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				 The Marvel movie, the second biggest box office hit of all time, 
				took wins for best movie, villain (Josh Brolin's Thanos) and 
				hero (Robert Downey Jr's Iron Man.) 
 But U.S. Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, the 
				diminutive, 86-year-old liberal judge, was voted best real-life 
				hero, cementing her status as an unexpected pop culture icon, 
				especially among women. She did not attend the MTV ceremony in 
				the California beach city of Santa Monica.
 
 The MTV Movie and TV awards usually focus on crowd-pleasers and 
				is an irreverent antidote to the more serious winter Hollywood 
				awards season. Winners get popcorn shaped trophies and are 
				chosen by fans voting online.
 
 But while medieval fantasy "Game of Thrones" was named best TV 
				show on Monday, other awards went to darker fare.
 
 "Surviving R. Kelly," in which seven women spoke on camera about 
				what they said was years of sexual and emotional abuse by the "I 
				Believe I Can Fly" singer, won best documentary.
 
 The Lifetime network documentary led to Kelly being dropped by 
				his record company and to criminal charges in Chicago of 
				aggravated sexual assault involving four women, three of them 
				minors. Kelly has pleaded not guilty and is awaiting trial.
 
 "Survivors walked through the fire and then stood again to tell 
				this story," Brie Miranda Bryant, an executive with Lifetime, 
				said in an acceptance speech.
 
 Elisabeth Moss, star of "The Handmaid's Tale," took the award 
				for best performance in a TV show, a category that was entirely 
				made up of women. The bleak drama series portrays a near future 
				in which women are stripped of all their rights, including 
				working and reading.
 
				
				 
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			Brie Larson's "Captain Marvel" triumphed in the best fight category, 
			while MTV's popular best kiss award went to newcomers Noah Centineo 
			and Lana Condor from the Asian-led teen movie "To All the Boys I've 
			Loved Before." 
			"Love who you want to love, and don't let anyone tell you 
			otherwise," Condor, 22, told the audience.
 Actor, producer and wrestler Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson was given the 
			Generation award for a career that encompasses more than 30 film and 
			TV shows, including the "Fast and Furious" movie franchise.
 
			
			 
			Johnson told the audience that when he first came to Hollywood some 
			15 years ago, the entertainment industry didn't know how to handle a 
			6-foot-4-inch, muscled, half black, half Samoan man, "so I decided I 
			wasn't going to conform to Hollywood, Hollywood was going to conform 
			to me".
 Breakout singer Lizzo gave her first awards show performance with 
			her hit single "Juice," an anthem to self-esteem.
 
 "Girls Trip" actress Jada Pinkett-Smith was given the annual 
			Trailblazer award for a career that includes author, fashion 
			designer, women's rights activist and funder of youth programs.
 
 (Reporting by Jill Serjeant; editing by Darren Schuettler)
 
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