laura Buxton released a balloon with her name and address in the hope of finding a pen pal. The balloon traveled 140 miles before coming down and was found by an almost-ten-year old also named Laura Buxton. They share a number of other similarities.

    In 1986, nurse Sandra Clarke could not stay with a patient who asked her to stay. When she returned, the patient had died alone. In 2001, she was key in starting No One Dies Alone, a program where volunteers sit with terminal patients who have no one else. The program is now world-wide.

    Pizza Hut Delivered a Pizza to the International Space Station. It cost over a million dollars.

    Cost of a Super Bowl ad in 2001: $2,100,000

    The Habits:
    iPod was released in October 2001.

    The X-Box came out in November 2001.

    …Everybody else was watching SpongeBob Squarepants

    Nobel Prize Winners:
    Physics – Eric Allin Cornell, Wolfgang Ketterle, and Carl Wieman
    Chemistry – William Standish Knowles, Ryōji Noyori, and Karl Barry Sharpless
    Medicine – Leland H. Hartwell, Tim Hunt, and Paul Nurse
    Literature – V. S. Naipaul
    Peace – United Nations, Kofi Annan
    Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel – George Akerlof, Michael Spence, and Joseph Stiglitz
    2001 Toys inducted to the National Toy Hall of Fame:
    Silly Putty, Tonka Trucks
    1st Appearances & 2001’s Most Popular Christmas Gifts, Toys and Presents:
    iPod, Harry Potter, K’NEX BattleTech/MechWarrior, Bob the Builder toys
    Broadway Show:
    The Producers (Musical) Opened on April 19, 2001, and closed on April 22, 2007
    42nd Street (Musical) Opened on May 2, 2001, and closed on January 2, 2005 (revival)
    The Bomb (Film):
    Glitter starring Mariah Carey
    Best Film Oscar Winner:
    Gladiator (presented in 2001)
    2001 Entries to The National Film Registry:
    All That Jazz (released in 1979)
    All the King’s Men (released in 1949)
    America, America (released in 1963)
    Cologne: From the Diary of Ray and Esther (released in 1939)
    The Evidence of the Film (released in 1913)
    Hoosiers (released in 1986)
    The House in the Middle (released in 1954)
    It (released in 1927)
    Jam Session (released in 1942)
    Jaws (released in 1975)
    Manhattan (released in 1979)
    Marian Anderson: the Lincoln Memorial Concert (released in 1939)
    Memphis Belle (released in 1944)
    The Miracle of Morgan’s Creek (released in 1944)
    Miss Lulu Bett (released in 1922)
    National Lampoon’s Animal House (released in 1978)
    Planet of the Apes (released in 1968)
    Rose Hobart (released in 1936)
    Serene Velocity (released in 1970)
    The Sound of Music (released in 1965)
    Stormy Weather (released in 1943)
    The Tell-Tale Heart (released in 1953)
    The Thin Blue Line (released in 1988)
    The Thing from Another World (released in 1951)
    The Big Movies: (according to boxofficemojo)
    1. Harry Potter and the Sorcerer’s Stone
    2. The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship Of The Ring
    3. Shrek
    4. Monster’s Inc
    5. Rush Hour 2
    6. The Mummy Returns
    7. Pearl Harbor
    8. Ocean’s Eleven
    9. Jurassic Park III
    10. Planet of the Apes
    2001 Most Popular TV Shows:
    1. Friends (NBC)
    2. CSI (CBS)
    3. ER (NBC)
    4. Survivor: Marquesas (CBS)
    5. Survivor: Africa (CBS)
    6. Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS)
    7. Law & Order (NBC)
    8. Will & Grace (NBC)
    9. The West Wing (NBC)
    10. Monday Night Football (ABC)

    2001 Billboard Number One Songs:
    November 18, 2000 – February 2, 2001:
    Independent Women – Destiny’s Child

    February 3 – February 16:
    It Wasn’t Me – Shaggy Featuring Ricardo “RikRok” Ducent

    February 17 – February 23:
    Ms. Jackson – OutKast

    February 24 – March 23:
    Stutter – Joe

    March 24 – April 6:
    Butterfly – Crazy Town

    April 7 – April 13:
    Angel – Shaggy Featuring Rayvon

    April 14 – July 1:
    All For You – Janet Jackson

    June 2 – July 6:
    Lady Marmalade – Christina Aguilera / Lil’ Kim / Mya / Pink

    July 7 – August 3:
    U Remind Me – Usher

    August 4 – August 17:
    Bootylicious – Destiny’s Child

    August 18 – September 28:
    Fallin’ – Alicia Keys

    September 29 – November 2:
    I’m Real – Jennifer Lopez featuring Ja Rule

    November 3 – December 14:
    Family Affair – Mary J. Blige

    December 15, 2001 – January 25, 2002:
    U Got It Bad – Usher

    Sports:
    World Series Champions: Arizona Diamondbacks
    Super Bowl XXXV Champions: Baltimore Ravens
    NBA Champions: Los Angeles Lakers
    Stanley Cup Champs: Colorado Avalanche
    U.S. Open Golf Retief Goosen
    U.S. Tennis: (Men/Ladies) Lleyton Hewitt/Venus Williams
    Wimbledon (Men/Women): Goran Ivanisevic/Venus Williams
    NCAA Football Champions: Miami
    NCAA Basketball Champions: Duke
    Kentucky Derby: Monarchos
  • Popular and Best-selling Books From 2001

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 2001

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 2001:
    A Common Life by Jan Karon
    A Day Late and a Dollar Short by Terry McMillan
    A Painted House by John Grisham
    American Gods by Neil Gaiman
    An Hour Before Daylight by Jimmy Carter
    Atonement by Ian McEwan
    Austerlitz by W.G. Sebald
    The Bear and the Dragon by Tom Clancy
    Black House by Stephen King and Peter Straub
    Blindsighted by Karin Slaughter
    Chosen Prey by John Sandford
    The Corrections by Jonathan Franzen
    Desecration by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    Dreamcatcher by Stephen King
    Fast Food Nation by Eric Schlosser
    1st to Die by James Patterson
    Foley Is Good by Mick Foley
    The Fourth Hand by John Irving
    From the Corner of His Eye by Dean Koontz
    Germs by Judith Miller, Stephen Engelberg and William Broad
    Ice Bound by Jerri Nielsen with Maryanne Vollers
    Isle of Dog by Patricia Cornwell
    Jack: Straight from the Gut by Jack Welch with John A. Byrne
    John Adams by David McCullough
    The Kiss by Danielle Steel
    Last Man Standing by David Baldacci
    Leap of Faith by Danielle Steel
    Life of Pi by Yann Martel
    Longaberger by Dave Longaberger
    Midnight Bayou by Nora Roberts
    Napalm & Silly Putty by George Carlin
    The No Spin Zone by Bill O’Reilly
    On the Street Where You Live by Mary Higgins Clark
    One Nation by The Editors of Life Magazine
    “P” is for Peril by Sue Grafton
    Seabiscuit by Laura Hillenbrand
    Seven Up by Janet Evanovich
    Skipping Christmas by John Grisham
    Suzanne’s Diary for Nicholas by James Patterson
    The Wild Blue by Stephen Ambrose
    Valhalla Rising by Clive Cussler
    Violets Are Blue by James Patterson

  • 2001 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    2001 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    Top 100 Hits of 2001

    1. Cha Cha Slide – Mr. C The Slide Man
    2. Lady Marmalade – Christina Aguilera, Pink, Lil Kim, and Mya
    3. I’m A Believer – Smash Mouth
    4. Get The Party Started – Pink
    6. Pop – *NSync
    7. Perfect Day – Hoku
    8. Dance With Me -112
    9. Hero – Enrique Iglesias
    10. I Wanna Talk About Me – Toby Keith
    11. U Remind Me – Usher
    12. It Wasn’t Me – Shaggy and Ricardo Ducent
    13. Ride Wit Me – Nelly Featuring City Spud
    14. Follow Me – Uncle Kracker
    15. Where The Party At – Jagged Edge with Nelly
    16. One More Time – Daft Punk
    17. Whenever, Wherever – Shakira
    18. Bootylicious – Destiny’s Child
    19. U Got It Bad – Usher
    20. Smooth Criminal – Alien Ant Farm
    21. God Bless The USA – Lee Greenwood
    22. Breathless – The Corrs
    23. Beautiful Day – U2
    24. Dance With Me – Debelah Morgan
    25. Nobody Wants To Be Lonely – Ricky Martin and Christina Aguilera
    26. Survivor – Destiny’s Child
    27. Sandstorm – Darude
    28. The Way You Love Me – Faith Hill
    29. Never Had A Dream Come True – S Club 7
    30. Put It On Me – Ja Rule and Lil Mo
    31. Because I Got High – Afroman
    32. Livin It Up – Ja Rule
    33. Hit ‘Em Up Style (Oops) – Blu Cantrell
    34. Get Ur Freak On – Missy Elliot
    35. Bouncing Off The Ceiling – A*Teens
    36. Superman (It’s Not Easy) – Five For Fighting
    37. Stranger In My House – Tamia
    38. Stuck In A Moment You Can’t Get Out Of – U2
    39. Thankyou – Dido
    40. This Is Me – Dream
    41. Bow Wow (That’s My Name) – Lil Bow Wow
    42. Thank You For Loving Me – Bon Jovi
    43. I Wanna Be Bad – Willa Ford
    44. Hanging By A Moment – Lifehouse
    45. Only Time – Enya
    46. Start the Commotion – The Wiseguys
    47. Fallin’ – Alicia Keys
    48. My Baby – Lil Romeo
    49. By Your Side – Sade
    50. Danger – Mystikal
    51. Around The World (La La La La La) – ATC
    52. Take It To Da House – Trick Daddy
    53. Yellow – Coldplay
    54. I’m Real – Jennifer Lopez
    55. So Fresh, So Clean – Outkast
    56. My Way – Limp Bizkit
    57. Clint Eastwood – Gorillaz
    58. Angel – Shaggy
    59. You Make Me Sick – Pink
    60. Turn Off The Light – Nelly Furtado
    61. Family Affair – Mary J Blige
    62. Drops of Jupiter – Train
    63. Raise Up – Petey Pablo
    64. The Space Between – Dave Matthews Band
    65. It’s Been a While – Stained
    66. How You Remind Me – Nickleback
    67. The Call – Backstreet Boys
    68. You Rock My World – Michael Jackson
    69. The Rock Show – Blink 182
    70. Free – Mya
    71. Video – India.Arie
    72. Flavor Of The Week – American Hi-Fi
    73. Baby, Come On Over (This Is Our Night) – Samantha Mumba
    74. I’m Like A Bird – Nelly Furtado
    75. Love Don’t Cost A Thing – Jennifer Lopez
    76. Peaches and Cream – One Twelve (112)
    77. When It’s Over – Sugar Ray
    78. All Or Nothing At All – O Town
    79. Fiesta (Remix) – R. Kelly & Jay-Z
    80. Stronger – Britney Spears
    81. Cross The Border – Philly’s Most Wanted
    82. All For You – Janet Jackson
    83. My Everything – 98°
    84. Again – Lenny Kravitz
    85. Everywhere – Michelle Branch
    86. Freedom – Paul McCartney
    87. I’m A Slave For You – Britney Spears
    88. #1 – Nelly
    89. What Would You Do? – City High
    90. Let Me Blow Ya Mind- Eve
    91. What It Feels Like For A Girl – Madonna
    92. Best I Ever Had (Gray Sky Morning) – Vertical Horizon
    93. Play – Jennifer Lopez
    94. Oochy Wally – QB Finest
    95. Puppy Love – Lil Bow Wow
    96. Dig In – Lenny Travis
    97. Still On Your Side – BBMak
    98. Bad Day – Fuel
    99. Schism – Tool
    100. Southern Hospitality – Ludacris
  • President George W. Bush 9/11 Speech

    President George W. Bush 9/11 Speech

    George W. Bush 9/11 Speech

    Mr. Speaker, Mr. President Pro Tempore, members of Congress, and fellow Americans:

    In the normal course of events, presidents come to this chamber to report on the state of the Union. Tonight, no such report is needed. It has already been delivered by the American people.

    We have seen it in the courage of passengers who rushed terrorists to save others on the ground. Passengers like an exceptional man named Todd Beamer. And would you please help me welcome his wife Lisa Beamer here tonight?

    We have seen the state of our Union in the endurance of rescuers working past exhaustion.

    We’ve seen the unfurling of flags, the lighting of candles, the giving of blood, the saying of prayers in English, Hebrew and Arabic.

    We have seen the decency of a loving and giving people who have made the grief of strangers their own.

    My fellow citizens, for the last nine days, the entire world has seen for itself the state of our Union, and it is strong.

    Tonight, we are a country awakened to danger and called to defend freedom. Our grief has turned to anger and anger to resolution. Whether we bring our enemies to justice or bring justice to our enemies, justice will be done.

    I thank the Congress for its leadership at such an important time.

    All of America was touched on the evening of the tragedy to see Republicans and Democrats joined together on the steps of this Capitol singing “God Bless America.”

    And you did more than sing. You acted, by delivering $40 billion to rebuild our communities and meet the needs of our military. Speaker Hastert, Minority Leader Gephardt, Majority Leader Daschle and Senator Lott, I thank you for your friendship, for your leadership and for your service to our country.

    And on behalf of the American people, I thank the world for its outpouring of support.

    America will never forget the sounds of our national anthem playing at Buckingham Palace, on the streets of Paris and at Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate.

    We will not forget South Korean children gathering to pray outside our embassy in Seoul, or the prayers of sympathy offered at a mosque in Cairo.

    We will not forget moments of silence and days of mourning in Australia and Africa and Latin America.

    Nor will we forget the citizens of 80 other nations who died with our own. Dozens of Pakistanis, more than 130 Israelis, more than 250 citizens of India, men and women from El Salvador, Iran, Mexico and Japan, and hundreds of British citizens.

    America has no truer friend than Great Britain.

    Once again, we are joined together in a great cause.

    I’m so honored the British prime minister has crossed an ocean to show his unity with America.

    Thank you for coming, friend.

    On September the 11th, enemies of freedom committed an act of war against our country. Americans have known wars, but for the past 136 years they have been wars on foreign soil, except for one Sunday in 1941. Americans have known the casualties of war, but not at the center of a great city on a peaceful morning.

    Americans have known surprise attacks, but never before on thousands of civilians.

    All of this was brought upon us in a single day, and night fell on a different world, a world where freedom itself is under attack.

    Americans have many questions tonight. Americans are asking, “Who attacked our country?”

    The evidence we have gathered all points to a collection of loosely affiliated terrorist organizations known as al-Qaida. They are some of the murderers indicted for bombing American embassies in Tanzania and Kenya and responsible for bombing the USS Cole.

    Al-Qaida is to terror what the Mafia is to crime. But its goal is not making money. Its goal is remaking the world and imposing its radical beliefs on people everywhere.

    The terrorists practice a fringe form of Islamic extremism that has been rejected by Muslim scholars and the vast majority of Muslim clerics; a fringe movement that perverts the peaceful teachings of Islam.

    The terrorists’ directive commands them to kill Christians and Jews, to kill all Americans and make no distinctions among military and civilians, including women and children.

    This group and its leader, a person named Osama bin Laden, are linked to many other organizations in different countries, including the Egyptian Islamic Jihad, the Islamic Movement of Uzbekistan.

    There are thousands of these terrorists in more than 60 countries.

    They are recruited from their own nations and neighborhoods and brought to camps in places like Afghanistan, where they are trained in the tactics of terror. They are sent back to their homes or sent to hide in countries around the world to plot evil and destruction.

    The leadership of al-Qaida has great influence in Afghanistan and supports the Taliban regime in controlling most of that country. In Afghanistan we see al-Qaida’s vision for the world. Afghanistan’s people have been brutalized, many are starving and many have fled.

    Women are not allowed to attend school. You can be jailed for owning a television. Religion can be practiced only as their leaders dictate. A man can be jailed in Afghanistan if his beard is not long enough.

    The United States respects the people of Afghanistan – after all, we are currently its largest source of humanitarian aid – but we condemn the Taliban regime.

    It is not only repressing its own people, it is threatening people everywhere by sponsoring and sheltering and supplying terrorists.

    By aiding and abetting murder, the Taliban regime is committing murder. And tonight the United States of America makes the following demands on the Taliban.

    Deliver to United States authorities all of the leaders of al-Qaida who hide in your land.

    Release all foreign nationals, including American citizens you have unjustly imprisoned. Protect foreign journalists, diplomats and aid workers in your country. Close immediately and permanently every terrorist training camp in Afghanistan. And hand over every terrorist and every person and their support structure to appropriate authorities.

    Give the United States full access to terrorist training camps, so we can make sure they are no longer operating.

    These demands are not open to negotiation or discussion.

    The Taliban must act and act immediately.

    They will hand over the terrorists, or they will share in their fate.

    I also want to speak tonight directly to Muslims throughout the world. We respect your faith. It’s practiced freely by many millions of Americans and by millions more in countries that America counts as friends. Its teachings are good and peaceful, and those who commit evil in the name of Allah blaspheme the name of Allah.

    The terrorists are traitors to their own faith, trying, in effect, to hijack Islam itself.

    The enemy of America is not our many Muslim friends. It is not our many Arab friends. Our enemy is a radical network of terrorists and every government that supports them.

    Our war on terror begins with al-Qaida, but it does not end there.

    It will not end until every terrorist group of global reach has been found, stopped and defeated.

    Americans are asking, “Why do they hate us?”

    They hate what they see right here in this chamber: a democratically elected government. Their leaders are self-appointed. They hate our freedoms: our freedom of religion, our freedom of speech, our freedom to vote and assemble and disagree with each other.

    They want to overthrow existing governments in many Muslim countries such as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Jordan. They want to drive Israel out of the Middle East. They want to drive Christians and Jews out of vast regions of Asia and Africa.

    These terrorists kill not merely to end lives, but to disrupt and end a way of life. With every atrocity, they hope that America grows fearful, retreating from the world and forsaking our friends. They stand against us because we stand in their way.

    We’re not deceived by their pretenses to piety.

    We have seen their kind before. They’re the heirs of all the murderous ideologies of the 20th century. By sacrificing human life to serve their radical visions, by abandoning every value except the will to power, they follow in the path of fascism, Nazism and totalitarianism. And they will follow that path all the way to where it ends in history’s unmarked grave of discarded lies.

    Americans are asking, “How will we fight and win this war?” We will direct every resource at our command – every means of diplomacy, every tool of intelligence, every instrument of law enforcement, every financial influence and every necessary weapon of war – to the destruction and to the defeat of the global terror network.

    Now this war will not be like the war against Iraq a decade ago, with a decisive liberation of territory and a swift conclusion. It will not look like the air war above Kosovo two years ago, where no ground troops were used and not a single American was lost in combat.

    Our response involves far more than instant retaliation and isolated strikes. Americans should not expect one battle, but a lengthy campaign unlike any other we have ever seen. It may include dramatic strikes visible on TV and covert operations secret even in success.

    We will starve terrorists of funding, turn them one against another, drive them from place to place until there is no refuge or no rest.

    And we will pursue nations that provide aid or safe haven to terrorism. Every nation in every region now has a decision to make: Either you are with us, or you are with the terrorists.

    From this day forward, any nation that continues to harbor or support terrorism will be regarded by the United States as a hostile regime. Our nation has been put on notice, we’re not immune from attack. We will take defensive measures against terrorism to protect Americans.

    Today, dozens of federal departments and agencies, as well as state and local governments, have responsibilities affecting homeland security.

    These efforts must be coordinated at the highest level. So tonight, I announce the creation of a Cabinet-level position reporting directly to me, the Office of Homeland Security.

    And tonight, I also announce a distinguished American to lead this effort, to strengthen American security: a military veteran, an effective governor, a true patriot, a trusted friend, Pennsylvania’s Tom Ridge.

    He will lead, oversee and coordinate a comprehensive national strategy to safeguard our country against terrorism and respond to any attacks that may come.

    These measures are essential. The only way to defeat terrorism as a threat to our way of life is to stop it, eliminate it and destroy it where it grows.

    Many will be involved in this effort, from FBI agents, to intelligence operatives, to the reservists we have called to active duty. All deserve our thanks, and all have our prayers.

    And tonight a few miles from the damaged Pentagon, I have a message for our military: Be ready. I have called the armed forces to alert, and there is a reason.

    The hour is coming when America will act, and you will make us proud.

    This is not, however, just America’s fight. And what is at stake is not just America’s freedom.

    This is the world’s fight. This is civilization’s fight. This is the fight of all who believe in progress and pluralism, tolerance and freedom.

    We ask every nation to join us.

    We will ask and we will need the help of police forces, intelligence services and banking systems around the world. The United States is grateful that many nations and many international organizations have already responded with sympathy and with support – nations from Latin America, to Asia, to Africa, to Europe, to the Islamic world.

    Perhaps the NATO charter reflects best the attitude of the world: An attack on one is an attack on all. The civilized world is rallying to America’s side.

    They understand that if this terror goes unpunished, their own cities, their own citizens may be next. Terror unanswered cannot only bring down buildings, it can threaten the stability of legitimate governments.

    And you know what? We’re not going to allow it.

    Americans are asking, “What is expected of us?”

    I ask you to live your lives and hug your children.

    I know many citizens have fears tonight, and I ask you to be calm and resolute, even in the face of a continuing threat.

    I ask you to uphold the values of America and remember why so many have come here.

    We’re in a fight for our principles, and our first responsibility is to live by them. No one should be singled out for unfair treatment or unkind words because of their ethnic background or religious faith.

    I ask you to continue to support the victims of this tragedy with your contributions. Those who want to give can go to a central source of information, libertyunites.org, to find the names of groups providing direct help in New York, Pennsylvania and Virginia.

    The thousands of FBI agents who are now at work in this investigation may need your cooperation, and I ask you to give it. I ask for your patience with the delays and inconveniences that may accompany tighter security and for your patience in what will be a long struggle.

    I ask your continued participation and confidence in the American economy. Terrorists attacked a symbol of American prosperity; they did not touch its source.

    America is successful because of the hard work and creativity and enterprise of our people. These were the true strengths of our economy before September 11th, and they are our strengths today.

    And finally, please continue praying for the victims of terror and their families, for those in uniform and for our great country. Prayer has comforted us in sorrow and will help strengthen us for the journey ahead.

    Tonight I thank my fellow Americans for what you have already done and for what you will do.

    And ladies and gentlemen of the Congress, I thank you, their representatives, for what you have already done and for what we will do together.

    Tonight we face new and sudden national challenges.

    We will come together to improve air safety, to dramatically expand the number of air marshals on domestic flights and take new measures to prevent hijacking.

    We will come together to promote stability and keep our airlines flying with direct assistance during this emergency.

    We will come together to give law enforcement the additional tools it needs to track down terror here at home.

    We will come together to strengthen our intelligence capabilities to know the plans of terrorists before they act and to find them before they strike.

    We will come together to take active steps that strengthen America’s economy and put our people back to work.

    Tonight, we welcome two leaders who embody the extraordinary spirit of all New Yorkers, Governor George Pataki and Mayor Rudolf Giuliani.

    As a symbol of America’s resolve, my administration will work with Congress and these two leaders to show the world that we will rebuild New York City.

    After all that has just passed, all the lives taken and all the possibilities and hopes that died with them, it is natural to wonder if America’s future is one of fear.

    Some speak of an age of terror. I know there are struggles ahead and dangers to face. But this country will define our times, not be defined by them.

    As long as the United States of America is determined and strong, this will not be an age of terror. This will be an age of liberty here and across the world.

    Great harm has been done to us. We have suffered great loss. And in our grief and anger, we have found our mission and our moment.

    Freedom and fear are at war. The advance of human freedom, the great achievement of our time and the great hope of every time, now depends on us.

    Our nation, this generation, will lift the dark threat of violence from our people and our future. We will rally the world to this cause by our efforts, by our courage. We will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail.

    It is my hope that in the months and years ahead life will return almost to normal. We’ll go back to our lives and routines, and that is good.

    Even grief recedes with time and grace.

    But our resolve must not pass. Each of us will remember what happened that day and to whom it happened. We will remember the moment the news came, where we were and what we were doing.

    Some will remember an image of a fire or story of rescue. Some will carry memories of a face and a voice gone forever.

    And I will carry this. It is the police shield of a man named George Howard, who died at the World Trade Center trying to save others.

    It was given to me by his mom, Arlene, as a proud memorial to her son. It is my reminder of lives that ended and a task that does not end.

    I will not forget the wound to our country and those who inflicted it. I will not yield, I will not rest, I will not relent in waging this struggle for freedom and security for the American people.

    The course of this conflict is not known, yet its outcome is certain. Freedom and fear, justice and cruelty, have always been at war, and we know that God is not neutral between them.

    Fellow citizens, we’ll meet violence with patient justice, assured of the rightness of our cause and confident of the victories to come.

    In all that lies before us, may God grant us wisdom, and may he watch over the United States of America.

    Thank you.

  • 2001 Oscars 73rd Academy Awards

    2001 Oscars 73rd Academy Awards

    2001 Oscars 73rd Academy Awards

    • Winners Announced: March 25, 2001
    • Held at: Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium, California
    • Host: Steve Martin
    • Eligibility Year: 2000

    Trivia

    • This was the first time Steve Martin hosted the Oscars, and he was praised for his comedic wit and charming demeanor.
    • Julia Roberts won Best Actress for her role in Erin Brockovich, marking one of the most iconic acceptance speeches in Academy history.
      “I, uh…I have a television, so I’m going to spend some time here to tell you some things. (addressing the conductor) And, and… and sir, you’re doing a great job, but you’re so quick with that stick, so why don’t you sit. ‘Cause I may never be here again.” – Julia Roberts, Best Actress, Erin Brockovich
    • Russell Crowe won Best Actor for Gladiator, which also won Best Picture, turning the historical epic into the star of the night.
    • Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon from Taiwan won Best Foreign Language Film and was also nominated for Best Picture, a rarity for foreign films.
    • Icelandic singer Björk made a splash on the red carpet with her infamous swan dress.
    • Benicio Del Toro won Best Supporting Actor for Traffic, while Marcia Gay Harden snagged Best Supporting Actress for her role in Pollock.
      “I won, and I get to scream and jump a little. But I got to go back to work tomorrow.” – Benicio del Toro, Best Supporting Actor, Traffic
    • The Best Director honor went to Steven Soderbergh for Traffic, marking him as one of the most versatile directors in Hollywood.
    • Bob Dylan won the Best Original Song for “Things Have Changed” from the movie Wonder Boys, accepting the award via satellite.
    • In the animated realm, Chicken Run was a critical darling but it was pre-Oscar category for Best Animated Feature, which would be introduced the following year.
    • Art director Tim Yip won Best Art Direction for Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, becoming the first person of Chinese descent to win in that category.
    • The Oscars went tech-savvy: this was the first year the Academy Awards were available for online streaming.
    • Angelina Jolie was absent, who had won the Best Supporting Actress award the previous year for Girl, Interrupted. She was filming Lara Croft: Tomb Raider at the time.

    2001 Oscar Nominees and Winners

    Best Picture:
    Gladiator – Douglas Wick, David Franzoni, and Branko Lustig, producers (WINNER)
    Chocolat – David Brown, Kit Golden, and Leslie Holleran, producers
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Bill Kong, Hsu Li-kong, and Ang Lee, producers
    Erin Brockovich – Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, and Stacey Sher, producers
    Traffic – Marshall Herskovitz, Edward Zwick, and Laura Bickford, producers
    Best Director:
    Steven Soderbergh – Traffic (WINNER)
    Stephen Daldry – Billy Elliot
    Ang Lee – Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon
    Steven Soderbergh – Erin Brockovich
    Ridley Scott – Gladiator
    Best Actor:
    Russell Crowe – Gladiator as General Maximus Decimus Meridius (WINNER)
    Javier Bardem – Before Night Falls as Reinaldo Arenas
    Tom Hanks – Cast Away as Chuck Noland
    Ed Harris – Pollock as Jackson Pollock
    Geoffrey Rush – Quills as the Marquis de Sade
    Best Actress:
    Julia Roberts – Erin Brockovich as Erin Brockovich (WINNER)
    Joan Allen – The Contender as Laine Hanson
    Juliette Binoche – Chocolat as Vianne Rocher
    Ellen Burstyn – Requiem for a Dream as Sara Goldfarb
    Laura Linney – You Can Count On Me as Sammy Prescott
    Best Supporting Actor:
    Benicio del Toro – Traffic as Javier Rodriguez (WINNER)
    Jeff Bridges – The Contender as President Jackson Evans
    Willem Dafoe – Shadow of the Vampire as Max Schreck
    Albert Finney – Erin Brockovich as Edward L. Masry
    Joaquin Phoenix – Gladiator as Commodus
    Best Supporting Actress:
    Marcia Gay Harden – Pollock as Lee Krasner (WINNER)
    Judi Dench – Chocolat as Armande Voizin
    Kate Hudson – Almost Famous as Penny Lane
    Frances McDormand – Almost Famous as Elaine Miller
    Julie Walters – Billy Elliot as Georgia Wilkinson
    Best Original Screenplay:
    Almost Famous – Cameron Crowe (WINNER)
    Billy Elliot – Lee Hall
    Erin Brockovich – Susannah Grant
    Gladiator – David Franzoni, John Logan, and William Nicholson
    You Can Count On Me – Kenneth Lonergan
    Best Adapted Screenplay:
    Traffic – Stephen Gaghan based on the British TV series Traffik created by Simon Moore (WINNER)
    Chocolat – Robert Nelson Jacobs based on the novel by Joanne Harris
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – James Schamus, Hui-Ling Wang, and Kuo Jung Tsai based on the book by Wang Dulu
    O Brother, Where Art Thou? – Joel Coen and Ethan Coen based on the Odyssey by Homer
    Wonder Boys – Steve Kloves based on the novel by Michael Chabon
    Best Foreign Language Film:
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (Taiwan) in Mandarin – Ang Lee (WINNER)
    Amores Perros (Mexico) in Spanish – Alejandro González Iñárritu
    Divided We Fall (Czech Republic) in Czech – Jan Hrebejk
    Everybody’s Famous! (Belgium) in Dutch and English – Dominique Deruddere
    The Taste of Others (France) in French – Agnès Jaoui
    Best Documentary Feature:
    Into the Arms of Strangers: Stories of the Kindertransport – Mark Jonathan Harris and Deborah Oppenheimer (WINNER)
    Legacy – Tod Lending
    Long Night’s Journey into Day – Frances Reid and Deborah Hoffmann
    Scottsboro: An American Tragedy – Barak Goodman and Daniel Anker
    Sound and Fury – Josh Aronson and Roger Weisberg
    Best Documentary Short:
    Big Mama – Tracy Seretean (WINNER)
    Curtain Call – Chuck Braverman and Steve Kalafer
    Dolphins – Greg MacGillivray and Alec Lorimore
    The Man on Lincoln’s Nose – Daniel Raim
    On Tiptoe: Gentle Steps to Freedom – Eric Simonson and Leelai Demoz
    Best Live Action Short Film:
    Quiero ser (I want to be…) – Florian Gallenberger (WINNER)
    By Courier – Peter Riegert and Ericka Frederick
    One Day Crossing – Joan Stein and Christina Lazaridi
    Seraglio – Gail Lerner and Colin Campbell
    A Soccer Story – Paulo Machline
    Best Animated Short Film:
    Father and Daughter – Michaël Dudok de Wit (WINNER)
    Periwig Maker – Steffen Schäffler and Annette Schäffler
    Rejected – Don Hertzfeldt
    Best Original Score:
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Tan Dun (WINNER)
    Chocolat – Rachel Portman
    Gladiator – Hans Zimmer
    Malèna – Ennio Morricone
    The Patriot – John Williams
    Best Original Song:
    “Things Have Changed” from Wonder Boys – Music and Lyrics by Bob Dylan (WINNER)
    “A Fool In Love” from Meet the Parents – Music and Lyrics by Randy Newman
    “I’ve Seen It All” from Dancer in the Dark – Music by Björk; Lyrics by Lars von Trier and Sjon Sigurdsson
    “A Love Before Time” from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Music by Jorge Calandrelli and Tan Dun; Lyrics by James Schamus
    “My Funny Friend and Me” from The Emperor’s New Groove – Music by Sting and David Hartley; Lyrics by Sting
    Best Sound Editing:
    U-571 – Jon Johnson (WINNER)
    Space Cowboys – Alan Robert Murray and Bub Asman
    Best Sound:
    Gladiator – Scott Millan, Bob Beemer, and Ken Weston (WINNER)
    Cast Away – Randy Thom, Tom Johnson, Dennis Sands, and William B. Kaplan
    The Patriot – Kevin O’Connell, Greg P. Russell, and Lee Orloff
    The Perfect Storm – John Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, David Campbell, and Keith A. Wester
    U-571 – Steve Maslow, Gregg Landaker, Rick Kline, and Ivan Sharrock
    Best Art Direction:
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Art Direction and Set Decoration: Timmy Yip (WINNER)
    Gladiator – Art Direction: Arthur Max; Set Decoration: Crispian Sallis
    How the Grinch Stole Christmas – Art Direction: Michael Corenblith; Set Decoration: Merideth Boswell
    Quills – Art Direction: Martin Childs; Set Decoration: Jill Quertier
    Vatel – Art Direction: Jean Rabasse; Set Decoration: Françoise Benoît-Fresco
    Best Cinematography:
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Peter Pau (WINNER)
    Gladiator – John Mathieson
    Malèna – Lajos Koltai
    O Brother, Where Art Thou? – Roger Deakins
    The Patriot – Caleb Deschanel
    Best Makeup:
    How the Grinch Stole Christmas – Rick Baker and Gail Rowell-Ryan (WINNER)
    The Cell – Michèle Burke and Edouard Henriques
    Shadow of the Vampire – Ann Buchanan and Amber Sibley
    Best Costume Design:
    Gladiator – Janty Yates (WINNER)
    102 Dalmatians – Anthony Powell
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Timmy Yip
    How the Grinch Stole Christmas – Rita Ryack
    Quills – Jacqueline West
    Best Film Editing:
    Traffic – Stephen Mirrione (WINNER)
    Almost Famous – Joe Hutshing and Saar Klein
    Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon – Tim Squyres
    Gladiator – Pietro Scalia
    Wonder Boys – Dede Allen
    Best Visual Effects:
    Gladiator – John Nelson, Neil Corbould, Tim Burke, and Rob Harvey (WINNER)
    Hollow Man – Scott E. Anderson, Craig Hayes, Scott Stokdyk, and Stan Parks
    The Perfect Storm – Stefen Fangmeier, Habib Zargarpour, John Frazier, and Walt Conti
    Academy Honorary Awards:
    Jack Cardiff
    Ernest Lehman
    Irving G. Thalberg Award:
    Dino De Laurentiis
  • 2001 Grammy Award Winners

    2001 Grammy Award Winners

    2001 Grammy Award Winners

     

    2001 Grammy Winners

    2001 Grammy Award Winners – Key Details

    • Winners Announced: February 21, 2001
    • Held at: Staples Center, Los Angeles
    • Host: Jon Stewart
    • Eligibility Year: October 1, 1999 – September 30, 2000

    Trivia

    • Jon Stewart’s hosting debut was a big hit, cementing him as a top choice for emceeing awards shows.
    • The night belonged to Eminem and Elton John, who performed Stan together in a highly anticipated collaboration.
    • Destiny’s Child clinched two awards, including Best R&B Song for “Say My Name,” which helped solidify their place in pop history.
    • In a triumphant moment, U2’s Beautiful Day won Song of the Year, Record of the Year, and Best Rock Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocal.
    • The Best New Artist award went to Shelby Lynne, a controversial pick as she had been in the music industry for more than a decade.
    • Jazz legend Herbie Hancock added another Grammy to his collection, this time for Best Jazz Instrumental Album for Gershwin’s World.
    • The Best Alternative Music Album award went to Kid A by Radiohead, marking the band’s increasing influence in the American music scene.
    • Steely Dan made a surprise win for Album of the Year with Two Against Nature, beating out strong competitors like Eminem and Radiohead.
    • Dolly Parton received the Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award, celebrating her contribution to country music.
    • Classical guitarist Sharon Isbin won her first Grammy for Best Instrumental Soloist Performance for her album Dreams of a World.
    • Madonna, often the queen of controversy, snagged the Best Song Written for Visual Media for her song “Beautiful Stranger,” featured in Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me.
    Record of the Year:
    Beautiful Day – U2
    Album of the Year:
    Two Against Nature – Steely Dan (Giant Records)
    Song of the Year:
    Beautiful Day – U2
    New Artist:
    Shelby Lynne
    Female Pop Vocal:
    I Try – Macy Gray
    Male Pop Vocal:
    She Walks This Earth (Soberana Rosa) – Sting
    Pop Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Cousin Dupree – Steely Dan
    Pop Collaboration with Vocals:
    Is You Is, or Is You Ain’t (My Baby) – B. B. King and Dr. John
    Pop Instrumental:
    Caravan – The Brian Setzer Orchestra:
    Dance Recording:
    Who Let the Dogs Out – Baha Men
    Pop Instrumental Album:
    Symphony No. 1 – Joe Jackson (Sony Classical)
    Pop Vocal Album:
    Two Against Nature – Steely Dan (Giant Records)
    Traditional Pop Vocal Album:
    Both Sides Now – Joni Mitchell (Reprise Records)
    Female Rock Vocal:
    There Goes the Neighborhood – Sheryl Crow
    Male Rock Vocal:
    Again – Lenny Kravitz
    Rock Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Beautiful Day – U2
    Hard Rock:
    Guerrilla Radio – Rage Against the Machine
    Metal:
    Elite – Deftones
    Rock Instrumental:
    The Call of the Ktulu – Metallica with Michael Kamen conducting the San Francisco Symphony Orchestra
    Rock Song:
    With Arms Wide Open – Scott Stapp and Mark Tremonti, songwriters
    Rock Album:
    There Is Nothing Left to Lose – Foo Fighters (RCA/Roswell Records)
    Alternative Music Album:
    Kid A – Radiohead (Radiohead)
    Female R&B Vocal:
    He Wasn’t Man Enough – Toni Braxton
    Male R&B Vocal:
    Untitled (How Does it Feel) D’Angelo
    R&B Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Say My Name – Destiny’s Child
    R&B Song:
    Say My Name – LaShawn Daniels, Fred Jerkins III, Rodney Jerkins, Beyoncé Knowles, LeToya Luckett, LaTavia Roberson, and Kelendria Rowland, songwriters
    R&B Album:
    Voodoo – D’Angelo (Cheeba Sound/Virgin Records America)
    Traditional R&B Vocal Performance:
    Ear-Resistible – The Temptations
    Rap Solo:
    The Real Slim Shady – Eminem
    Rap Duo or Group:
    Forgot about Dre – Dr. Dre featuring Eminem
    Rap Album:
    The Marshall Mathers LP – Eminem
    Female Country Vocal:
    Breathe – Faith Hill
    Male Country Vocal:
    Solitary Man – Johnny Cash
    Country Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Cherokee Maiden – Asleep at the Wheel
    Country Collaboration with Vocals:
    Let’s Make Love – Faith Hill and Tim McGraw
    Country Instrumental:
    Leaving Cottondale – Alison Brown with Béla Fleck
    Country Song:
    I Hope You Dance – Mark D. Sanders and Tia Sillers, songwriters
    Country Album:
    Breathe – Faith Hill (Warner Bros. Records)
    Bluegrass Album:
    The Grass Is Blue – Dolly Parton (Sugar Hill Records)
    New Age Album:
    Thinking of You – Kitaro (Domo Records)
    Contemporary Jazz:
    Outbound – Béla Fleck and the Flecktones
    Jazz Vocal:
    In The Moment Live in Concert – Dianne Reeves
    Jazz Instrumental – Solo:
    (Go) Get It – Pat Metheny
    Jazz Instrumental, Individual or Group:
    Contemporary Jazz – Branford Marsalis (Columbia Records)
    Large Jazz Ensemble:
    52nd Street Themes – Joe Lovano (Blue Note Records)
    Latin Jazz:
    Live at the Village Vanguard – Chucho Valdés
    Rock Gospel Album:
    Double Take – Petra (Word Records)
    Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album:
    If I Left the Zoo – Jars of Clay (Essential Records)
    Southern Gospel, Country Gospel, or Bluegrass Gospel Album:
    Soldier of the Cross – Ricky Skaggs And Kentucky Thunder (Skaggs Family Records)
    Traditional Soul Gospel Album:
    You Can Make It – Shirley Caesar(Myrrh Records)
    Contemporary Soul Gospel Album:
    Thankful – Mary Mary (Columbia/C2/Word Entertainment)
    Gospel Album by a Choir or Chorus:
    Live – God Is Working – Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir; Carol Cymbala, Choir Director (M2.0 Music)
    Latin Pop Album:
    Shakira – MTV Unplugged – Shakira
    Latin Rock/Alternative Album:
    Uno – La Ley
    Tropical Latin Album:
    Alma Caribeña – Gloria Estefan
    Salsa Album:
    Masterpiece/Obra Maestra – Tito Puente and Eddie Palmieri
    Merengue Album:
    Olga Viva, Viva Olga – Olga Tañón
    Mexican-American Album:
    Por Una Mujer Bonita – Pepe Aguilar
    Tejano Album:
    ¿Qué Es Música Tejana? – The Legends
    Traditional Blues Album:
    Riding with the King – B. B. King and Eric Clapton(Reprise Records)
    Contemporary Blues Album:
    Shoutin’ in Key – Taj Mahal and the Phantom Blues Band (Hannibal Records)
    Traditional Folk Album:
    Public Domain – Songs from the Wild Land – Dave Alvin (HighTone)
    Contemporary Folk Album:
    Red Dirt Girl – Emmylou Harris (Nonesuch Records)
    Native American Music Album:
    Gathering of Nations Pow Wow – Various Artists (Soar)
    Reggae Album:
    Art and Life – Beenie Man (Virgin Records America)
    World Music Album:
    João Voz e Violão – João Gilberto (Verve Records)
    Polka Album:
    Touched by a Polka – Jimmy Sturr (Rounder Records)
    Musical Album for Children:
    Woody’s Roundup featuring Riders in the Sky – Riders in the Sky (Walt Disney Records)
    Spoken Word Album for Children:
    Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (J. K. Rowling) – Jim Dale (Listening Library)
    Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album:
    The Measure of a Man (Sidney Poitier) – Sidney Poitier (Harper Audio)
    Spoken Comedy Album:
    Braindroppings – George Carlin (HighBridge Audio)
    Musical Show Album:
    Elton John and Tim Rice’s Aida (Buena Vista Records)
    Best Compilation Soundtrack Album:
    Almost Famous – Various Artists (DreamWorks Records)
    Best Score Soundtrack Album for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    American Beauty – Thomas Newman, Composer
    Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    When She Loved Me (from Toy Story 2) – Randy Newman, songwriter
    Instrumental Composition:
    Theme from Angela’s Ashes – John Williams, Composer
    Instrumental Arrangement:
    Spain for Sextet and Orchestra – Chick Corea, arranger
    Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocals:
    Both Sides Now – Vince Mendoza, arranger
    Best Recording Package:
    Music – Kevin Reagan, art director (Maverick/Warner Bros. Records)
    Best Boxed Recording Package:
    Miles Davis and John Coltrane: The Complete Columbia Recordings 1955-1961 – Frank Harkins and Arnold Levine, art directors (Columbia/Legacy Recordings)
    Best Album Notes:
    Miles Davis and John Coltrane: The Complete Columbia Recordings 1955-1961 – Bob Blumenthal, album notes writer
    Historical Album:
    Louis Armstrong: The Complete Hot Five and Hot Seven Recordings (Columbia/Legacy Recordings)
    Best-Engineered Album – Non-Classical:
    Two Against Nature – Phil Burnett, Roger Nichols, Dave Russell and Elliot Scheiner, engineers (Giant Records)
    Producer, Non-Classical:
    Dr. Dre
    Remixer, Non-Classical:
    Hex Hector
    Best-Engineered Album – Classical:
    Dvorák: Requiem, Op. 89; Sym. No. 9, Op. 95 – From the New World – John Eargle, engineer
    Classical Producer:
    Steven Epstein
    Classical Album:
    Shostakovich: The String Quartets – Emerson String Quartet (Deutsche Grammophon)
    Orchestral Performance:
    Mahler: Sym. No. 10 – Sir Simon Rattle (Berliner Phil.) (EMI Classics)
    Opera Recording:
    Busoni: Doktor Faust – Kent Nagano, conductor (Erato)
    Choral Performance:
    Penderecki: Credo – Helmuth Rilling, conductor (Oregon Bach Festival Cho.; Oregon Bach Festival Orch.)
    Instrumental Soloist with Orchestra:
    Maw: Violin Concerto – Joshua Bell, violin; Sir Roger Norrington, conductor
    Instrumental Soloist without Orchestra:
    Dreams of a World (Works of Lauro, Ruiz-Pipo, Duarte, etc.) – Sharon Isbin, guitar
    Chamber Music:
    Shostakovich: The String Quartets – Emerson String Quartet
    Small Ensemble Performance (with or without Conductor):
    Shadow Dances (Stravinsky Miniatures Tango; Suite No. 1; Octet, Etc.) – Juliane Banse, soprano; The 12 Cellists of the Berlin Philharmonic
    Classical Vocal:
    The Vivaldi Album (Dell’aura al sussurrar; Alma oppressa, etc.) – Cecilia Bartoli, mezzo soprano
    Classical Contemporary Composition:
    Crumb: Star-Child – George Crumb, Composer
    Classical Crossover Album:
    Appalachian Journey (1B; Misty Moonlight Waltz; Indecision, etc.) – Yo-Yo Ma, cello; Edgar Meyer. double bass; Mark O’Connor, violin (Alison Krauss, fiddle and vocals; James Taylor, vocals)
    Music Video, Short Form:
    Learn to Fly – (Foo Fighters), Jesse Peretz, video director
    Music Video, Long Form:
    Gimme Some Truth – The Making of John Lennon’s Imagine Album (John Lennon) – Andrew Solt, video director
  • Bill Clinton’s Letter to George W. Bush

    Bill Clinton’s Letter to George W. Bush

    Bill Clinton’s Letter to George W. Bush
    January 20, 2001

    Dear George,

    Today you embark on the greatest venture, with the greatest honor, that can come to an American citizen.

    Like me, you are especially fortunate to lead our country in a time of profound and largely positive change, when old questions, not just about the role of government, but about the very nature of our nation, must be answered anew.

    You lead a proud, decent, good people. And from this day you are President of all of us. I salute you and wish you success and much happiness.

    The burdens you now shoulder are great but often exaggerated. The sheer joy of doing what you believe is right is inexpressible.

    My prayers are with you and your family. Godspeed.

    Sincerely, Bill

  • 2000 Number One Hits

    2000 Number One Hits

    2000 Number One Hits

    Sidenote: The best-selling song of 2000 was Breathe by Faith Hill, which peaked at number two on April 22, 2000.

    October 23, 1999- January 14, 2000:
    Smooth Santana Featuring Rob Thomas

    January 15 – January 28:
    What A Girl WantsChristina Aguilera

    January 29 – February 18:
    I Knew I Loved You Savage Garden

    February 19 – March 3:
    Thank God I Found YouMariah Carey featuring Joe and 98 Degrees

    March 4 – March 17:
    AmazedLonestar

    March 18 – April 7:
    Say My NameDestiny’s Child

    April 8 – June 16:
    Maria MariaSantana featuring Wyclef Jean and The Product G&B

    June 17 – July 23:
    Try AgainAaliyah

    June 24 – July 14:
    Be With YouEnrique Iglesias

    July 15July 21:
    Everything You WantVertical Horizon

    July 22 – July 28:
    BentMatchbox Twenty

    July 29 – August 11:
    It’s Gonna Be Me*NSYNC

    August 12 – August 25:
    IncompleteSisqó

    August 26 – September 15:
    Doesn’t Really MatterJanet Jackson

    September 16October 13:
    MusicMadonna

    October 14 – November 10:
    Come on Over (All I Want Is You)Christina Aguilera

    November 11 – November 17:
    With Arms Wide OpenCreed

    November 18, 2000 – February 2, 2001:
    Independent WomenDestiny’s Child

    (Data is compiled from various charts including Billboard’s “Pop,” “Rock,” “Airplay,” “R&B/Dance” and “Singles” Charts. The “Hot 100” is the primary chart used for this list.)

  • 2000 History, Facts and Trivia

    2000 History, Facts and Trivia

    2000 History, Facts and Trivia

    Quick Facts from 2000:

    • World Changing Event: HotorNot.com was founded. It was the first major participation site on the internet.
    • The Top Song was Independent Woman by Destiny’s Child
    • Influential Songs include: Goodbye Earl by The Dixie Chicks, Stan by Eminem, and Graduation by Vitamin C
    • The Movies to Watch include Cast Away, Erin Brockovich, Remember the Titans, Unbreakable, O Brother, Where Art Thou?, The Emperor’s New Groove and The Perfect Storm
    • People Magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive: Brad Pitt
    • Notable books include Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire by J.K. Rowling and Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom.
    • Price of Russet Potatoes, 5 pounds in 2000: 79 cents
      Dell Dimension computer, 64 MB, with the monitor: $899.00
      Samsung MP3 player: $399.00
      Sony PlayStation: $299.00
    • The Funny Guy was: Lewis Black
    • According to a poll in 2000, the Japanese believe that their best invention of the 20th century was instant noodles.
    • Athletes in the Olympic Village reportedly used 70,000 condoms at the 2000 Games and 100,000 at the 2008 Games. About 450,000 were provided in 2016.
    • The Unexpected Paycheck: A prisoner named James Carter was leading the men in a song called Po’ Lazarus. While chopping logs, it was recorded by Alan Lomax and Shirley Collins. In 2000, it was used in O Brother, Where Art Thou?, which won a Grammy. Carter was tracked down and given thousands in royalties.
    • The Conversation: “So, why were we so worried about Y2K again…?”

    Year 2000 History Roundup:

    • January 1 – New Millennium Celebrations: Global festivities marked the beginning of the 21st century and the new millennium, despite debates about the official start year.
    • January 10 – AOL and Time Warner Announced Merger: America Online announced a $162 billion deal to purchase Time Warner, marking the largest corporate merger at that time.
    • January 14 – Dow Jones Industrial Average Peak: The Dow Jones closed at 11,722.98, reflecting the peak of the Dot-com bubble.
    • February 13 – Final ‘Peanuts’ Comic Strip Published: The last original “Peanuts” comic strip was published.
    • February 17 – Microsoft Released Windows 2000: Microsoft launched Windows 2000, introducing new features for business and professional computing.
    • March 10 – NASDAQ Composite Index Peak: The NASDAQ reached an all-time high of 5,048.62, signaling the zenith of the Dot-com bubble.
    • March 26 – Vladimir Putin Elected President of Russia: Vladimir Putin won the Russian presidential election, beginning his first term as president.
    • April 22 – Elián González Reunited with Father: After a federal raid on his Miami relatives’ home, six-year-old Cuban boy Elián González was reunited with his father, ending an international custody dispute.
    • May 5ILOVEYOU Computer Virus Spread: The ILOVEYOU virus, originating from the Philippines, infected millions of computers worldwide, causing extensive damage.
    • May 11 – India’s Population Reached 1 Billion: India’s population officially reached 1 billion, marked by the birth of a baby girl named Astha.
    • June 26 – Human Genome Project Draft Completed: A preliminary draft of the human genome was completed, marking a significant milestone in genetics.
    • July 2 – Vicente Fox Elected President of Mexico: Vicente Fox won the Mexican presidential election, ending 71 years of Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) rule.
    • July 25 – Concorde Crash in Paris: Air France Flight 4590, a Concorde aircraft, crashed shortly after takeoff in Paris, killing all 109 people on board and four on the ground.
    • August 12 – Russian Submarine Kursk Sank: The Russian submarine Kursk sank in the Barents Sea during a naval exercise, resulting in the deaths of all 118 crew members.
    • September 6–8 – UN Millennium Summit Held: World leaders gathered at the United Nations Headquarters in New York City for the Millennium Summit to discuss global issues and set development goals.
    • September 15–October 1 – Sydney Hosted Summer Olympics: The 2000 Summer Olympics were held in Sydney, Australia, featuring 10,651 athletes from 199 nations.
    • October 12USS Cole Bombing: The USS Cole, a U.S. Navy destroyer, was attacked by suicide bombers in Aden, Yemen, resulting in the deaths of 17 sailors.
    • November 7Contested U.S. Presidential Election: The U.S. presidential election between George W. Bush and Al Gore resulted in a prolonged legal battle over Florida’s vote count.
    • December 12Bush v. Gore Supreme Court Decision: The U.S. Supreme Court halted the Florida recount, effectively awarding the presidency to George W. Bush.
    • December 15 – Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant Closed: The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant was officially shut down, ending operations 14 years after the catastrophic 1986 disaster.
    • December 24 – Christmas Eve Church Bombings in Indonesia: A series of bombings targeted churches across Indonesia, resulting in 18 deaths and numerous injuries.
    • December 25 – Luoyang Christmas Fire in China: A devastating fire at a shopping center in Luoyang, China, killed 309 people during Christmas celebrations.
    • December 31 – End of the 20th Century: The 20th and 2nd millennium concluded, leading to global reflections on the past 1000 years.
    • Dot-Com Bubble Burst: The collapse of numerous internet-based companies led to a significant stock market downturn, marking the end of the Dot-com bubble.

    Top Ten Baby Names of 2000:

    Emily, Hannah, Madison, Ashley, Sarah, Jacob, Michael, Matthew, Joshua, Chris, Topher

    Fashion Icons and Sex Symbols:

    Gisele Bündchen, Jessica Biel, Claudia Schiffer, Britney Spears, Heidi Klum, Estella Warren, Shannon Elizabeth, Christina Aguilera, Jessica Alba, Piper Perabo

    The Hot Guys:

    Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Bon Jovi, Mel Gibson, Ricky Martin, Mark Wahlberg, Casper Casper Van Dien, Jessie L. Martin, Tyrese, Derek Jeter, Johnny Depp, Russell Crowe, Ben Affleck, Tom Cruise, Alex Rodriguez, and Prince William.

    “The Quote:”

    “I have nipples, Greg. Could you milk me?”
    – Robert De Nero in Meet The Parents

    Time Magazine’s Man of the Year:

    George W. Bush

    Time Magazine’s Person of the Century:

    Albert Einstein

    Miss America:

    Heather French (Maysville, KY)

    Miss USA:

    Lynnette Cole (Tennessee)

    The Scandals:

    The Mexican government opened fire on peaceful protestors in October 1968. An estimated 300-400 civilians were killed and an additional 1,345 were arrested. In 2000, official government documents were released that showed the government employed agents dressed as protestors to provoke the officers into the shooting.

    Jenifer Lopez’s Versace Grammy Dress.

    Meg Ryan left hubby Dennis Quaid for what turned out to be a fling with Russell Crowe.

    The police found cocaine and valium in Robert Downey Jr.’s Merv Griffin Hotel room.

    In November 2000, Japan passed its first anti-stalking law after Shiori Ino, a 21-year-old student, was murdered by her stalker the previous year. She had been turned away multiple times by the police.

    Hip Hop Obesity Death:

    Big Pun

    Beloved Mad Magazine Cartoonist Death:

    Don Martin

    Pop Culture Facts & History:

    2000 was the first year Martin Luther King Jr. Day was officially observed in all 50 states.

    In October 2000, Heinz introduced colored ketchup products called EZ Squirt, which eventually included green (2000), purple (2001), mystery (pink, orange, or teal, 2002), and blue (2003). In 2006, the products were discontinued.

    There have been two wooden looping roller coasters in history, one built in 1895 (Flip Flap Railway at Paul Boyton’s Sea Lion Park on Coney Island in Brooklyn, New York, closed 1902) and the other in 2000 (Son of Beast at Kings Island in Mason, Ohio, closed 2009).

    November 2, 2000 was the last time humans were simultaneously on earth. Ever since then, the ISS has been occupied continuously.

    Coca-Cola settled at a trial, where they were accused of discrimination in pay, promotions and performance evaluations towards African-American employees. They agreed to a $192 million settlement in corporate racial discrimination, the largest settlement ever.

    In 2000, author J.K. Rowling gave her father the first edition of Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire for Father’s Day and signed it: “Lots of love from your firstborn.” Three years later, he sold it for £27,500.

    For centuries, there was a secret wing at the Naples National Archaeological Museum, where all the erotic art found in Pompeii was locked away. The cabinet remained closed for over a hundred years, with the doorway even bricked up at one point, and was only fully opened to the public in 2000.

    NASA spacecraft ‘Deep Impact’ is lost in space, as NASA lost communication with it due to a similar problem to the Y2K bug. It was lost less than a second after January 1st, 2000 – most likely because the time tracker onboard had overflowed.

    In 2000, an American-British consortium offered $250 million to each of the group’s four members to reunite, but they turned down the offer.

    Danish citizen, Stig Severinsen, held his breath for over twenty minutes while submerged in a tank filled with sharks.

    A Brazilian electronics company, Gradiente, is legally allowed to call their phone ‘iPhone’ because they trademarked the word in 2000, 7 years before Apple’s iPhone. They share the name with Apple, although they are different products.

    Air travel was practically unaffected on January 1, 2000, even though there was a fair amount of panic about the Y2K bug.

    The country of Tuvalu could not join the United Nations until 2000, because it did not have the $100,000 fee to join. Tuvalu began selling its domain name of .tv to companies to make most of that country’s money.

    The lowest PGA score of 63 played by Jose Maria Olazabal.

    Spain’s Paralympic basketball team was ordered to return their gold medals won in Sydney after nearly all of their players were found to have no disability at all.

    Two Egyptologists found that a 2,700-year-old 27-inch statue of King Taharqa was unknowingly being used as a bike rack by staff in the basement of a Southampton museum. It had been ignored for a century.

    Angelina Jolie and Billy Bob Thornton got married on May 5, 2000.

    Brad Pitt and Jennifer Aniston were married on July 29, 2000

    After nearly two weeks of planning, Pop Culture Madness.com went online on January 8, 2000.

    The highest-grossing stop-motion animated film is Chicken Run (2000, $106,834,564), beating out The Nightmare Before Christmas.

    Strictly speaking, the “20th Century” didn’t end until December 31, 2000.

    Ten members of the Spanish Paralympic basketball team were ordered to hand back their 2000 Sydney Games gold medals after it was revealed that they had no intellectual disability.

    A 2000 study of the Library of Congress suggested that the amount of uncompressed textual data represented by the 26 million books then in the collection was 10 terabytes.

    In the year 2000, about 37 percent of Earth’s land area was agricultural land.

    All arcade games imported into North America from 1989 to 2000 had the following FBI slogan included into their attract mode: “Winners Don’t Use Drugs”.

    In post-war America, (1950s and 1960s) Americans were told that by the year 2000 the normal work week would be 20-30 hours, and people would be committing suicide from boredom.

    Millennials are not people born after the 2000s as a lot of people seem to think. Actually it ranges from people born from 1980 until 2000!

    In 2000 a mining company in Mexico discovered a cave filled with giant crystals under the Sierra de Naica Mountain.

    The Chernobyl Nuclear Power Plant had four reactors and only one was impacted by the 1986 meltdown; the others continued producing power for several years and one (Reactor No. 3) produced power until it was decommissioned in 2000.

    405 is a three-minute film released in June 2000 had a budget of $300. It was the first “viral video”. $140 was to pay two tickets for walking on the highway shoulder while filming. It was issued to them by California Highway Patrol Officer Dana Anderson, who is listed in the “Special Thanks” section of the credits. The video created by Bruce Branit and Jeremy Hunt.

    Based on the 2000 Census, only 6.6% of the Hawaiian population comprised native Hawaiians.

    In July 2000, Turner Classic Movies aired The Wizard of Oz with the option of listening to Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of the Moon on a separate audio feed.

    Andre Geim won the (parody prize) Ig Nobel Prize in 2000 for his work on using magnetism to levitate a frog. 10 years later, his experiments regarding graphene won him the 2010 Nobel Prize in Physics. This makes him the only recipient of the Ig Nobel and Nobel Prizes.

    Only one Major League Baseball player has worn the number 69 for over a year- Bronson Arroyo, who wore it from 2000-2002 with the Pittsburgh Pirates.

    A naked man, Richard Hatch, won $1,000,000 in the first season of CBS’s Survivor.

    Cost of a Super Bowl ad in 2000: $2,200,000

    German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was supposed to turn the Holocaust memorial flame in Yad Vashem up. However, he turned the burner knob the wrong way and accidentally extinguished the flame.

    Richard Klinkhamer’s wife “disappeared” in 1991. He then wrote a book on seven ways to kill your spouse. In 2000, the new owners of his former home found the skeletal remains of his wife, and in 2001 he was sentenced to 7 years in prison. He was released in 2003 for good behavior.

    A study of 2000 high-performing CEOs found more non-college graduates (8%) than Ivy League graduates (7%).

    Sholom Weiss was sentenced to 845 years in Feb 2000 in Florida, for fraud and racketeering but was reduced to 835 years on FULL payment of restitution, $125,016,656.

    Between the years 1900 and 2000, the increase in world population was three times greater than during the entire previous history of humanity—an increase from 1.5 to 6.1 billion in just 100 years.

    World War II News

    András Toma was a Hungarian soldier taken prisoner by the Red Army in 1945, then discovered living in a Russian psychiatric hospital in 2000. He was the last prisoner of war from the Second World War to be repatriated.

    2000 Toys inducted to the National Toy Hall of Fame:

    Bicycle, Jacks, Jump Rope, Mr. Potato Head, Slinky

    1st Appearances & 2000’s Most Popular Christmas Gifts, Toys and Presents:

    Who wants to be a Millionaire Board Game, Barbie, Addams Family gift set

    Best Film Oscar Winner:

    American Beauty (presented in 2000)

    2000 Entries to The National Film Registry:

    Apocalypse Now (released in 1979)
    Dracula (released in 1931)
    The Fall of the House of Usher (released in 1928)
    Five Easy Pieces (released in 1970)
    Goodfellas (released in 1990)
    Koyaanisqatsi (released in 1983)
    The Land Beyond the Sunset (released in 1912)
    Let’s All Go to the Lobby (released in 1957)
    The Life of Emile Zola (released in 1937)
    Little Caesar (released in 1930)
    The Living Desert (released in 1953)
    Love Finds Andy Hardy (released in 1938)
    Multiple SIDosis (released in 1970)
    Network (released in 1976)
    Peter Pan (released in 1924)
    Porky in Wackyland (released in 1938)
    President McKinley Inauguration Footage (released in 1901)
    Regeneration (released in 1915)
    Salomé (released in 1923)
    Shaft (released in 1971)
    Sherman’s March (released in 1986)
    A Star Is Born (released in 1954)
    The Tall T (released in 1957)
    Why We Fight (released in 1943/1945)
    Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter? (released in 1957)
    Abbott and Costello Meet Frankenstein (released in 1948)

    The Big Movies: (according to boxofficemojo)

    1. How The Grinch Stole Christmas
    2. Cast Away
    3. Mission Impossible II
    4. Gladiator
    5. What Women Want
    6. The Perfect Storm
    7. Meet The Parents
    8. X-Men
    9. Scary Movie
    10. What Lies Beneath

    Broadway Show:

    Contact (Dance Musical) Opened on March 30, 2000 and closed on September 1, 2002

    2000’s Most Popular TV Shows:

    1. Survivor: The Australian Outback (CBS)
    2. ER (NBC)
    3. Who Wants to Be a Millionaire (ABC)
    4. Friends (NBC)
    5. Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS)
    6. NFL Monday Night Football (ABC)
    7. The Practice (ABC)
    8. CSI (CBS)
    9. Law & Order (NBC)
    10. Will & Grace (NBC)

    2000 Billboard Number One Songs:

    October 23, 1999- January 14, 2000:
    Smooth – Santana Featuring Rob Thomas

    January 15 – January 28:
    What A Girl Wants – Christina Aguilera

    January 29 – February 18:
    I Knew I Loved You – Savage Garden

    February 19 – February 25:
    Thank God I Found You – Mariah Carey featuring Joe and 98 Degrees

    February 26 – March 3:
    I Knew I Loved You – Savage Garden

    March 4 – March 17:
    Amazed – Lonestar

    March 18 – April 7:
    Say My Name – Destiny’s Child

    April 8 – June 16:
    Maria Maria – Santana featuring Wyclef Jean and The Product G&B

    June 17 – July 23:
    Try Again – Aaliyah

    June 24 – July 14:
    Be With You – Enrique Iglesias

    July 15July 21:
    Everything You Want – Vertical Horizon

    July 22 – July 28:
    Bent – Matchbox Twenty

    July 29 – August 11:
    It’s Gonna Be Me – *NSYNC

    August 12 – August 25:
    Incomplete – Sisqó

    August 26 – September 15:
    Doesn’t Really Matter – Janet Jackson

    September 16October 13:
    Music – Madonna

    October 14 – November 10:
    Come on Over (All I Want Is You) – Christina Aguilera

    November 11 – November 17:
    With Arms Wide Open – Creed

    November 18, 2000 – February 2, 2001:
    Independent Women – Destiny’s Child

    2000 United States Census:

    Total US Population: 281,421,906
    1. New York, New York – 8,008,278
    2. Los Angeles, California – 3,694,820
    3. Chicago, Illinois – 2,896,016
    4. Houston, Texas – 1,953,631
    5. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – 1,517,550
    6. Phoenix, Arizona – 1,321,045
    7. San Diego, California – 1,223,400
    8. Dallas, Texas – 1,188,580
    9. San Antonio, Texas – 1,144,646
    10. Detroit, Michigan – 951,270

    Sports:

    World Series Champions: New York Yankees
    Super Bowl XXXIV Champions: St. Louis Rams
    NBA Champions: Los Angeles Lakers
    Stanley Cup Champs: New Jersey Devils
    U.S. Open Golf Tiger Woods
    U.S. Tennis: (Men/Ladies) Marat Safin/Venus Williams
    Wimbledon (Men/Women): Pete Sampras/Venus Williams
    NCAA Football Champions: Oklahoma
    NCAA Basketball Champions: Michigan State
    Kentucky Derby: Fusaichi Pegasus

  • Popular and Best-selling Books From 2000

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 2000

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 2000:
    A Storm of Swords by George R.R. Martin
    The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay by Michael Chabon
    The Bear and the Dragon by Tom Clancy
    The Beatles Anthology by The Beatles
    Before I Say Good-Bye by Mary Higgins Clark
    The Brethren by John Grisham
    Cradle and All by James Patterson
    The Day John Died by Christopher Anderson
    Drowning Ruth by Christina Schwarz
    Easy Prey
    by John Sandford
    Flags of Our Fathers by James Bradley with Ron Powers
    Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
    Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire by J.K. Rowling
    House of Leaves by Mark Z. Danielewski
    The House on Hope Street by Danielle Steel
    Hot Six by Janet Evanovich
    The Indwelling: The Beast Takes Possession by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    It’s Not about the Bike by Lance Armstrong with Sally Jenkins
    Journey by Danielle Steel
    The Last Precinct by Patricia Cornwell
    The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen, Volume One by Alan Moore and Kevin O’Neill
    Life on the Other Side by Sylvia Browne with Lindsay Harrison
    The Mark: The Beast Rules the World by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    Me Talk Pretty One Day by David Sedaris
    Nothing Like It in the World by Stephen Ambrose
    The O’Reilly Factor by Bill O’Reilly
    Pastoralia by George Saunders
    The Rescue by Nicholas Sparks
    The Rock Says by The Rock with Joe Laydon
    Roses Are Red by James Patterson
    Star Wars by George Lucas
    Tuesdays with Morrie by Mtch Albom
    The Wedding by Danielle Steel
    White Teeth by Zadie Smith
    Winter Solstice by Rosamunde Pilcher
    Winter’s Heart by Robert Jordan

  • 2000 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    2000 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    2000  Popular Top 100 Song Chart

    1. Who Let The Dogs Out – Baha Men
    2. All The Small Things – Blink 182
    3. Amazed – Lonestar
    4. Oops! I Did It Again – Britney Spears
    5. Graduation – Vitamin C
    6. Bye Bye Bye – N*Sync
    7. Say My Name – Destiny’s Child
    8. Let’s Make Love – Tim McGraw and Faith Hill
    9. Zombie Nation – Kernkraft 400
    10. I Turn To You – Christina Aguilera
    11. I Knew I Loved You – Savage Garden
    12. It’s My Life – Bon Jovi
    13. Breathe – Faith Hill
    14. Shake Your Bon-Bon – Ricky Martin
    15. Blue (Da Ba Dee) – Eiffel 65
    16. Goodbye Earl – Dixie Chicks
    17. Let’s Get Married – Jagged Edge
    18. The Bad Touch – Bloodhound Gang
    19. The Real Slim Shady – Eminem
    20. Independent Woman – Destiny’s Child
    21. It’s Gonna Be Me – N*Sync
    22. Jumpin’ Jumpin’ – Destiny’s Child
    23. Sexual (Li Da Di) – Amber
    24. With Arms Wide Open – Creed
    25. Aaron’s Party (Come Get It) – Aaron Carter
    26. Lucky – Britney Spears
    27. Party Up – DMX
    28. Forgot About Dre – Dr. Dre & Eminem
    29. Gotta Tell You – Samantha Mumba
    30. Show Me The Meaning Of Being Lonely – Backstreet Boys
    31. Only God Knows Why – Kid Rock
    32. I Just Wanna Love You (Give It 2 Me) – Jay-Z
    33. Hot Boyz – Missy Elliot with Nas, Eve & Q-Tip
    34. I Like It – Sammie
    35. Country Grammar – Nelly
    36. Bounce With Me – Lil Bow Wow with Xscape
    37. He Loves You Not – Dream
    38. You Sang To Me – Marc Anthony
    39. Better Off Alone – Alice DeeJay
    40. Thong Song – SisqO
    41. Otherside – Red Hot Chili Peppers
    42. I Wanna Know – Joe
    43. What A Girl Wants – Christina Aguilera
    44. Faded – Soul Decision
    45. Wobble Wobble – 504 Boys
    46. Come On Over – Christina Aguilera
    47. What’s Your Fantasy – Ludacris
    48. Try Again – Aaliyah
    49. Pop Ya Collar – Usher
    50. She Bangs – Ricky Martin
    51. Angels – Robbie Williams
    52. Maria Maria – Santana featuring The Product G & B
    53. Shake Ya Ass – Mystikal
    54. Pinch Me – Barenaked Ladies
    55. Stan – Eminem (featuring Dido)
    56. Higher – Creed
    57. Cowboy Take Me Away – Dixie Chicks
    58. Feelin’ So Good – Jennifer Lopez
    59. My Best Friend – Tim McGraw
    60. Give Me Just One Night (Una Noche) – 98°
    61. Rollin’ (Urban Assault Vehicle) – Limp Biskit
    62. Heavy Things – Phish
    63. Rhythm Divine – Enrique Iglesias
    64. Music – Madonna
    65. I Think I’m In Love With You – Jessica Simpson
    66. Bent – Matchbox Twenty
    67. I Wanna Be With You – Mandy Moore
    68. Big Pimpin’ – Jay-Z with UGK
    69. This Time Around – Hanson
    70. Hope – Shaggy
    71. Dancing Queen – A*Teens
    72. Meet Virginia – Train
    73. Steal My Kisses – Ben Harper
    74. Little Black Back Pack – Stroke 9
    75. The Hardest Part of Breaking Up (Is Getting All Your Stuff) – 2Ge+ther
    76. I’m Outta Love – Anastacia
    77. Kryptonite – 3 Doors Down
    78. Broadway – Goo Goo Dolls
    79. I Try – Macy Gray
    80. Case of the Ex (Whatcha Gonna Do) – Mya
    81. Do It Again (Put Ya Hands Up) – Jay-Z
    82. Back Here – BBMak
    83. No More – Ruff Endz
    84. Californication – Red Hot Chili Peppers
    85. My Love Is Your Love – Whitney Houston
    86. Hanguingaround – Counting Crows
    87. The One – Backstreet Boys
    88. Everything You Want – Vertical Horizon
    89. Thank God I Found You – Mariah Carery, Joe and 98 Degrees
    90. Spanish Guitar – Toni Braxton
    91. Absolutely (Story of a Girl) – Ninedays
    92. Wonderful – Everclear
    93. There You Go – Pink
    94. Shape of My Heart – Backstreet Boys
    95. Learn To Fly – Foo Fighters
    96. Hey Papi – Jay-Z
    97. Take A Picture – Filter
    98. Never Let You Go – Third Eye Blind
    99. I Don’t Wanna – Aaliyah
    100. I Don’t Wanna Kiss You Goodnight – LFO
  • 2000 Oscars 72nd Academy Awards

    2000 Oscars 72nd Academy Awards

    2000 Oscars 72nd Academy Awards

    • Winners Announced: March 26, 2000
    • Held at: Los Angeles Shrine Auditorium, California
    • Host: Billy Crystal
    • Eligibility Year: 1999

    Trivia

    • American Beauty dominated the awards, winning five Oscars, including Best Picture, Best Director for Sam Mendes, and Best Actor for Kevin Spacey.
    • This was the last time Billy Crystal hosted the Oscars before returning 12 years later in 2012.
    • The Matrix made a strong showing in the technical categories, picking up four awards for Editing, Sound, Sound Effects Editing, and Visual Effects.
    • This Oscars event was infamous for the “He stole my Oscar!” moment when a man took Angelina Jolie’s Best Supporting Actress Oscar from a table during the post-show Governors Ball.
    • Hilary Swank won the Best Actress award for Boys Don’t Cry beating Annette Bening, who was a strong favorite for her role in American Beauty.
    • Pedro Almodóvar’s All About My Mother won for Best Foreign Language Film, adding to the director’s global recognition.
    • The Best Documentary Feature went to One Day in September, which detailed the tragic events surrounding the Munich Olympics in 1972.
    • Phil Collins won Best Original Song for “You’ll Be in My Heart” from Tarzan, echoing his Grammy win for the same song.
    • Michael Caine, winning Best Supporting Actor for The Cider House Rules, delivered one of the most emotional speeches of the night, paying tribute to his fellow nominees.
    • In a rare event, the ceremony had a tie in the Best Sound Editing category, with both The Matrix and Fight Club taking home the award.

    2000 Oscar Nominees and Winners

    Best Picture:
    American Beauty – Bruce Cohen and Dan Jinks, producers (WINNER)
    The Cider House Rules – Richard N. Gladstein, producer
    The Green Mile – Frank Darabont and David Valdes, producers
    The Insider – Pieter Jan Brugge and Michael Mann, producers
    The Sixth Sense – Frank Marshall, Kathleen Kennedy, and Barry Mendel, producers
    Best Director:
    Sam Mendes – American Beauty (WINNER)
    Spike Jonze – Being John Malkovich
    Lasse Hallström – The Cider House Rules
    Michael Mann – The Insider
    M. Night Shyamalan – The Sixth Sense
    Best Actor:
    Kevin Spacey – American Beauty as Lester Burnham (WINNER)
    Russell Crowe – The Insider as Jeffrey Wigand
    Richard Farnsworth – The Straight Story as Alvin Straight
    Sean Penn – Sweet and Lowdown as Emmet Ray
    Denzel Washington – The Hurricane as Rubin Carter
    Best Actress:
    Hilary Swank – Boys Don’t Cry as Brandon Teena (WINNER)
    Annette Bening – American Beauty as Carolyn Burnham
    Janet McTeer – Tumbleweeds as Mary Jo Walker
    Julianne Moore – The End of the Affair as Sarah Miles
    Meryl Streep – Music of the Heart as Roberta Guaspari
    Best Supporting Actor:
    Michael Caine – The Cider House Rules as Dr. Wilbur Larch (WINNER)
    Tom Cruise – Magnolia as Frank T.J. Mackey
    Michael Clarke Duncan – The Green Mile as John Coffey
    Jude Law – The Talented Mr. Ripley as Dickie Greenleaf
    Haley Joel Osment – The Sixth Sense as Cole Sear
    Best Supporting Actress:
    Angelina Jolie – Girl, Interrupted as Lisa Rowe (WINNER)
    Toni Collette – The Sixth Sense as Lynn Sear
    Catherine Keener – Being John Malkovich as Maxine Lund
    Samantha Morton – Sweet and Lowdown as Hattie
    Chloë Sevigny – Boys Don’t Cry as Lana Tisdel
    Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen:
    American Beauty – Alan Ball (WINNER)
    Being John Malkovich – Charlie Kaufman
    Magnolia – Paul Thomas Anderson
    The Sixth Sense – M. Night Shyamalan
    Topsy-Turvy – Mike Leigh
    Best Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published:
    The Cider House Rules – John Irving based on his novel (WINNER)
    Election – Alexander Payne and Jim Taylor from the novel by Tom Perrotta
    The Green Mile – Frank Darabont adapted from the novel by Stephen King
    The Insider – Eric Roth and Michael Mann based on the Vanity Fair article “The Man Who Knew Too Much” by Marie Brenner
    The Talented Mr. Ripley – Anthony Minghella adapted from the novel by Patricia Highsmith
    Best Foreign Language Film:
    All About My Mother (Spain) in Spanish – Pedro Almodóvar (WINNER)
    East/West (France) in French – Régis Wargnier
    Himalaya (Nepal) in Nepalese – Éric Valli
    Solomon & Gaenor (United Kingdom) in Welsh – Paul Morrison
    Under the Sun (Sweden) in Swedish – Colin Nutley
    Best Documentary Feature:
    One Day in September – Arthur Cohn and Kevin Macdonald (WINNER)
    Buena Vista Social Club – Wim Wenders and Ulrich Felsberg
    Genghis Blues – Roko Belic and Adrian Belic
    On the Ropes – Nanette Burstein and Brett Morgen
    Speaking in Strings – Paola di Florio and Lilibet Foster
    Best Documentary Short Subject:
    King Gimp – Susan Hannah Hadary and William A. Whiteford (WINNER)
    Eyewitness – Bert Van Bork
    The Wildest Show in the South: The Angola Prison Rodeo – Simeon Soffer and Jonathan Stack
    Best Live Action Short Film:
    My Mother Dreams the Satan’s Disciples in New York – Barbara Schock and Tammy Tiehel (WINNER)
    Bror, Min Bror – Henrik Ruben Genz and Michael W. Horsten
    Killing Joe – Mehdi Norowzian and Steve Wax
    Kleingeld – Marc-Andreas Bochert and Gabriele Lins
    Major and Minor Miracles – Marcus Olsson
    Best Animated Short Film:
    The Old Man and the Sea – Alexander Petrov (WINNER)
    3 Misses – Paul Driessen
    Humdrum – Peter Peake
    My Grandmother Ironed the King’s Shirts – Torill Kove
    When the Day Breaks – Wendy Tilby and Amanda Forbis
    Best Original Score:
    The Red Violin – John Corigliano (WINNER)
    American Beauty – Thomas Newman
    Angela’s Ashes – John Williams
    The Cider House Rules – Rachel Portman
    The Talented Mr. Ripley – Gabriel Yared
    Best Original Song:
    “You’ll Be in My Heart” from Tarzan – Music and Lyrics by Phil Collins (WINNER)
    “Blame Canada” from South Park: Bigger, Longer & Uncut – Music and Lyrics by Trey Parker and Marc Shaiman
    “Music of My Heart” from Music of the Heart – Music and Lyrics by Diane Warren
    “Save Me” from Magnolia – Music and Lyrics by Aimee Mann
    “When She Loved Me” from Toy Story 2 – Music and Lyrics by Randy Newman
    Best Sound Effects Editing:
    The Matrix – Dane Davis (WINNER)
    Fight Club – Ren Klyce and Richard Hymns
    Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace – Ben Burtt and Tom Bellfort
    Best Sound:
    The Matrix – John T. Reitz, Gregg Rudloff, David E. Campbell and David Lee (WINNER)
    The Green Mile – Robert J. Litt, Elliot Tyson, Michael Herbick and Willie D. Burton
    The Insider – Andy Nelson, Doug Hemphill and Lee Orloff
    The Mummy – Leslie Shatz, Chris Carpenter, Rick Kline and Chris Munro
    Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace – Gary Rydstrom, Tom Johnson, Shawn Murphy and John Midgley
    Best Art Direction:
    Sleepy Hollow – Art Direction: Rick Heinrichs; Set Decoration: Peter Young (WINNER)
    Anna and the King – Art Direction: Luciana Arrighi; Set Decoration: Ian Whittaker
    The Cider House Rules – Art Direction: David Gropman; Set Decoration: Beth Rubino
    The Talented Mr. Ripley – Art Direction: Roy Walker; Set Decoration: Bruno Cesari
    Topsy-Turvy – Art Direction: Eve Stewart; Set Decoration: Eve Stewart and John Bush
    Best Cinematography:
    American Beauty – Conrad Hall (WINNER)
    The End of the Affair – Roger Pratt
    The Insider – Dante Spinotti
    Sleepy Hollow – Emmanuel Lubezki
    Snow Falling on Cedars – Robert Richardson
    Best Makeup:
    Topsy-Turvy – Christine Blundell and Trefor Proud (WINNER)
    Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me – Michèle Burke and Mike Smithson
    Bicentennial Man – Greg Cannom
    Life – Rick Baker
    Best Costume Design:
    Topsy-Turvy – Lindy Hemming (WINNER)
    Anna and the King – Jenny Beavan
    Sleepy Hollow – Colleen Atwood
    The Talented Mr. Ripley – Ann Roth and Gary Jones
    Titus – Milena Canonero
    Best Film Editing:
    The Matrix – Zach Staenberg (WINNER)
    American Beauty – Tariq Anwar and Christopher Greenbury
    The Cider House Rules – Lisa Zeno Churgin
    The Insider – William Goldenberg, Paul Rubell and David Rosenbloom
    The Sixth Sense – Andrew Mondshein
    Best Visual Effects:
    The Matrix – John Gaeta, Janek Sirrs, Steve Courtley and Jon Thum (WINNER)
    Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace – John Knoll, Dennis Muren, Scott Squires and Rob Coleman
    Stuart Little – John Dykstra, Jerome Chen, Henry F. Anderson III and Eric Allard
    Academy Honorary Award:
    Andrzej Wajda
    Irving G. Thalberg Award:
    Warren Beatty
  • 2000 Grammy Award Winners

    2000 Grammy Award Winners

    2000 Grammy Award Winners

    • Winners Announced: February 23, 2000
    • Held at: Staples Center, Los Angeles, California
    • Host: Rosie O’Donnell
    • Eligibility Year: October 1, 1998 – September 30, 1999

    2000 Grammys Trivia

    • The ceremony marked the debut of the Staples Center as the event’s venue, moving from its previous location, the Shrine Auditorium.
    • Carlos Santana’s Supernatural swept the awards with nine Grammys, tying Michael Jackson’s record for the most wins in a single night.
    • Eminem made headlines for winning Best Rap Album for The Slim Shady LP, amidst controversy over the album’s lyrical content.
    • TLC’s “No Scrubs” bagged Best R&B Song and Best R&B Performance by a Duo or Group, strengthening the influence of R&B in mainstream music.
    • In a curious twist, Sting won Best Pop Vocal Album for Brand New Day while also securing the Best Male Pop Vocal Performance for the title track.
    • The Best New Artist category featured a notable lineup, including Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, Kid Rock, Macy Gray, and Susan Tedeschi. Christina Aguilera took home the prize.
    • The year 2000 was significant for Latin music, as Ricky Martin performed “The Cup of Life,” energizing the genre’s presence in mainstream American music.
    • Diane Warren won Song of the Year for “You’ll Be In My Heart,” performed by Phil Collins for the Tarzan soundtrack.
    • As a sign of changing times, MP3.com received a special technical Grammy award, acknowledging the influence of digital media on the music industry.
    • Country legend Johnny Cash was awarded a posthumous Grammy for Best Male Country Vocal Performance for his rendition of “Solitary Man.”

    2000 Grammy Winners

    Record of the Year:
    Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
    Album of the Year:
    Supernatural – Santana (Arista Records):
    Song of the Year:
    Smooth – Itaal Shur and Rob Thomas, songwriters
    New Artist:
    Christina Aguilera
    Female Pop Vocal:
    I Will Remember You – Sarah McLachlan
    Male Pop Vocal:
    Brand New Day – Sting
    Pop Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Maria Maria – Santana
    Pop Collaboration with Vocals:
    Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
    Pop Instrumental:
    El Farol – Santana
    Dance Recording:
    Believe – Cher
    Pop Album:
    Brand New Day – Sting (A&M Records)
    Traditional Pop Album:
    Bennett Sings Ellington Hot and Cool – Tony Bennett
    Female Rock Vocal:
    Sweet Child O’ Mine – Sheryl Crow
    Male Rock Vocal:
    American Woman – Lenny Kravitz
    Rock Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Put Your Lights On – Santana featuring Everlast
    Hard Rock:
    Whiskey in the Jar – Metallica
    Metal:
    Iron Man – Black Sabbath
    Rock Instrumental:
    The Calling – Santana featuring Eric Clapton
    Rock Song:
    Scar Tissue – Flea, John Frusciante, Anthony Kiedis, and Chad Smith, songwriters
    Rock Album:
    Supernatural – Santana (Arista Records)
    Alternative Music Performance:
    Mutations – Beck
    Female R&B Vocal:
    It’s Not Right but It’s Okay – Lauryn Hill
    Male R&B Vocal:
    Staying Power – Barry White
    R&B Duo or Group with Vocals:
    No Scrubs – TLC
    R&B Song:
    No Scrubs – Kevin ‘Shekspere’ Briggs, Kandi Burruss, and Tameka Cottle, songwriters
    R&B Album:
    Fanmail – TLC (LaFace Records):
    Traditional R&B Vocal Performance:
    Staying Power – Barry White
    Rap Solo:
    My Name Is – Eminem
    Rap Duo or Group:
    You Got Me – The Roots featuring Erykah Badu
    Rap Album:
    The Slim Shady LP – Eminem
    Female Country Vocal:
    Man! I Feel like a Woman! – Shania Twain
    Male Country Vocal:
    Choices – George Jones
    Country Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Ready to Run – Dixie Chicks
    Country Collaboration with Vocals:
    After the Gold Rush – Emmylou Harris, Linda Ronstadt, and Dolly Parton
    Country Instrumental:
    Bob’s Breakdowns – Asleep At The Wheel featuring Tommy Allsup, Floyd Domino, Larry Franklin, Vince Gill, and Steve Wariner
    Country Song:
    Come On Over – Robert John Mutt Lange and Shania Twain, songwriters
    Country Album:
    Fly – Dixie Chicks (Monument Records):
    Bluegrass Album:
    Ancient Tones – Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder (Skaggs Family Records)
    New Age Album:
    Celtic Solstice – Paul Winter and Friends (Living Music)
    Contemporary Jazz:
    Inside – David Sanborn
    Jazz Vocal:
    When I Look in Your Eyes – Diana Krall
    Jazz Instrumental, Solo:
    In Walked Wayne – Wayne Shorter
    Jazz Instrumental, Individual or Group:
    Like Minds – Gary Burton, Chick Corea, Pat Metheny, Roy Haynes, and Dave Holland (Concord Jazz)
    Large Jazz Ensemble:
    Serendipity 18 – The Bob Florence Limited Edition
    Latin Jazz:
    Latin Soul – Poncho Sanchez
    Rock Gospel Album:
    Pray – Rebecca St. James (ForeFront Records)
    Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album:
    Speechless – Steven Curtis Chapman (Sparrow Records)
    Southern Gospel, Country Gospel, or Bluegrass Gospel Album:
    Kennedy Center Homecoming – Bill and Gloria Gaither and Their Homecoming Friends(Spring House Music Group)
    Traditional Soul Gospel Album:
    Christmas with Shirley Caesar – Shirley Caesar (Myrrh Records)
    Contemporary Soul Gospel Album:
    Mountain High . . . Valley Low – Yolanda Adams (Elektra Entertainment Group)
    Gospel Album by a Choir or Chorus
    High and Lifted Up – The Brooklyn Tabernacle Choir; Carol Cymbala, Choir Director (Atlantic Records)
    Latin Pop:
    Tiempos – Rubén Blades
    Latin Rock/Alternative:
    Resurrection – Chris Perez Band
    Tropical Latin:
    Mambo Birdland – Tito Puente
    Salsa:
    Llego . . . Van Van: Van Van Is Here – Los Van Van
    Merengue:
    Pintame – Elvis Crespo
    Mexican-American:
    100 Años de Mariachi – Plácido Domingo
    Tejano:
    Por Eso Te Amo – Los Palominos
    Traditional Blues:
    Blues on the Bayou – B. B. King (MCA Records)
    Contemporary Blues:
    Take Your Shoes Off – The Robert Cray Band (Rykodisc)
    Traditional Folk:
    Press On – June Carter Cash (Risk/Small Hairy Dog Records)
    Contemporary Folk:
    Mule Variations – Tom Waits (Tom Waits)
    Reggae Album:
    Calling Rastafari – Burning Spear (Heartbeat Records)
    World Music Album:
    Livro – Caetano Veloso (Nonesuch Records)
    Polka Album:
    Polkasonic – Brave Combo (Cleveland International Records)
    Musical Album for Children:
    The Adventures of Elmo in Grouchland – Various Artists (Sony Wonder)
    Spoken Word Album for Children:
    Listen to the Storyteller – Wynton Marsalis, Graham Greene, and Kate Winslet (Sony Classical)
    Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album:
    The Autobiography of Martin Luther King, Jr. – LeVar Burton (with Martin Luther King, Jr.) (Time Warner Audiobooks)
    Spoken Comedy Album:
    Bigger and Blacker – Chris Rock (DreamWorks Records)
    Musical Show Album:
    Annie Get Your Gun (Angel Records)
    Best Soundtrack Album:
    Tarzan – Phil Collins (Walt Disney Records)
    Instrumental Composition for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    A Bug’s Life – Randy Newman, Composer:
    Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    Beautiful Stranger (from Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me) – Madonna and William Orbit, songwriters
    Instrumental Composition:
    Joyful Noise Suite – Don Sebesky, Composer
    Instrumental Arrangement:
    Chelsea Bridge – Don Sebesky, arranger
    Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocals:
    Lonely Town – Alan Broadbent, arranger
    Best Recording Package:
    Ride with Bob – Ray Benson, Sally Carns, and Buddy Jackson, art directors (DreamWorks Records Nashville)
    Best Album Notes:
    John Coltrane – The Classic Quartet-Complete Impulse! Studio Recordings – Bob Blumenthal, album notes writer
    Historical Album:
    The Duke Ellington Centennial Edition?The Complete RCA Victor Recordings (1927-1973) (RCA Victor/BMG Classics)
    Best-Engineered Album – Non-Classical:
    When I Look in Your Eyes – Al Schmitt, engineer (Verve Records)
    Producer, Non-Classical:
    Walter Afanasieff
    Remixer, Non-Classical:
    Club 69 (Peter Rauhofer)
    Best-Engineered Album – Classical:
    Stravinsky: Firebird; The Rite of Spring; Perséphone – Markus Heiland, engineer
    Classical Producer:
    Adam Abeshouse
    Classical Album:
    Stravinsky: Firebird; The Rite of Spring; Perséphone – Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor (RCA Victor Red Seal)
    Orchestral:
    Stravinsky: Firebird; The Rite of Spring; Perséphone – Michael Tilson Thomas, conductor (Deutsche Grammophon)
    Opera:
    Stravinsky: The Rake’s Progress – John Eliot Gardiner, conductor (Deutsche Grammophon)
    Choral:
    Britten: War Requiem – Robert Shafer, conductor (The Washington Chorus)
    Instrumental Soloist with Orchestra:
    Prokofiev: Piano Cons. Nos. 1 and 3/Bartók: Piano Con. No. 3 – Martha Argerich, piano; Charles Dutoit, conductor
    Instrumental Soloist without Orchestra:
    Shostakovich: 24 Preludes and Fugues, Op. 87 – Vladimir Ashkenazy, piano
    Chamber Music:
    Beethoven: The Violin Sonatas (Nos. 1-3, Op. 12; Nos. 1-3, Op. 30; “Spring” Sonata, Etc.) – Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin; Lambert Orkis, piano
    Small Ensemble Performance (with or without Conductor):
    Colors Of Love (Works of Thomas, Stucky, Tavener, Rands, Etc.) – Chanticleer; Joseph Jennings, conductor
    Classical Vocal:
    Mahler: Des Knaben Wunderhorn – Thomas Quasthoff, baritone; Anne Sofie von Otter, mezzo soprano
    Classical Contemporary Composition:
    Boulez: Répons – Pierre Boulez, Composer
    Classical Crossover Album:
    Schickele: Hornsmoke (Piano Con. No. 2 in F Maj. ‘Ole’; Brass Calendar; Hornsmoke-A Horse Opera) – The Chestnut Brass Co.; Peter Schickele, piano and narrator
    Music Video, Short Form:
    Freak on a Leash – (Korn), Jonathan Dayton, Valerie Faris, Todd McFarlane, and Graham Morris, video directors
    Music Video, Long Form:
    Band of Gypsys – Live at Fillmore East – (Jimi Hendrix), Bob Smeaton, video director
  • 1999 Number One Hits

    1999 Number One Hits

    1999 Billboard Number One Hits:

    December 5, 1998 – January 14, 1999:
    I’m Your Angel – R. Kelly & Céline Dion
    January 15 – January 28:
    Have You Ever – Brandy
    January 29 – February 12:
    …Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
    February 13 – March 12:
    Angel Of Mine – Monica
    March 13 – April 9:
    Believe – Cher
    April 10 – May 7:
    No Scrubs – TLC
    May 8 – June 11:
    Livin’ La Vida Loca – Ricky Martin
    June 12 – July 16:
    If You Had My Love – Jennifer Lopez
    July 17 – July 23:
    Bills, Bills, Bills – Destiny’s Child
    July 24 – July 30:
    Wild Wild West – Will Smith featuring Dru Hill and Kool Moe Dee
    July 31 – September 3:
    Genie In A Bottle – Christina Aguilera
    September 4 – September 17:
    Bailamos – Enrique Iglesias
    September 18 – October 8:
    Unpretty – TLC
    October 9 – October 22:
    Heartbreaker – Mariah Carey featuring Jay-Z
    October 23, 1999- January 14, 2000:
    Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas

    (Data is compiled from various charts including Billboard’s “Pop,” “Rock,” “Airplay,” “R&B/Dance” and “Singles” Charts. The “Hot 100” is the primary chart used for this list.)

  • 1999 History, Facts and Trivia

    1999 History, Facts and Trivia

    1999 History, Facts and Trivia

    Quick Facts from 1999:

    • World Wide Worry: Would the Y2K computer bug end the world as we know it?
    • The Top Song was Smooth by Santana with Rob Thomas
    • The Movies to Watch include The Sixth Sense, Stuart Little, Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me and Tarzan
    • The Most Famous Person in America was probably Bill Gates
    • Notable books include: Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling and From Hell(collected) by Alan Moore and Eddie Campbell
    • Price of a postage stamp in 1999: 33 cents
      Sony Discman: $59.00
      Crayola crayons 64 pack: $1.79
    • The Funny Guys were: Chris Rock and Mitch Hedberg
      The Funny Late Late Night Host: Craig Kilborn
    • Myth Becomes Reality: Prior to 1999, the American Express Black Card was just a myth. AmEx decided to capitalize on it and actually make a black, exclusive credit card. You can only qualify if you are a multi-millionaire and get an invitation.
    Top Ten Baby Names of 1999:
    Emily, Hannah, Alexis, Sarah, Samantha, Jacob, Michael, Matthew, Joshua, Nicholas
    Fashion Icons and Sex Symbols:
    Gisele Bündchen, Angelina Jolie, Salma Hayek, Claudia Schiffer, Jennifer Love Hewitt, Shania Twain, Denise Richards, Rebecca Romijn, Heidi Klum
    Leading Men and Hollywood Hunks:
    David Beckham, Christian Bale, Justin Timberlake, George Clooney

    “The Quotes”
    “I see dead people”
    – Haley Joel Osment, in ‘The Sixth Sense’

    ‘Is that your final answer?’
    – Regis Philbin, on Who Wants To Be A Millionaire?

    Time Magazine’s Person of the Year:
    Jeff Bezos
    Miss America:
    Nicole Johnson (Virginia Beach, VA)
    Miss USA:
    Kimberly Pressler (New York)
    The Scandals:
    Y2k was a bust. Many thought that most computers would stop working when the year 2000 hit.
    Airplane Celebrity Death:
    John F. Kennedy Jr.
    Sports Entertainment Death:
    Owen Hart (WWF wrestler, live on TV). He fell to his death when the harness that was supposed to slowly lower him into the ring prematurely snapped, causing him to fall 78 feet
    Tragedy:
    12 people were killed and 27 injured at Texas A&M University when a massive bonfire under construction collapsed.
    Pro Golfer Death:
    Payne Stewart when his plane lost cabin pressure and all occupants passed out. After 4 hours of autopilot, the airplane crashed in South Dakota.
    TV Child Star Death:
    Dana Plato, age 34 (overdose)

    Ouch:
    Joan Murray survived a 14,500 ft fall when her main parachute failed while skydiving. She landed in a fire ant mound. Numerous venomous stings caused an adrenaline rush to keep her heart beating long enough for doctors to assist.

    A schizophrenic man broke into George Harrison’s home and stabbed him over 40 times. His wife incapacitated the man and George was hospitalized. His official statement following the attack was “He wasn’t a burglar, and he certainly wasn’t auditioning for the Traveling Wilburys.”

    Gardner Museum Art Heist: $500 million worth of art from Rembrandt, Vermeer, Manet, and Degas were stolen from a museum. They have never been recovered.

    World Facts:

     

    Scotland re-established its parliament in 1999 after the Scotland Act (1998) was passed by the British parliament after a referendum. One of the first words spoken in the Parliament were, “The Scottish Parliament, which adjourned on March 25, 1707, is hereby reconvened.”

    There was a two-week-long lion-hyena war over disputed territory in Ethiopia during 1999, where lions killed 35 hyenas and hyenas managed to kill six lions, with the lions eventually taking over the territory.

    Despite the fact that they have been in use since the late 19th century, the current flag and national anthem of Japan were not official until 1999.

    Jonathan James was only 15 when he hacked into the systems of NASA and the United States Department of Defense in June 1999. Since he was a juvenile, he was charged with 2 counts of “juvenile delinquency” placed under a 6 month home arrest and asked to write apology letters to NASA and the Department of Defense.

    Hackers revealed a security flaw in Hotmail that permitted anybody to log in to any Hotmail account using the password ‘eh’. At the time it was called “the most widespread security incident in the history of the Web”.

    Pop Culture Facts & History:
    Finally, Pac-Man’s Perfect Score! Billy Mitchell, played Pac-Man for six hours non-stop to reach the 256th screen and achieve a score of 3,333,360. Pac-Man was released in 1980.

    July 1st is Bobby Bonilla Day, the day in which the New York Mets pay Bobby Bonilla, a man who last played for them in 1999, $1.19 million until the year 2035.

    Prior to 1999, the mythical American Express Black Card was just that: a myth. The myth became so pervasive that AmEx decided to capitalize on it and actually make a black, ultra-exclusive credit card.

    For the 1999 Disney film Tarzan, Phil Collins sang all his own songs for the Spanish, French, Italian, and German translations of the soundtrack.

    On May 19th, 1999 when Star Wars: The Phantom Menace released into theaters, an estimated 2.2 million full-time employees missed work to watch the film, costing the US an estimated $293 million dollars from loss of productivity.

    Maude Flanders was killed-off on The Simpsons because of a pay raise dispute with the voice actress, Maggie Roswell. She was flying back-and-forth from Denver to Los Angeles and wanted a raise to cover the costs. Fox offered her a $150 per episode raise, so she quit.

    According to the 1999 film the Matrix, Neo’s passport expires on September 11, 2001.

    3.4 million copies of the animated Disney movie, The Rescuers, were recalled in 1999 because it contained two frames where there was a naked woman in the background.

    They Might Be Giants were the first major-label recording artist to release an entire album exclusively in mp3 format.

    In November of 1999, Kevin Smith attended a protest against his own movie, Dogma. He even made it onto the local news, when the on-the-scene reporter asked him (not knowing it was him) his thoughts on the movie. He responded: “I don’t know, but I’ve been told, ‘not good.’”. He said his name was ‘Bryan Johnson’.

    The Screen Actors Guild strike of 1999 prevented the use of live actors in advertising. Needing an ad campaign, an insurance company turned to CGI to replace the actor. Thus, the Geico Gecko was born.

    In 1999 the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that software source code is protected speech.

    A Las Vegas couple were unable to come to a decision on how to split up their Beanie Baby collection during their divorce settlement. A judge ordered them to dump their collection on the floor of the court and take turns picking them one-by-one.

    In 1999 Google brought in 16 students to test out their search engine. Upon reaching the site, they sat still for 45 seconds, just staring. Worried, Google finally asked what was wrong. All 16 responded the same: they were waiting for the rest of the page to load.

    The Kyocera VP-210 was released in 1999. The phone had an 0.11MP camera and could take up to 20 pictures before its onboard storage was full.

    When the Nick Drake song Pink Moon was used in a Volkswagen commercial in 1999, the US sales of his albums went from about 6,000 in 1999 to 74,000 in 2000.

    When he retired in 1999, Wayne Gretzky held or shared 61 NHL records. #thegreatone

    Austin Powers The Spy Who Shagged Me (1999) re-used the rocket launch scene from 1995’s Apollo 13.

    Susan Lucci won her first Daytime Emmy Award, after 19 nominations.

    Cost of a Super Bowl ad in 1999: $1,600,000

    The Habits:
    Collecting Pokemon “pocket monsters” toys, cards, and games. Also, watching them on television.

    Watching The Blair With Project in theaters. The film earned $248 Million and cost about $25,000.

    Watching ABC TV’s Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? at home. This show was the spark for network reality television.

    1999 Toys inducted to the National Toy Hall of Fame:
    Barbie, Crayola Crayon, Erector Set, Etch A Sketch, Frisbee, Hula Hoop, Lego, Lincoln Logs, Marbles, Monopoly, Play-Doh, Radio Flyer Wagon, Roller Skates, Teddy Bear, Tinkertoy, View-Master, Duncan Yo-Yo
    1st Appearances & 1999’s Most Popular Christmas Gifts, Toys and Presents:
    Furby Babies, Pokemon, Mary-Kate and Ashley and Britney Spears dolls, Chuck-E-Cheese Pizza Factory
    Broadway Shows:
    Fosse (Dance Musical) Opened on January 14, 1999, and closed on August 25, 2001
    Annie Get Your Gun (Musical) Opened on March 4, 1999, and closed on September 1, 2001
    East End Shows:
    Mamma Mia! (Musical) Opened on April 6, 1999
    The Lion King (Musical) Opened on October 19, 1999

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1999:
    A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe
    The Alibi by Sandra Brown
    Apollyon by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    Assassins by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    Bittersweet by Danielle Steel
    Black Notice by Patricia Cornwell
    Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee
    From Hell (collected) by Alan Moore Eddie Campbell
    The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon by Stephen King
    Hannibal by Thomas Harris
    Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
    Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling
    Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
    Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri
    Irresistible Forces by Danielle Steel
    Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem
    The Perks of Being a Wallflower
    by Stephen Chbosky
    Southern Cross by Patricia Cornwell
    Star Wars: Episode 1, The Phantom Menace by Terry Brooks
    Tara Road by Maeve Binchy
    The Testament by John Grisham
    Timeline by Michael Crichton
    We’ll Meet Again by Mary Higgins Clark

    Best Film Oscar Winner:
    Shakespeare in Love (presented in 1999)
    1999 Entries to The National Film Registry:
    Civilization (released in 1916)
    Do the Right Thing (released in 1989)
    The Docks of New York (released in 1928)
    Duck Amuck (released in 1953)
    Emperor Jones (released in 1933)
    Gunga Din (released in 1939)
    In the Land of the Head Hunters (released in 1914)
    Jazz on a Summer’s Day (released in 1959)
    King: A Filmed Record… Montgomery to Memphis (released in 1970)
    The Kiss (released in 1896)
    Kiss Me Deadly (released in 1955)
    Lambchops (released in 1929)
    Laura (released in 1944)
    Master Hands (released in 1936)
    My Man Godfrey (released in 1936)
    Night of the Living Dead (released in 1968)
    The Plow That Broke the Plains (released in 1936)
    Raiders of the Lost Ark (released in 1981)
    Roman Holiday (released in 1953)
    The Shop Around the Corner (released in 1940)
    A Streetcar Named Desire (released in 1951)
    The Ten Commandments (released in 1956)
    Trance and Dance in Bali (released in 1936/1939)
    The Wild Bunch (released in 1969)
    Woman of the Year (released in 1942)
    The Big Movies: (according to boxofficemojo)
    1. Star Wars Episode One: The Phantom Menace
    2. The Sixth Sense
    3. Toy Story 2
    4. Austin Powers: The Spy Who Shagged Me
    5. The Matrix
    6. Tarzan
    7. Big Daddy
    8. The Mummy
    9. Runaway Bride
    10. Blair Witch Project
    1999 Most Popular TV Shows:
    1. Who Wants To Be a Millionaire (ABC)
    2. E.R. (NBC)
    3. Friends (NBC)
    4. Frasier (NBC)
    5. 60 Minutes (CBS)
    6. The Practice (ABC)
    7. Touched By An Angel (CBS)
    8. Law and Order (NBC)
    9. Everybody Loves Raymond (CBS)
    10. Jesse (NBC)

    1999 Billboard Number One Songs:
    December 5 – January 15:
    I’m Your Angel – R. Kelly & Céline Dion

    January 16 – January 29:
    Have You Ever – Brandy

    January 30 – February 7:
    …Baby One More Time – Britney Spears

    February 13 – March 12:
    Angel Of Mine – Monica

    March 13 – April 9:
    Believe – Cher

    April 10 – May 7:
    No Scrubs – TLC

    May 8 – June 4:
    Livin’ La Vida Loca – Ricky Martin

    June 5 – July 16:
    If You Had My Love – Jennifer Lopez

    July 17 – July 23:
    Bills, Bills, Bills – Destiny’s Child

    July 24 – July 30:
    Wild Wild West – Will Smith featuring Dru Hill and Kool Moe Dee

    July 31 – September 3:
    Genie In A Bottle – Christina Aguilera

    September 4 – September 17:
    Bailamos – Enrique Iglesias

    September 18 – October 8:
    Unpretty – TLC

    October 9 – October 22:
    Heartbreaker – Mariah Carey featuring Jay-Z

    October 23, 1999- January 14, 2000:
    Smooth – Santana Featuring Rob Thomas

    Sports:
    World Series Champions: New York Yankees
    Super Bowl XXXIII Champions: Denver Broncos
    NBA Champions: San Antonio Spurs
    Stanley Cup Champs: Dallas Stars
    U.S. Open Golf Payne Stewart
    U.S. Tennis: (Men/Ladies) Andre Agassi/Serena Williams
    Wimbledon (Men/Women): Pete Sampras/Lindsay Davenport
    NCAA Football Champions: Florida State
    NCAA Basketball Champions: Connecticut
    Kentucky Derby: Charismatic

    Sports Highlights:
    Lance Armstrong won the Tour de France for the first time, winning seven in all, losing all of them later, in 2012.

    Brandi Chastain’s penalty kick won for the U.S. Women’s Soccer Team, beating Chin. She dropped to her knees and ripped off her jersey in celebration. Sports bras as outerwear became somewhat fashionable for a few months after that.

     

  • Popular and Best-selling Books From The 1990s

    Popular and Best-selling Books From The 1990s

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1990:

    The Bad Place by Dean Koontz
    The Black Book by Orhan Pamuk
    The Bourne Ultimatum by Robert Ludlum
    The Buddah of Suburbia by Hanif Kureishi
    The Burden of Proof by Scott Turow
    Daddy by Daniel Steel
    The Dark Place by Stephen King
    Devices and Desires by P.D. James
    Four Past Midnight by Stephen King
    L.A. Confidential by James Ellroy
    Memories of Midnight by Sidney Sheldon
    Oh, the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Seuss
    The Plains of Passage by Jean M. Auel
    September by Rosamunde Pilcher
    The Stand by Stephen King
    Thanos Quest by Jim Starlin and Ron Lim
    The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien
    The Very Quiet Cricket by Eric Carle
    The Wheels on the Bus by Paul O. Zelinsky

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1991:

    A Thousand Acres by Jane Smiley
    America Psycho by Bret Easton Ellis
    The Dark Tower III: The Waste Lands by Stephen King
    The Doomsday Conspiracy by Sidney Sheldon
    The Firm by John Grisham
    Goodnight Moon (orig. 1942 board book) by Margaret Wise Brown and Clement Hurd
    Heartbeat by Danielle Steel
    Heir to the Empire by Timothy Zahn
    I Spy: A Book of Picture Riddles by Jean Marzollo, photos by Walter Wick
    The Infinity Gauntlet by Jim Starlin, Gerorge Perez and Ron Lim
    The Kitchen God’s Wife by Amy Tan
    Loves Music, Loves to Dance
    by Mary Higgins Clark
    Mao II by Don DeLillo
    Mating by Norman Rush
    Needful Things by Stephen King
    Night Over Water by Ken Follett
    No Greater Love by Danielle Steel
    Oh, the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Seuss
    The Plains of Passage by Jean M. Auel
    Possession by A.S. Byatt
    Remember by Barbara Taylor Bradford
    Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley
    The Secret Pilgrim by John le Carre
    The Seeress of Kell by David Eddings
    The Sum of All Fears by Tom Clancy

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1992:

    All Around the Town by Mary Higgins Clark
    The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Walker
    Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King
    Dr Atkins’s New Diet Revolution by Robert Atkins
    The English Patient by Michael Ondaatje
    Gerald’s Game by Stephen King
    Hideaway by Dean Koontz
    Jewels by Danielle Steel
    Men Are from Mars, Women Are from Venus by John Gray
    Mexico by James A. Michener
    Mixed Blessings by Danielle Steel
    Oh, the Places You’ll Go by Dr. Suess
    The Pelican Brief by John Grisham
    The Rainbow Fish by Marcus Pfister
    Rising Sun by Michael Crichton
    Scarlett by Alexandra Ripley
    The Secret History by Donna Tartt
    Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson
    The Stars Shine Down by Sidney Sheldon
    The Tale of the Body Thief by Anne Rice
    The Volcano Lover by Susan Sontag
    Waiting to Exhale by Terry McMillan
    The Way Things Ought To Be by Rush Limbaugh
    Where is Joe Merchant? by Jimmy Buffet

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1993:

    The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller
    Cat’s Cradle by Anne Akers Johnson and Sarah Boore
    The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield
    The Client by John Grisham
    Dolores Claiborne by Stephen King
    Dragon Tears by Dean Koontz
    The Giver by Lois Lowry
    Lasher by Anne Rice
    Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel
    Nightmares & Dreamscapes by Stephen King
    Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha by Roddy Doyle
    Pleading Guilty by Scott Turow
    The Scorpio Illusion by Robert Ludlum
    See I Told You So by Rush Limbaugh
    The Shipping News by E. Annie Prouls
    Slow Waltz in Cedar Bend by Robert James Waller
    Without Remorse by Tom Clancy
    Vanished by Danielle Steel
    The Virgin Suicides by Jeffrey Eugenides

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1994:

    Accident by Danielle Steel
    The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller
    The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield
    The Chamber by John Grisham
    Debt of Honor by Tom Clancy
    Disclosure by Michael Crichton
    The Gift by Danielle Steel
    Gun, With Occasional Music by Jonathan Lethem
    The Ice Storm by Rick Moody
    Insomnia by Stephen King
    Disney’s the Lion King (adapted by) Justine Korman
    Politically Correct Bedtime Stories by James Finn Garner
    Remember Me by Mary Higgins Clark
    Slow Waltz in Cedar Bend by Robert James Waller
    Taltos by Anne Rice
    Who Will Run the Frog Hospital? by Lorrie Moore
    Wings by Danielle Steel

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1995:

    Beach Music by Pat Conroy
    The Bridges of Madison County by Robert James Waller
    The Celestine Prophecy by James Redfield
    The Christmas Box by Richard Paul Evans
    Emotional Intelligence by Daniel Goleman
    Five Days in Paris by Danielle Steel
    From Potter’s Field by Patricia Cornwell
    The Golden Compass by Philip Pullman
    Guess How Much I Love You by Sam McBratney and Anita Jeram
    The Horse Whisperer by Nicholas Evans
    “L” Is for Lawless by Sue Grafton
    Lightning by Danielle Steel
    The Lost World by Michael Crichton
    Memnoch the Devil by Anne Rice
    Politically Correct Holiday Stories by James Finn Garner
    The Rainmaker by John Grisham
    The Rings of Saturn by W.G. Sebald
    Rose Madder by Stephen King
    Sabbath’s Theater by Philip Roth

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1996:

    A Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin
    Airframe by Michael Crichton
    Bridget Jones’s Diary by Helen Fielding
    Cause of Death by Patricia Cornwell
    The Christmas Box by Richard Paul Evans
    CivilWarLand in Bad Decline by George Saunders
    The Deep End of the Ocean by Jacquelyn Mitchard
    Desperation by Stephen King
    Executive Orders by Tom Clancy
    Falling Up by Shel Silverstein
    Fight Club by Chuck Palahniuk
    The Green Mile by Stephen King
    The Horse Whisperer by Nicholas Evans
    How Stella Got Her Groove Back by Terry McMillan
    Infinite Jest by David Foster Wallace
    Intensity by Dean Koontz
    It Takes a Village by Hillary Clinton
    Kingdom Come by Mark Waid and Alex Ross
    Malice by Danielle Steel
    Moonlight Becomes You by Mary Higgins Clark
    Primary Colors by Anonymous (Joe Klein)
    The Regulators by Richard Bachman (Stephen King)
    The Runaway Jury by John Grisham
    Servant of the Bones by Anne Rice
    Silent Honor by Danielle Steel
    The Tenth Insight by James Redfield

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1997:

    A Supposedly Fun Thing I’ll Never Do Again by David Foster Wallace
    Airframe by Michael Crichton
    American Pastoral by Philip Roth
    The Best Laid Plans by Sidney Sheldon
    The Buffalo Tree by Adam Rapp
    Cat and Mouse by James Patterson
    Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier
    The Dark Tower IV: Wizard and Glass by Stephen King
    Flood Tide by Clive Cussler
    The Ghost by Danielle Steel
    Ghost World by Daniel Clowes
    The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy
    Harry Potter and The Philosopher’s Stone by J.K. Rowling
    Hornet’s Nest by Patricia Cornwell
    Mason & Dixon by Thomas Pynchon
    Out of Sheer Rage by Geoff Dyer
    The Partner by John Grisham
    The Perfect Storm by Sebastian Junger
    Plum Island by Nelson DeMille
    Pretend You Don’t See Her by Mary Higgins Clark
    The Ranch by Danielle Steel
    Sole Survivor by Dean Koontz
    Special Delivery by Danielle Steel
    Tuesdays with Morrie by Mitch Albom
    Underworld by Don DeLillo
    Unnatural Exposure by Patricia Cornwell
    The Wind-Up Bird Chronicle by Haruki Murakami

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1998:

    A Clash of Kings by George R.R. Martin
    A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe
    Autobiography of Red: A Novel in Verse by Anne Carson
    Bag of Bones by Stephen King
    Birds of America by Lorrie Moore
    Cold Mountain by Charles Frazier
    Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
    Birds of America by Lorrie Moore
    I Know This Much Is True by Wally Lamb
    The Klone and I by Danielle Steel
    The Little Sisters of Eluria by Stephen King
    The Long Road Home by Danielle Steel
    Mirror Image by Danielle Steel
    “N” is for Noose by Sur Grafton
    Paradise by Toni Morrison
    The Path of Daggers by Robert Jordan
    Point of Origin by Patricia Cornwell
    Rainbow Six by Tom Clancy
    The Street Lawyer by John Grisham
    Who Moved My Cheese? by Spencer Johnson
    Widow for One Year by John Irving
    You Belong To Me by Mary Higgins Clark

    Popular and Best-selling Books From 1999:

    A Man in Full by Tom Wolfe
    The Alibi by Sandra Brown
    Apollyon by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    Assassins by Jerry B. Jenkins and Tim LaHaye
    Bittersweet by Danielle Steel
    Black Notice by Patricia Cornwell
    Disgrace by J.M. Coetzee
    From Hell (collected) by Alan Moore Eddie Campbell
    The Girl Who Loved Tom Gordon by Stephen King
    Hannibal by Thomas Harris
    Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets by J.K. Rowling
    Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban by J.K. Rowling
    Hearts in Atlantis by Stephen King
    Interpreter of Maladies by Jhumpa Lahiri
    Irresistible Forces by Danielle Steel
    Motherless Brooklyn by Jonathan Lethem
    The Perks of Being a Wallflower
    by Stephen Chbosky
    Southern Cross by Patricia Cornwell
    Star Wars: Episode 1, The Phantom Menace by Terry Brooks
    Tara Road by Maeve Binchy
    The Testament by John Grisham
    Timeline by Michael Crichton
    We’ll Meet Again by Mary Higgins Clark

  • 1999 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    1999 Music – The 100 Most Popular Songs

    1999 Music Hits Chart

    1. I Don’t Want To Miss a Thing – Aerosmith
    2. Everybody (Backstreet’s Back) – Backstreet Boys
    3. Jump Jive An’ Wail – Brian Setzer Orchestra
    4. I Want You Back – N*Sync
    So tell me what to do now when I want you back”
    5. The Cup of Life – Ricky Martin
    6. My Heart Will Go On – Celine Dion
    7. Good Riddance (Time Of Your Life) – Green Day
    8. From This Moment On – Shania Twain
    9. Too Close – Next
    10. Suavemente – Elvis Crespo
    11. Nice & Slow – Usher
    12. Tearin’ Up My Heart – *NSYNC
    13. Truly Madly Deeply – Savage Garden
    14. The Boy Is Mine – Brandy & Monica
    15. Ghetto Supastar (That Is What You Are) – Pras Michel
    16. Intergalactic – Beastie Boys
    17. Stay (Wasting Time) – Dave Matthews Band
    18. Are You That Somebody? – Aaliyah
    19. All My Life – K-Ci and JoJo
    20. I’ll Be – Edwin McCain
    21. Just The Two of Us – Will Smith
    22. Closing Time – Semisonic
    23. Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It – Will Smith
    24. Zoot Suit Riot – Cherry Poppin’ Daddies
    25. Landslide – Fleetwood Mac
    26. As Long As You Love Me – Backstreet Boys
    27. This Is How We Party – S.O.A.P.
    28. Because Of You – 98 Degrees (98°)
    29. Cruel Summer – Ace of Base
    30. Been Around The World – Puff Daddy
    31. Love Me – 112
    32. Iris – Goo Goo Dolls
    33. I’m Your Angel – R Kelly & Celine Dion
    34. You’re Still The One – Shania Twain
    35. This Kiss – Faith Hill
    36. It’s All About The Benjamins – Puff Daddy
    37. My All – Mariah Carey
    38. A Song For Mama – Boyz II Men
    39. No, No, No part 2 – Destiny’s Child
    40. Walking On The Sun – Smash Mouth
    41. Roxanne ’97 – Puff Daddy Remix with The Police
    42. Lollipop (Candyman) – Aqua
    43. Doin’ Time – Sublime
    44. One More Night – Amber
    45. My Favorite Mistake – Sheryl Crow
    46. Stop – Spice Girls
    47. Thank U – Alanis Morissette
    48. Kind and Generous – Natalie Merchant
    49. I Don’t Want To Wait – Paula Cole
    50. 3 AM – Matchbox 20
    51. Goodbye – Spice Girls
    52. My Way – Usher
    53. Kiss The Rain – Billie Myers
    54. Been Around the World – Puff Daddy
    55. Pink – Aerosmith
    56. One Week – Barenaked Ladies
    57. Luv Me, Luv Me – Shaggy & Janet Jackson
    58. Real World – Matchbox 20
    59. Sex and Candy – Marcy Playground
    60. The Way – Fastball
    61. Sweetest Thing – U2
    62. I’ll Never Break Your Heart – Backstreet Boys
    63. Doo Wop (That Thing) Lauren Hill
    64. The Rockafeller Skank – Fatboy Slim
    65. Torn – Natalie Imbruglia
    66. Bitter Sweet Symphony – The Verve
    67. Ooh La La – Rod Stewart
    68. Ray of Light – Madonna
    69. Can’t Get Enough Of You Baby – Smash Mouth
    70. Adia – Sarah McLachlan
    71. Never Ever – All Saints
    72. Flagpole Sitta – Harvey Danger
    73. Brick – Ben Folds Five
    74. Crush – Jennifer Paige
    75. Love Like This – Faith Evans
    76. Turn Back Time – Aqua
    77. It’s All About Me – Mya
    78. Heroes – The Wallflowers
    79. Going back To Cali – The Notorious B.I.G.
    80. Shimmer – Fuel
    81. Lookin’ At Me – Mase
    82. Hey Now Now – Swirl 360
    83. 32 Flavors – Alana Davis
    84. Celebrity Skin – Hole
    85. Woof Woof – The 69 Boyz
    86. Brian Wilson – Barenaked Ladies
    87. Looking Through Your Eyes – LeAnn Rimes
    88. Your Life Is Now – John Mellencamp
    89. Raise The Roof – Luke
    90. The First Night – Monica
    91. Only If… – Enya
    92. Victory – Puff Daddy
    93. Still A G Thang – Snoop Dogg
    94. The Gift – Collin Raye
    95. Pretty Boys and Pretty Girls – Book of Love
    96. Daydreamin’ – Tatyana Ali
    97. Uninvited – Alanis Morissette
    98. Chickenhead – Wyclef Jean
    99. Smack My B*tch Up – Prodigy
    100. I Will Buy You A New Life – Everclear
  • fun quiz

  • fun test

  • 25 Biggest Songs of the 1990s

    25 Biggest Songs of the 1990s

    Top 25 Songs 1990-1999

    1. One Sweet Day – Mariah Carey & Boyz II Men
    2. Macarena – Los Del Rio
    3. I’ll Make Love To You – Elton John
    4. Candle In The Wind 1997/ Something About The Way You Look Tonight – Elton John
    5. I Will Always Love You – Whitney Houston
    6. End Of The Road – Boyz II Men
    7. The Boy Is Mine – Brandy & Monica
    8. Smooth – Santana w/ Rob Thomas
    9. Un-Break My Heart – Toni Braxton
    10. I Swear – All- 4- One
    11. I’ll Be Missing You – Puff Daddy & Faith Evans w/ 112
    12. Fantasy – Mariah Carey
    13. Dream Lover – Mariah Carey
    14. That’s The Way Love Goes – Janet Jackson
    15. Jump – Kris Kross
    16. Tha Crossroads – Bone Thugs- N- Harmony
    17. Waterfalls – TLC
    18. Take A Bow – Madonna
    19. Can’t Help Falling In Love – UB40
    20. This Is How We Do It- Montell Jordan
    21. Informer – Snow
    22. (Everything I Do) I Do It For You – Bryan Adams
    23. Black or White – Michael Jackson
    24. The Sign – Ace of Base
    25. Because You Loved Me – Celine Dion
  • The Top 69 Sexiest Songs Of The 1990s!

    The Top 69 Sexiest Songs Of The 1990s!

    Sexy Songs of the 1990s 

    Are you as good as I remember baby,
    get it on, get it on
    ’cause tonight is the night when two become one

    – 2 Become One, Spice GirlsSexy Songs can be seductive, soft, soulful and slow.
    They can sound so innocent when we sang them as pre-teens.

    Any time
    And any place
    I don’t care who’s around
    Nonononono
    Weeooohhooo!

    – Any Time, Any Place, Janet Jackson

    1990s Sexy Songs

    1.
     
    Too Close – Next
    2.
     
2 Become 1 – Spice Girls
3.
  Sex Me – R. Kelly
4.
  Any Time, Any Place – Janet Jackson
5.
  Nice and Slow – Usher
6.
  Fade Into You – Mazzy Star
7.
  Red Light Special – TLC
8.
  Anywhere – 112
9.
  O.P.P. – Naughty By Nature
10.
  I’m Too Sexy – Right Said Fred
11.
  I Wanna Sex You Up – Color Me Badd
12.
  Justify My Love – Madonna
13.
  I’ll Make Love To You – Boys II
Men
14.
  Mr. Boombastic – Shaggy
15.
  Pony – Ginuwine
16.
  Sexual – Amber
17.
  Bump N’ Grind – R. Kelly
18.
  Gett Off – Prince and the New Power
Generation
19.
  Let’s Talk About Sex – Salt ‘n’
Pepa
20.
  If – Janet Jackson
21.
  I Touch Myself – Divynls
22.
  Shoop – Salt N Pepa
23.
  Take Your Time (Do It Right) – Max-A-Million
24.
  Freak Me – Silk
25.
  Closer – Nine Inch Nails
26.
  Do Me! – Bell Biv Devoe
27.
  Sexy M.F. – Prince and The New Power
Generation
28.
  The Way You Make Me Feel – Michael
Jackson
29.
  Honey – Mariah Carey
30.
  You’re Makin’ Me High – Toni Braxton
31.
  I Get Around – 2Pac featuring Digital
Underground
32.
  All I Want To Do Is Make Love To You
– Heart
33.
  No Diggity – Blackstreet
34.
  The First Night – Monica
35.
  Boom Boom Boom – Venga Boys
36.
  Doin’ It – LL Cool J
37.
  Knockin Da Boots – H-Town
38.
  Barbie Girl – Aqua
39.
  Cherry Pie – Warrant
40.
  Unskinny Bop – Poison
41.
  Sex and Candy – Marcy Playground
42.
  Kiss From A Rose – Seal
43.
  Crash Into Me – Dave Matthews Band
44.
  Rump Shaker – Wreckx-N-Effect
45.
  Romantic – Karyn White
46.
  Boom Boom Boom -Outhere Brothers
47.
  Damn I Wish I Was Your Lover – Sophie
B. Hawkins
48.
  Rub You The Right Way – Johnny Gill
49.
  Human Nature – Madonna
50.
  I Feel You – Depeche MOde
51.
  Freak Like Me – Adina Howard
52.
  Laid – James
53.
  You Oughta Know – Alanis Morissette
54.
  I Like The Way (Kissing Game)
Hi Five
55.
  Wicked Game – Chris Isaac
56.
  Your Body’s Callin’ – R. Kelly
57.
  Criminal – Fiona Apple
58.
  Erotica – Madonna
59.
  I’m Good At Being Bad – TLC
60.
  Whatta Man – Salt ‘N’ Pepa with
En Vogue
61.
  Sweat (A La La La La Long) – Inner
Circle
62.
  Everybody Here Wants You – Jeff
Buckley
63.
  Hanky Panky – Madonna
64.
  Sadeness – Enigma
65.
  Babydoll – Mariah Carey
66.
  Freek’n You – Jodeci
67.
  Teardrop – Massive Attack
68.
  Put It In Your Mouth – Akinyele
69.
  Glory Box – Portishead
  • Your Complete 90s Music Checklist

    Your Complete 90s Music Checklist

    Your Complete 90s Pop Music Checklist

    Some of the most notable genres and sub-genres of music from the 1990s include:

    1. Rock: Rock music continued to be popular in the 1990s, with several sub-genres emerging and gaining traction. Some of the most notable sub-genres of rock music from the 1990s include alternative rock, grunge, and Britpop.

    2. Pop: Pop music also remained popular in the 1990s, with artists like Mariah Carey, Britney Spears, and the Backstreet Boys achieving widespread success.

    3. Hip-Hop: Hip-hop, which had emerged in the 1980s, gained even greater popularity in the 1990s. Artists like Tupac Shakur, Notorious B.I.G., and Jay-Z were among the most notable hip-hop artists of the decade.

    4. Electronic: Electronic music, including house, techno, and trance, also gained popularity in the 1990s.

    5. R&B: R&B, a genre of music that combines elements of soul, funk, and pop, also gained widespread popularity in the 1990s. Artists like R. Kelly, Boyz II Men, and TLC were among the most notable R&B acts of the decade.

    Selected Nineties’ Bubblegum Pop Hits

    1. MMM Bop – Hanson
    2. …Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
    3. Wannabe – Spice Girls
    4. As Long As You Love Me – Backstreet Boys
    5. Step By Step – New Kids On The Block
    6. I Want You Back – *NSYNC
    7. Quit Playing Games With My Heart – Backstreet Boys
    8. Jump – Kris Kross
    9. She Ain’t Worth It – Glenn Medeiros
    10. Tearin’ Up My Heart – *NSYNC

    The 90s Songs That Mom And Dad Hated

    1. Baby Got Back – Sir Mixx-A-Lott
    2. Bump N’ Grind – R. Kelly
    3. The Humpty Dance – Digital Underground
    4. Pretty Fly (For A White Guy) – The Offspring
    5. Informer – Snow
    6. Let’ Talk About Sex – Salt-N-Pepa
    7. Booti Call – BLACKstreet
    8. Come Baby Come – K7
    9. Justify My Love – Madonna
    10. Losing My Religion – R.E.M.

    The Nineties’ Songs That Everybody Hated

    1. You Must Love Me – Madonna
    2. I Can’t Dance – Genesis
    3. Rico Suave – Gerardo
    4. All For Love – Bryan Adams, Rod Stewart and Sting
    5. Cantaloop – US3
    6. 2 Legit 2 Quit – M.C. Hammer
    7. I Finally Found Someone – Bryan Adams and Barbra Streisand
    8. Lump – Presidents of the United States of America
    9. Sometimes Love Just Ain’t Enough – Patty Smyth and Don Henley
    10. Play That Funky Music – Vanilla Ice
    11. Can I Touch You… There? – Michael Bolton

    Selected Summer Songs 1990-1999

    1. Summertime – DJ Jazzy Jeff & Fresh Prince, 1991
    2. Everybody (Backstreet’s Back) – Backstreet Boys, 1998
    3. All Star – Smash Mouth, 1999
    4. Summergirls – LFO, 1999
    5. MMMBop – Hanson, 1997
    6. That’s The Way Love Goes – Janet Jackson, 1993
    7. U Can’t Touch This – M.C. Hammer, 1990
    8. Baby Got Back – Sir Mix-A-Lot, 1992
    9. Boombastic/In The Summertime – Shaggy, 1995
    10. Macarena – Los Del Rio, 1996
    11. The Boy Is Mine – Brandy & Monica, 1998
    12. This Is How We Do It – Montell Jordan, 1995
    13. I’ll Be Missing You – Puff Daddy & Faith Evens featuring 112, 1996
    14. Cruel Summer – Ace of Base, 1997
    15. Regulate – Warren G & Nate Dogg
    16. Step By Step – New Kids On The Block, 1990
    17. Waterfalls – TLC, 1995
    18. Good Vibrations – Marky Mark and The Funky Bunch, 1991
    19. Steal My Sunshine – Len, 1999
    20. Don’t Speak – No Doubt, 1996

    90s Boy Band Hits

    In No Particular Order
    1. Dragostea Din Tei – O-Zone
    2. I Want You Back – *NSYNC
    3. Step By Step – New Kids On The Block
    4. Tearin’ Up My Heart – *NSYNC
    5. Summergirls – LFO
    6. MMMBop – Hanson
    7. End of the Road – Boyz II Men
    8. Because Of You – 98 Degrees
    9. I Swear – All 4 One
    10. Everybody (Backstreet’s Back) – Backstreet Boys

    90s Girl Group & Solo Artist Hits

    1. Wannabe – Spice Girls
    2. … Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
    3. Fantasy – Mariah Carey
    4. Head Over Feet – Alanis Morissette
    5. You Were Meant For Me – Jewel
    6. 2 Become 1 – Spice Girls
    7. The Boy Is Mine – Brandy & Monica
    8. (You Drive Me) Crazy – Britney Spears
    9. What Have You Done For Me Lately – Janet Jackson
    10. Always Be My Baby – Mariah Carey
    11. Ironic – Alanis Morissette
    12. Vogue – Madonna
    13. Hold On – En Vogue
    14. No Scrubs – TLC
    15. Black Velvet – Alannah Miles
    16. Barbie Girl – Aqua
    17. Are You That Somebody? – Aaliyah
    18. C’est La Vie – B*Witched
    19. I Love You Always Forever – Donna Lewis
    20. Stay (I Missed You) – Lisa Loeb & Nine Stories
    21. Hold On – Wilson Phillips
    22. Damn I Wish I Was Your Lover – Sophie B. Hawkins
    23. Missing – Everything But The Girl
    24. If You Had My Love – Jennifer Lopez
    25. All Around The World – Lisa Stansfield

    90s Dance Hits

    1. Vogue – Madonna
    2. Move This – Technotronic
    3. Supermodel – RuPaul
    4. Jock Jam – ESPN Presents
    5. Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now) – C+C Music Factory
    6. Everybody Everybody – Black Box
    7. Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It – Will Smith
    8. Pump Up The Jam – Technotronic
    9. Groove Is In The Heart – Deee-Lite
    10. I Like To Move It – Reel 2 Real

    The Nineties’ Only Doo-Wop Hit

    1. Morse Code Of Love – The Capris

    90s Rap/Hip Hop Hits

    1. My Name Is… – Eminem
    2. California Love – 2Pac Feat. Dr. Dre
    3. Baby Got Back – Sir Mix-A-Lot
    4. Humpty Dance – Digital Underground
    5. Nuttin’ But A G-Thang – Dr. Dre feat. Snoop Doggy Dogg
    6. Hip Hop Hooray – Naughty By Nature
    7. U Can’t Touch This – MC Hammer
    8. Gangsta’s Paradise – Coolio
    9. Jump Around – House Of Pain
    10. Just A Friend – Biz Markie

    Nineties’ Reggaeton Dance Hits

    1. Murder She Wrote – Chaka Demus & Pilers
    2. Action – Terror Fabulous with Nadine Sutherland
    3. Boombastic – Shaggy
    4. Mr. Loverman – Shabba Ranks
    5. Fat Boy – Max-A-Million
    6. Girlstown – Super Cat
    7. Slow and Sexy – Shabba Ranks with Johnny Gill
    8. Sexual Healing – Max-A-Million
    9. Luv Me Luv Me – Shaggy featuring Janet (Jackson)
    10. Flex – Mad Cobra

    The Nineties’ Songs That You Need
    To Make Your Collection Complete

    1. Summertime – DJ Jazzy Jeff & The Fresh Prince
    2. Everybody (Backstreet’s Back) – Backstreet Boys
    3. Tubthumping – Chumbawamba
    4. We Like To Party! – Vengaboys
    5. Good Riddance (Time of Your Life) – Green Day
    6. The Sign – Ace of Base
    7. Under The Bridge – Red Hot Chili Peppers
    8. The Impression That I Get – Mighty Mighty Bosstones
    9. Man On The Moon – R.E.M.
    10. Fly – Sugar Ray
    11. Zoot Suit Riot – Cherry Poppin’ Daddies
    12. Men In Black – Will Smith
    13. I Want You Back – *Nsync
    14. Blaze of Glory – Jon Bon Jovi
    15. Mr. Jones – Counting Crows
    16. … Baby One More Time – Britney Spears
    17. Walkin On The Sun – Smash Mouth
    18. Butterfly Kisses – Bob Carlisle
    19. Livin La Vida Loca – Ricky Martin
    20. Doo Wop (That Thing) – Lauren Hill

    The 90s Big Money Songs And/Or One Hit Wonders

    1. Ice Ice Baby – Vanilla Ice
    2. Baby Got Back – Sir Mixx-A-Lott
    3. Unbelievable – EMF
    4. Macarena – Los Del Rio
    5. Cotton Eye Joe – Rednex
    6. Groove Is In The Heart – Deee-lite
    7. C’est La Vie – B*witched
    8. Nothing Compares To U – Sinead O’Conner
    9. Boom Boom Boom – Outhere Brothers
    10. Everybody’ Free (To Wear Sunscreen) – Baz Luhrmann

    The Nineties’ Fad Songs & Short-Lived Hits

    1. Achy Breaky Heart – Billy Ray Cyrus
    2. Ice Ice Baby – Vanilla Ice
    3. Macarena – Los Del Rio
    4. Candle In The Wind (1997) – Elton John
    5. Tubthumping – Chumbawumba
    6. My Heart Will Go On – Celine Dion
    7. What’ Up – 4 non-Blondes
    8. Black or White – Michael Jackson
    9. How Do You Talk To An Angel – the Heights
    10. Wannabe – Spice Girls
    11. Mmm Bop – Hanson

    The 90s Weirdest Songs

    1. Mmm Mmm Mmm Mmm – Crash Test Dummies
    2. What’ The Frequency, Kenneth? – R.E.M.
    3. Counting Blue Cars – Dishwalla
    4. Hell – Squirrel Nut Zippers
    5. The Humpty Dance – Digital Underground
    6. Shiny Happy People – R.E.M.
    7. Good Stuff – B-52s
    8. Personal Jesus – Depeche Mode
    9. Flagpole Sitta – Harvey Danger
    10. Black or White – Michael Jackson

    The Nineties’ Songs That We Secretly Liked

    1. My Heart Will Go On – Celine Dion
    2. Hold On – Wilson Phillips
    3. I Wanna Be Rich – Calloway
    4. I Can’t Dance – Genesis
    5. Coco Jamboo – Mr. President
    6. 1,,2,3,4 (Sumpin New) – Coolio
    7. C’Mon N’ Ride It (The Train) – Quad City DJ’s
    8. Poison – Bell Biv DeVoe
    9. Men In Black – Will Smith
    10. Candy Rain – Soul For Real

    90s Album Rock (AOR Radio) Hits

    1. Under The Bridge – Red Hot Chili Peppers
    2. Enter Sandman – Metallica
    3. Iris – Goo Goo Dolls
    4. Wonderwall – Oasis
    5. Mr. Jones – Counting Crows
    6. She’s So High – Tal Bachman
    7. Cherry Pie – Warrant
    8. Epic – Faith No More
    9. Silent Lucidity – Queensryche
    10. Unskinny Bop – Poison

    Nineties’ Power Rock Ballads

    1. I Don’t Want To Miss A Thing – Aerosmith
    2. Blaze Of Glory – Jon Bon Jovi
    3. Every Rose has it’s Thorn – Poison
    4. November Rain – Guns N Roses
    5. Open Arms – Journey
    6. I Want To Know What Love Is – Foreigner
    7. More Than Words – Extreme
    8. Always – Bon Jovi
    9. Honestly – Stryper
    10. Sister Christian – Night Ranger
    11. Wind Of Change – Scorpions
    12. Don’t Know What You Got (Till It’s Gone) – Cinderella
    13. Love Is On The Way – Saigon Kick
    14. When I Look Into Your Eyes – Lifehouse
    15. I’ll Be There for You – Bon Jovi
    16. Angel – Aerosmith
    17. Patience – Guns N Roses
    18. High Enough – Damn Yankees
    19. Nothing Else Matters – Metallica
    20. Forever – Kiss

    90s Grunge/ Alternative Rock

    1. Smells Like Teen Spirit – Nirvana
    2. Better Man – Pearl Jam
    3. Creep – Radiohead
    4. Come As You Are – Nirvana
    5. When I Come Around – Green Day
    6. Daughter – Pearl Jam
    7. All Apologies – NIrvana
    8. You Oughta Know – Alanis Morissette
    9. Send Me On My Way – Rusted Root
    10. Run-Around – Blues Traveler
    11. Black Hole Sun – Soundgarden
    12. Loser – Beck
    13. Alive – Pearl Jam
    14. Two Princes – Spin Doctors
    15. Shine- Collective Soul
    16. What Would You Sat – Dave Matthews Band
    17. Sometimes Always – Jesus and Mary Chain
    18. Basket Case – Green Day
    19. Man In The Box – Alice In Chains
    20. Today – Smashing Pumpkins

    90s Alt Pop/Rock One Hit Wonders

    1. Sex and Candy – Marcy Playground
    2. Flagpole Sitta – Harvey Danger
    3. Steal My Sunshine – Len
    4. Counting Blue Cars – Dishwalla
    5. My Own Worst Enemy – Lit
    6. Criminal – Fiona Apple
    7. Fade Into You – Mazzy Star
    8. Blue Monday – Orgy
    9. Pepper – Butthole Surfers
    10. Naked Eye – Luscious Jackson

    Nineties’ Pop Rock Hits

    1. Smells Like Teen Spirit – Nirvana
    2. Jump, Jive and Wail – Brian Setzer Orchestra
    3. Smooth – Santana featuring Rob Thomas
    4. All-Star – Smash Mouth
    5. What Would You Say? – Dave Matthews Band
    6. Better Man – Pearl Jam
    7. What I Got – Sublime
    8. Name – Goo Goo Dolls
    9. All I Wanna Do – Sheryl Crow
    10. Champagne Supernova – Oasis
    11. Semi-Charmed Life – Third Eye Blind
    12. Buddy Holly – Weezer

    Nineties’ Sexy Pop Songs

    1. I’m Too Sexy – Right Said Fred
    2. I Wanna Sex You Up – Color Me Badd
    3. Bump N’ Grind – R. Kelly
    4. Sexy Mother F. – Prince
    5. Ooh Aah… Just a LittleBit – Gina G
    6. I Kissed a Girl – Jill Sobule
    7. Sex Me – R. Kelly
    8. Touch Me (All Night Long) – Cathy Dennis
    9. I Touch Myself – Divinyls
    10. Too Close – Next
    11. All I Wanna Do Is Make Love To You – Heart

    The 90s Top 25 Remakes

    1. Unforgettable – Nat and Natalie Cole
    2. Cotton Eyed Joe – Rednex
    3. Mambo No. 5 – Lou Bega
    4. Killing Me Softly – Fugees
    5. Can’t Help Falling In Love – UB40
    6. Sexual Healing – Max-A-Million
    7. Turn The Beat Around – Gloria Estefan
    8. Come and Get Your Love – Real McCoy
    9. Candle In The Wind (1997) – Elton John
    10. Fly Like An Eagle – Seal
    11. L.A. Woman – Billy Idol
    12. Total Eclipse of the Heart – Nikki French
    13. Endless Love – Luther Vandross and Mariah Carey
    14. What’s Up – DJ Miko
    15. Cruel Summer – Ace of Base
    16. Higher Ground – Red Hot Chili Peppers
    17. Live and Let Die – Guns N’ Roses
    18. I Say A Little Prayer – Diana King
    19. Wild Night – John Mellencamp and Me’ hell Ndegeocello
    20. I Believe In You And Me – Whitney Houston
    21. Baby I Love Your Way – Big Mountain
    22. When A Man Loves A Woman – Michael Bolton
    23. Betcha By Golly Wow! – Prince
    24. Please Don’t Go – K.W.S.
    25. Love Rollercoaster – Red Hot Chili Peppers

    Nineties’ Comedy Songs

    1. Chanukah Song – Adam Sandler
    2. Amish Paradise – Weird Al Yankovic
    3. The Humpty Dance – Digital Underground
    4. The Thanksgiving Song – Adam Sandler
    5. Smells Like Nirvana – Weird Al Yankovic
    6. This Is Ponderous – 2nu
    7. Deep, Deep Trouble – The Simpsons
    8. Meet The Flintstones – The B.C. 52’s
    9. Three Little Pigs – Green Jelly
    10. Redneck Games – Jeff Foxworthy & Alan Jackson

     

  • 1999 Oscars 71st Academy Awards

    1999 Oscars 71st Academy Awards

    1999 Oscars 71st Academy Awards

    • Winners Announced: March 21, 1999
    • Held at: Los Angeles County Music Center, Los Angeles, California
    • Host: Whoopi Goldberg
    • Eligibility Year: 1998

    Trivia

    • Whoopi Goldberg became the first woman and the first African American to solo host the Oscars. This was her third time hosting but her first time going solo.
    • Shakespeare in Love managed to snag seven Oscars, including Best Picture, beating out the favorite, Saving Private Ryan. It was considered a major upset at the time.
    • Gwyneth Paltrow won Best Actress for Shakespeare in Love, and her emotional acceptance speech, complete with tears and a pink Ralph Lauren gown, became iconic.
    • Roberto Benigni became the toast of the town with his effusive and animated acceptance speech after winning Best Actor for Life is Beautiful. He climbed over chairs to get to the stage, a move that’s still talked about today.
    • Life is Beautiful also won for Best Foreign Language Film, making it one of the few to win in multiple categories.
    • Elton John and Tim Rice snagged Best Original Song for “The Prayer” from Quest for Camelot. Interestingly, this was a year where animated films showed strong in the music categories.
    • The ceremony was one of the longest in Oscars history, clocking in at over four hours.
    • James Coburn won Best Supporting Actor for Affliction, which was notable as he was a Hollywood veteran and this was his first Oscar win.
    • The event was produced by the legendary Gil Cates, who had a knack for putting on a show that combined glamour with unexpected moments.
    • This year’s ceremony was notable for its inclusion of a tribute to filmmaker Stanley Kubrick, who had passed away just weeks before the ceremony.
    • “This is a terrible mistake, because I used up all of my English.”
      – Roberto Benigni, after winning his second Oscar of the night for Life is Beautiful
    • “Am I allowed to say I really wanted this? This is fantastic.”
      – Steven Spielberg

    1999 Oscar Nominees and Winners

    Best Picture:
    Shakespeare in Love – Donna Gigliotti, David Parfitt, Harvey Weinstein, Edward Zwick and Marc Norman, producers (WINNER)
    Elizabeth – Alison Owen, Eric Fellner and Tim Bevan, producers
    Life Is Beautiful – Elda Ferri and Gianluigi Braschi, producers
    Saving Private Ryan – Steven Spielberg, Ian Bryce, Mark Gordon and Gary Levinsohn, producers
    The Thin Red Line – Robert Michael Geisler, Grant Hill and John Roberdeau, producers
    Best Director:
    Steven Spielberg – Saving Private Ryan (WINNER)
    Roberto Benigni – Life Is Beautiful
    John Madden – Shakespeare in Love
    Terrence Malick – The Thin Red Line
    Peter Weir – The Truman Show
    Best Actor:
    Roberto Benigni – Life Is Beautiful as Guido Orefice (WINNER)
    Tom Hanks – Saving Private Ryan as Captain John Miller
    Ian McKellen – Gods and Monsters as James Whale
    Nick Nolte – Affliction as Wade Whitehouse
    Edward Norton – American History X as Derek Vinyard
    Best Actress:
    Gwyneth Paltrow – Shakespeare in Love as Viola De Lesseps (WINNER)
    Cate Blanchett – Elizabeth as Queen Elizabeth I of England
    Fernanda Montenegro – Central Station as Isadora “Dora” Teixeira
    Meryl Streep – One True Thing as Kate Gulden
    Emily Watson – Hilary and Jackie as Jacqueline du Pré
    Best Supporting Actor:
    James Coburn – Affliction as Glen Whitehouse (WINNER)
    Robert Duvall – A Civil Action as Jerome Facher
    Ed Harris – The Truman Show as Christof
    Geoffrey Rush – Shakespeare in Love as Philip Henslowe
    Billy Bob Thornton – A Simple Plan as Jacob Mitchell
    Best Supporting Actress:
    Judi Dench – Shakespeare in Love as Queen Elizabeth I of England (WINNER)
    Kathy Bates – Primary Colors as Libby Holden
    Brenda Blethyn – Little Voice as Mari Hoff
    Rachel Griffiths – Hilary and Jackie as Hilary du Pré
    Lynn Redgrave – Gods and Monsters as Hanna
    Best Screenplay Written Directly for the Screen:
    Shakespeare in Love – Marc Norman and Tom Stoppard (WINNER)
    Bulworth – Warren Beatty and Jeremy Pikser
    Life Is Beautiful – Vincenzo Cerami and Roberto Benigni
    Saving Private Ryan – Robert Rodat
    The Truman Show – Andrew Niccol
    Best Screenplay Based on Material Previously Produced or Published:
    Gods and Monsters – Bill Condon based on the novel Father of Frankenstein by Christopher Bram (WINNER)
    Out of Sight – Scott Frank from the novel by Elmore Leonard
    Primary Colors – Elaine May adapted from the novel by anonymous
    A Simple Plan – Scott B. Smith based on his novel
    The Thin Red Line – Terrence Malick adapted from the novel by James Jones
    Best Foreign Language Film:
    Life Is Beautiful (Italy) in Italian – Roberto Benigni (WINNER)
    Central Station (Brazil) in Portuguese – Walter Salles
    Children of Heaven (Iran) in Persian – Majid Majidi
    The Grandfather (Spain) in Spanish – José Luis Garci
    Tango (Argentina) in Spanish – Carlos Saura
    Best Original Song:
    “When You Believe” from The Prince of Egypt – Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz (WINNER)
    “I Don’t Want to Miss a Thing” from Armageddon – Music and Lyrics by Diane Warren
    “That’ll Do” from Babe: Pig in the City – Music and Lyrics by Randy Newman
    “A Soft Place to Fall” from The Horse Whisperer – Music and Lyrics by Allison Moorer and Gwil Owen
    “The Prayer” from Quest for Camelot – Music by Carole Bayer Sager and David Foster; Lyrics by Carole Bayer Sager, David Foster, Tony Renis and Alberto Testa
    Best Documentary Feature:
    The Last Days – James Moll and Ken Lipper (WINNER)
    Dancemaker – Matthew Diamond and Jerry Kupfer
    The Farm: Angola, USA – Jonathan Stack and Liz Garbus
    Lenny Bruce: Swear to Tell the Truth – Robert B. Weide
    Regret to Inform – Barbara Sonneborn and Janet Cole
    Best Documentary Short Subject:
    The Personals: Improvisations on Romance in the Golden Years – Keiko Ibi (WINNER)
    A Place in the Land – Charles Guggenheim
    Sunrise Over Tiananmen Square – Shui-Bo Wang and Donald McWilliams
    Best Live Action Short Film:
    Election Night – Kim Magnusson and Anders Thomas Jensen (WINNER)
    Culture – Will Speck and Josh Gordon
    Holiday Romance – Alexander Jovy and JJ Keith
    La Carte Postale – Vivian Goffette
    Victor – Simon Sandquist and Joel Bergvall
    Best Animated Short Film:
    Bunny – Chris Wedge (WINNER)
    The Canterbury Tales – Christopher Grace and Jonathan Myerson
    Jolly Roger – Mark Baker
    More – Mark Osborne and Steve Kalafer
    When Life Departs – Karsten Kiilerich and Stefan Fjeldmark
    Best Original Dramatic Score:
    Life Is Beautiful – Nicola Piovani (WINNER)
    Elizabeth – David Hirschfelder
    Pleasantville – Randy Newman
    Saving Private Ryan – John Williams
    The Thin Red Line – Hans Zimmer
    Best Original Musical or Comedy Score:
    Shakespeare in Love – Stephen Warbeck (WINNER)
    A Bug’s Life – Randy Newman
    Mulan – Music by Matthew Wilder; Lyrics by David Zippel; Orchestral Score by Jerry Goldsmith
    Patch Adams – Marc Shaiman
    The Prince of Egypt – Music and Lyrics by Stephen Schwartz; Orchestral Score by Hans Zimmer
    Best Sound Effects Editing:
    Saving Private Ryan – Gary Rydstrom and Richard Hymns (WINNER)
    Armageddon – George Watters II
    The Mask of Zorro – David McMoyler
    Best Sound:
    Saving Private Ryan – Gary Rydstrom, Gary Summers, Andy Nelson and Ron Judkins (WINNER)
    Armageddon – Kevin O’Connell, Greg P. Russell and Keith A. Wester
    The Mask of Zorro – Kevin O’Connell, Greg P. Russell and Pud Cusack
    Shakespeare in Love – Robin O’Donoghue, Dominic Lester and Peter Glossop
    The Thin Red Line – Andy Nelson, Anna Behlmer and Paul Brincat
    Best Art Direction:
    Shakespeare in Love – Art Direction: Martin Childs; Set Decoration: Jill Quertier (WINNER)
    Elizabeth – Art Direction: John Myhre; Set Decoration: Peter Howitt
    Pleasantville – Art Direction: Jeannine Oppewall; Set Decoration: Jay Hart
    Saving Private Ryan – Art Direction: Tom Sanders; Set Decoration: Lisa Dean Kavanaugh
    What Dreams May Come – Art Direction: Eugenio Zanetti; Set Decoration: Cindy Carr
    Best Cinematography:
    Saving Private Ryan – Janusz Kaminski (WINNER)
    A Civil Action – Conrad Hall
    Elizabeth – Remi Adefarasin
    Shakespeare in Love – Richard Greatrex
    The Thin Red Line – John Toll
    Best Makeup:
    Elizabeth – Jenny Shircore (WINNER)
    Saving Private Ryan – Lois Burwell, Conor O’Sullivan and Daniel C. Striepeke
    Shakespeare in Love – Lisa Westcott and Veronica Brebner
    Best Costume Design:
    Shakespeare in Love – Sandy Powell (WINNER)
    Beloved – Colleen Atwood
    Elizabeth – Alexandra Byrne
    Pleasantville – Judianna Makovsky
    Velvet Goldmine – Sandy Powell
    Best Film Editing:
    Saving Private Ryan – Michael Kahn (WINNER)
    Life Is Beautiful – Simona Paggi
    Out of Sight – Anne V. Coates
    Shakespeare in Love – David Gamble
    The Thin Red Line – Billy Weber, Leslie Jones and Saar Klein
    Best Visual Effects:
    What Dreams May Come – Joel Hynek, Nicholas Brooks, Stuart Robertson and Kevin Mack (WINNER)
    Armageddon – Richard R. Hoover, Pat McClung and John Frazier
    Mighty Joe Young – Rick Baker, Hoyt Yeatman, Allen Hall and Jim Mitchell
    Academy Honorary Award:
    Elia Kazan
    Irving G. Thalberg Award:
    Norman Jewison
  • 1999 Grammy Award Winners

    1999 Grammy Award Winners

    1999 Grammy Award Winners

    • Winners Announced: February 25, 1999
    • Held at: Radio City Music Hall, New York City
    • Host: Kelsey Grammer
    • Eligibility Year: October 1, 1997 – September 30, 1998

    Trivia

    • Best New Artist Snub: Despite huge success, Backstreet Boys lost the Best New Artist award to Lauryn Hill.
    • Album of the Year: The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill by Lauryn Hill also took home the Album of the Year, solidifying her rising stardom.
    • Record of the Year: Celine Dion’s My Heart Will Go On won the award, continuing its acclaim from its association with Titanic.
    • Multiple Awards: Lauryn Hill took home five awards this year, setting a record for a female artist at that time.
    • Rap Categories: Jay-Z won his first Grammy, Best Rap Album for Vol. 2… Hard Knock Life.
    • Latin Music: Ricky Martin’s Vuelve won Best Latin Pop Performance, foreshadowing the Latin pop explosion that was to come later in 1999.
    • Country Collaboration: Clint Black, Joe Diffie, Merle Haggard, Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, Patty Loveless, Earl Scruggs, Ricky Skaggs, Marty Stuart, Pam Tillis, Randy Travis, Travis Tritt and Dwight Yoakam collaborated on “Same Old Train,” which won Best Country Collaboration With Vocals.

    1999 Grammy Winners

     Record of the Year:
    My Heart Will Go On – Celine Dion Song of the Year:
     Song of the Year:
    My Heart Will Go On – James Horner and Will Jennings, songwriters
     Album of the year:
    The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill – Lauryn Hill (Ruffhouse/Columbia Records)
     New Artist:
    Lauryn Hill
    Female Pop Vocal:
    My Heart Will Go On – Celine Dion
    Male Pop Vocal:
    My Father’s Eyes – Eric Clapton
    Pop Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Jump Jive An’ Wail – The Brian Setzer Orchestra
    Pop Collaboration with Vocals:
    I Still Have That Other Girl – Elvis Costello and Burt Bacharach
    Pop Instrumental:
    Sleepwalk – The Brian Setzer Orchestra
    Dance Recording:
    Ray of Light – Madonna
    Pop Album:
    Ray of Light – Madonna (Maverick/Warner Bros. Records)
    Traditional Pop Album:
    Live at Carnegie Hall The 50th Anniversary Concert – Patti Page
    Female Rock Vocal:
    Uninvited – Alanis Morissette
    Male Rock Vocal:
    Fly Away – Lenny Kravitz
    Rock Duo or Group with Vocals:
    Pink – Aerosmith
    Hard Rock:
    Most High – Jimmy Page and Robert Plant
    Metal:
    Better Than You – Metallica
    Rock Instrumental:
    The Roots of Coincidence – Pat Metheny Group
    Rock Song:
    Uninvited – Alanis Morissette, songwriter
    Rock Album:
    The Globe Sessions – Sheryl Crow (A&M Records)
    Alternative Album:
    Hello Nasty – Beastie Boys
    Female R&B Vocal:
    Doo Wop (That Thing), Lauryn Hill
    Male R&B Vocal:
    St. Louis Blues – Stevie Wonder
    R&B Duo or Group with Vocals:
    The Boy Is Mine – Brandy and Monica
    R&B Song:
    Doo Wop (That Thing) – Lauryn Hill, songwriter
    R&B Album:
    The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill – Lauryn Hill (Ruffhouse/Columbia Records)
    Traditional R&B Vocal Performance:
    Live! One Night Only – Patti LaBelle
    Rap Solo:
    Gettin’ Jiggy Wit It – Will Smith
    Rap Duo or Group:
    Intergalactic – Beastie Boys
    Rap Album:
    Vol. 2 . . . Hard Knock Life – Jay-Z
    Female Country Vocal:
    You’re Still the One – Shania Twain
    Male Country Vocal:
    If You Ever Have Forever in Mind – Vince Gill
    Country Duo or Group with Vocals:
    There’s Your Trouble – Dixie Chicks
    Country Collaboration with Vocals:
    Same Old Train – Clint Black, Joe Diffie, Merle Haggard, Emmylou Harris, Alison Krauss, Patty Loveless, Earl Scruggs, Ricky Skaggs, Marty Stuart, Pam Tillis, Randy Travis, Travis Tritt, and Dwight Yoakam
    Country Instrumental:
    A Soldier’s Joy – Randy Scruggs and Vince Gill
    Country Song:
    You’re Still the One – Robert John Mutt Lange and Shania Twain, songwriters
    Country Album:
    Wide Open Spaces – Dixie Chicks (Monument Records)
    Bluegrass Album:
    Bluegrass Rules! – Ricky Skaggs and Kentucky Thunder (Skaggs Family Records)
    New Age Album:
    Landmarks – Clannad (Atlantic Records)
    Contemporary Jazz:
    Imaginary Day – Pat Metheny Group
    Jazz Vocal:
    I Remember Miles – Shirley Horn
    Jazz Instrumental, Solo:
    Rhumbata – Chick Corea and Gary Burton
    Jazz Instrumental, Individual or Group:
    Gershwin’s World – Herbie Hancock (Verve Records)
    Large Jazz Ensemble:
    Count Plays Duke – Count Basie Orchestra
    Latin Jazz:
    Hot House – Arturo Sandoval
    Rock Gospel Album:
    You Are There – Ashley Cleveland (Cadence/204 Records)
    Pop/Contemporary Gospel Album:
    This Is My Song – Deniece Williams (Harmony Records)
    Southern Gospel, Country Gospel, or Bluegrass Gospel Album:
    The Apostle – Music From and Inspired by the Motion Picture – various artists (Sparrow Records/Rising Tide [MCA])
    Traditional Soul Gospel Album:
    He Leadeth Me – Cissy Houston (House Of Blues Music)
    Contemporary Soul Gospel Album:
    The Nu Nation Project – Kirk Franklin (Gospo Centric Records)
    Gospel Album by a Choir or Chorus:
    Reflections – The Associates; O’Landa Draper, Choir Director (Warner Alliance Records)
    Latin Pop:
    Vuelve – Ricky Martin
    Latin Rock/Alternative:
    Sueños Liquidos – Mana
    Tropical Latin:
    Contra la Corriente – Marc Anthony
    Mexican-American:
    Los Super Seven – Los Super Seven
    Tejano:
    Said and Done – Flaco Jimenez
    Traditional Blues:
    Any Place I’m Going – Otis Rush (House Of Blues Records)
    Contemporary Blues:
    Slow Down – Keb’ Mo’ (Okeh/550 Music)
    Traditional Folk:
    Long Journey Home – The Chieftains with various artists (Wicklow Records)
    Contemporary Folk:
    Car Wheels on a Gravel Road – Lucinda Williams (Mercury Records)
    Reggae Album:
    Friends – Sly and Robbie (EastWest Records America/EEG)
    World Music Album:
    Quanta Live – Gilberto Gil (Atlantic/Mesa Records)
    Polka Album:
    Dance with Me – Jimmy Sturr and His Orchestra (Rounder Records)
    Musical Album for Children:
    Elmopalooza! – The Sesame Street Muppets with various artists (Sony Wonder Records)
    Spoken Word Album for Children:
    The Children’s Shakespeare – various artists (Dove Audio)
    Spoken Word or Non-Musical Album:
    Still Me (Christopher Reeve) – Christopher Reeve (Random House Audio Books)
    Spoken Comedy Album:
    The 2000-Year-Old Man in the Year 2000 – Mel Brooks and Carl Reiner (Rhino Records)
    Musical Show Album:
    The Lion King (Walt Disney Records)
    Instrumental Composition:
    Almost 12 – Bela Fleck, Future Man, and Victor Lemonte Wooten, composers
    Instrumental Composition for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    Saving Private Ryan – John Williams, Composer
    Song Written Specifically for a Motion Picture or for Television:
    My Heart Will Go On (from Titanic) – James Horner and Will Jennings, songwriters
    Instrumental Arrangement:
    Waltz for Debby – Don Sebesky, arranger
    Instrumental Arrangement with Accompanying Vocals:
    St. Louis Blues – Herbie Hancock, Robert Sadin, and Stevie Wonder, arrangers
    Best Recording Package:
    Ray of Light – Kevin Reagan, art director (Maverick/Warner Bros. Records)
    Best Recording Package Boxed:
    The Complete Hank Williams, Jim Kemp and Virginia Team, art directors (Rhino Records)
    Best Album Notes:
    Miles Davis Quintet 1965?1968 – Bob Belden, Todd Coolman and Michael Cuscuna, album notes writers
    Historical Album:
    The Complete Hank Williams (Mercury Records Nashville):
    Best-Engineered Album – Non-Classical:
    The Globe Sessions – Tchad Blake, Trina Shoemaker and Andy Wallace, engineers (A&M Records)
    Producer, Non-Classical:
    Rob Cavallo
    Remixer, Non-Classical:
    David Morales
    Best-Engineered Album – Classical:
    Barber: Prayers of Kierkegaard/Vaughan Williams: Dona Nobis Pacem/Bartok: Cantata Profana – Jack Renner, engineer
    Classical Producer:
    Steven Epstein
    Classical Album:
    Barber: Prayers of Kierkegaard/Vaughan Williams: Dona Nobis Pacem/Bartok: Cantata Profana – Atlanta Symphony Orchestra and Chorus, Robert Shaw, conductor (Telarc)
    Orchestral:
    Mahler: Sym. No. 9 – Pierre Boulez conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (Deutsche Grammophon)
    Opera:
    Bartok: Bluebeard’s Castle – Pierre Boulez, conducting the Chicago Symphony Orchestra (Deutsche Grammophon)
    Choral:
    Barber: Prayers of Kierkegaard/Vaughan Williams: Dona Nobis Pacem/Bartok: Cantata Profana – Robert Shaw, conductor (Telarc)
    Instrumental Soloist with Orchestra:
    Penderecki: Violin Con. No. 2 ‘Metamorphosen’ – Anne-Sophie Mutter, violin; Krzysztof Penderecki, conductor
    Instrumental Soloist without Orchestra:
    Bach: English Suites Nos. 1, 3 and 6 – Murray Perahia, piano
    Chamber Music:
    American Scenes (Works of Copland, Previn, Barber, Gershwin) – Andre Previn, piano; Gil Shaham, violin
    Small Ensemble Performance (with or without Conductor):
    Reich: Music for 18 Musicians – Steve Reich and Musicians
    Classical Vocal:
    The Beautiful Voice (Works of Charpentier, Gounod, Massenet, Flotow, Etc.) – Renee Fleming, soprano
    Classical Contemporary Composition:
    Penderecki: Violin Con. No. 2 ‘Metamorphosen’ – Krzysztof Penderecki, Composer
    Classical Crossover Album:
    Soul of the Tango?The Music of Astor Piazzolla – Yo-Yo Ma, cello; Jorge Calandrelli, conductor
    Music Video, Short Form:
    Ray of Light – Jonas Akerlund, video director
    Music Video, Long Form:
    American Masters: Lou Reed: Rock and Roll Heart – Timothy Greenfield-Sanders, video director
  • Quiz Test

  • 1998 Number One Hits

    1998 Number One Hits

    1998 Billboard Number One Hits:

    October 11, 1997 – January 16, 1998:
    Candle In The Wind 1997 – Elton John
    January 17 – January 30:
    Truly Madly Deeply – Savage Garden
    January 31 – February 13:
    Together Again – Janet Jackson
    February 14 – February 27:
    Nice & Slow – Usher
    February 28 – March 13:
    My Heart Will Go On – Céline Dion
    March 14 – April 3:
    Gettin’ Jiggy Wit’ It – Will Smith
    April 4 – April 24:
    All My Life – K-ci and JoJo
    April 25 – May 22:
    Too Close – Next
    May 23 – June 5:
    My All – Mariah Carey
    June 6 – September 4:
    The Boy Is Mine – Brandy & Monica
    September 5 – October 2:
    I Don’t Want To Miss A Thing – Aerosmith
    October 3 – October 16:
    The First Night – Monica
    October 17 – November 13:
    One Week – Barenaked Ladies
    November 14 – November 27:
    Doo Wop (That Thing) – Lauryn Hill
    November 28- December 4:
    Lately – Divine
    December 5, 1998 – January 14, 1999:
    I’m Your Angel – R. Kelly & Céline Dion

    (Data is compiled from various charts including Billboard’s “Pop,” “Rock,” “Airplay,” “R&B/Dance” and “Singles” Charts. The “Hot 100” is the primary chart used for this list.)