Independent voices from the TWT Communities
Show Bits brings you the 55th annual Grammy Awards through the eyes of Associated Press journalists. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item.
Show Bits brings you the 55th annual Grammy Awards through the eyes of Associated Press journalists. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item.
Show Bits brings you the 55th annual Grammy Awards through the eyes of Associated Press journalists. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item.
The Grammy Awards show started at 8 p.m. EST. Not at 8:05 or 8:07 or 8:10

This winter, as Adam LaRoche waded through free agency, he presented the various options coming across his desk to his children. Each time LaRoche furnished the options to his familial panel — including his 10-year-old son Drake, who became a fixture in the Washington Nationals' clubhouse last season — the answer was always the same.
Along with Rihanna, Nicki Minaj is the top nominee at Sunday's American Music Awards, but the rapper-singer isn't concerned with her four nominations.
Pink on a song with Lauryn Hill? The pop star hopes so.

Along with Rihanna, Nicki Minaj is the top nominee at Sunday's American Music Awards, but the rapper-singer isn't concerned with her four nominations.

Under a cloudless sky that whipped cold wind into a sea of red, the end arrived at 2:08 p.m. local time.
Nicki Minaj's New York City concert featured usual suspects like her mentor Lil Wayne and label mate Drake, but it was another guest appearance that was really striking: rapper Foxy Brown.

The veritable silence that had descended on Nationals Park on Thursday night was as stifling as the muggy, 95-degree air that sat over it all day. Matt Cain was dealing. The Nationals weren't producing. A ho-hum game that would fall into the "can't win 'em all" category in a series already decided seemed an all-but-certain outcome.
A New York nightclub that was the site of a celebrity-studded, bottle-tossing brawl is suing the city for shutting it down.

San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker is suing a New York City club and its operators for $20 million over a scratched retina he says he suffered during a fight involving singer Chris Brown and members of hip-hop star Drake's entourage.
San Antonio Spurs guard Tony Parker says he suffered a scratched retina on one of his eyes during a New York City nightclub brawl involving singer Chris Brown and members of hip-hop star Drake's entourage.
Singer Chris Brown, his girlfriend and his bodyguard were injured when a dance floor showdown with members of hip-hop star Drake's entourage turned into a bottle-hurling brawl earl Thursday at a nightclub, police said.
As LaRoche walked off the field his son, Drake, looked him right in the eye and told him, "Dad, you got lucky."
Brown spoke with police Thursday; Drake, who was scheduled to perform at Saratoga Springs Performing Arts Center Thursday night in upstate New York, said he was unable to and would do so at a more convenient time with his attorney.