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			you think you can shock? Prizes take backseat at MTV awards 
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            [August 23, 2014]  
            By Piya Sinha-Roy INGLEWOOD Calif. (Reuters) - Blood, 
			buttocks, snakes and angry rants are just some of the surprises 
			served up by the MTV Video Music Awards over the last three decades, 
			and as Sunday's ceremony looms, there is stiff competition to 
			deliver the show's next most outrageous stunt. | 
			
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				 R&B star Beyonce and newcomer rapper Iggy Azalea lead the 
				nominees at the Video Music Awards, or VMAs, with eight nods 
				each, and winners will receive the "Moonman" statuettes at the 
				newly renovated Forum arena in Inglewood, California. 
 But the night is rarely about the winners - rather, all eyes 
				will be on the performances and the surprises.
 
 Since launching in 1984, Viacom Inc-owned MTV's VMAs is 
				synonymous with irreverence and unscripted moments.
 
 Key moments include Howard Stern baring his derriere as "Fartman" 
				in 1992, Britney Spears' sultry dance with a snake in 2001, and 
				2009's eventful show where Lady Gaga smeared blood on herself 
				and a ranting Kanye West ripped Taylor Swift's award out of her 
				hand onstage.
 
 
				 
				Last year, pop star Miley Cyrus became the talk around water 
				coolers after thrusting her latex lingerie-clad "twerking" dance 
				moves both on stage and into the zeitgeist during a raunchy 
				performance of "Blurred Lines" with Robin Thicke.
 
 With Cyrus in attendance but not scheduled to perform, the 
				achievement of 2014's most talked-about VMA moment is up for 
				grabs to the boldest competitor.
 
 "Every artist looks at the VMAs as one of the most competitive 
				live performance moments, where everybody really brings their 
				A-game and comes to own the night," said Amy Doyle, executive 
				producer of the live telecast ceremony.
 
 "Knowing that a lot of historical music moments are made on this 
				stage, they want to be part of VMA history," she said.
 
			[to top of second column] | 
            
			 
			R&B star Beyonce, who last stole the VMA spotlight in 2011 when she 
			revealed her baby bump on stage, is vying to outdo herself this year 
			with "one of the most ambitious" performances the show has hosted, 
			Doyle teased.
 "She will be doing something that no other artist has ever tried to 
			do before," Doyle said.
 
			With a line-up of performances from Taylor Swift, Ariana Grande and 
			Nicki Minaj, this year's show is also dominated by the ladies of pop 
			music, reflecting a growing prominence of solo female talent in the 
			current music industry.
 "Females are definitely making the most interesting music in the 
			pop-sphere right now," said 22-year-old British singer Charli XCX, 
			who is nominated in the Artist to Watch category and will perform 
			her hit song "Boom Clap" at the pre-show.
 
 "Women strive to control their own careers now and change the way 
			people view them in the pop industry, and I think that's amazing 
			because it's hard to be a woman in this industry."
 
 (Editing by Eric Kelsey and Gunna Dickson)
 
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