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Dixie Chicks launch full-frontal attack - "not...standing their ground...pushing it even farther"
The Dallas Morning News ^ | April 25, 2003 | By TOM MAURSTAD / The Dallas Morning News

Posted on 04/26/2003 11:35:34 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP

Dixie Chicks launch full-frontal attack


04/25/2003

By TOM MAURSTAD / The Dallas Morning News

You're a platinum-selling country star riding a record-setting wave of popularity. But a few weeks ago, you made a comment during a concert that has angered and alienated your core constituency.

What do you do?

If you're the Dixie Chicks, you pose naked on the cover of Entertainment Weekly.

This latest move is likely to turn up the flames on a controversy that has been burning for more than a month. That's a feeling echoed by program directors at the area's two leading country-music stations, neither of which has played a Dixie Chicks' song since early March when singer Natalie Maines told a London audience she was ashamed that President Bush is from Texas.

Under the headline "Dixie Chicks Come Clean," the May 2 issue shows the country-music trio posed in a pyramid of bare skin. Across their torsos are painted phrases – "Traitors," "Saddam's Angels," "Shut Up!" – drawn from the volumes of letters and e-mails the band has received.

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In the tradition of mainstream magazines featuring nude celebrities on their covers (Janet Jackson on Rolling Stone, Demi Moore on Vanity Fair), the Dixie Chicks are positioned in such a way – a hand here, a leg there – that no private parts are exposed. Such attention to the technicalities of nudity does nothing to diminish the provocative nature of the image.

(And in answer to the first question this photograph will spark, an Entertainment Weekly spokeswoman asserts: "That's them, their bodies. There were no computer tricks, no airbrushing.")

With the women's unflinching stares into the camera and the blurb's promise of "Country's Controversial Superstars Take on Their Critics," the cover is striking, even defiant.

"We wanted to show the absurdity of the extreme names people have been calling us," fiddle player Martie Maguire says in the story.

The Dixie Chicks ... stirring up more controversy with their upcoming <I> Entertainment Weekly </I> cover photo.
AP
The Dixie Chicks ... stirring up more controversy with their upcoming Entertainment Weekly cover photo.

The attention-getting cover story comes on the heels of the group's interview this week with Diane Sawyer on ABC's Primetime Thursday . Publicity campaigns undertaken by celebrities who have fallen from their public's graces are nothing new. But traditionally the celebrity is practicing some form of damage control – a high-profile mea culpa or by going silent on the subject.

But not the Dixie Chicks. Far from throwing water on the fire, they seem to be throwing gasoline.

"What this reflects is that the old damage control just doesn't work anymore because everybody knows the playbook," says Robert Thompson, a professor of pop culture and television at Syracuse University. "Everybody is so media savvy now that if you apologize, people just dismiss it as what your consultant told you to say."

A band representative on Thursday said the singers had no comment on the cover photograph or the interview. But others in country music certainly have.

"I don't know that they'll ever be as big with the country audience as they used to or as important to the country audience as they used to be," says Paul Williams, program director of KPLX-FM (99.5) "The Wolf."

"At first I thought it was a joke," says Ted Stecker, program director for KSCS-FM (96.3), of the Entertainment Weekly cover. "I don't think it's a good move for them right now.

Unlike other outspoken celebrities, such as rocker Sheryl Crow or activist director Michael Moore, whose anti-war comments have generally been applauded by their fans, the Dixie Chicks' comments play against country music's bedrock fans.

"You could write off the comment that started all this as something said in the excitement of the moment," says Leo Braudy, author of The Frenzy of Renown: Fame and its History. "But what's going on now is the result of calculation.

"It's a pretty striking strategy. Rather than backing down and appearing on the cover waving a flag or dressed in military uniforms, they are not just standing their ground, they're pushing it even farther."

Staff critic Mario Tarradell contributed to this report.

E-mail tmaurstad@dallasnews.com


Online at: http://www.dallasnews.com/latestnews/stories/042503dnovechicks.18b99.html


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To: Jael; All
Answer Houston radio's Chris Baker's poll, click the pic!!



41 posted on 04/26/2003 12:06:01 PM PDT by Eaker (64,999,987 firearm owners killed no one yesterday. Somehow, it didn't make the news.)
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To: Paul Atreides
LOLOL!
42 posted on 04/26/2003 12:06:23 PM PDT by Bonaparte
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To: Eaker
Yes.
5%

No
10%

No bleeping way!
85%
43 posted on 04/26/2003 12:10:21 PM PDT by Enterprise
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To: Eaker
RE: The expression on Natalie's face....

Where will you be when your diarrhea hits?

44 posted on 04/26/2003 12:11:06 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Felis_irritable
Even models are airbrushed for magazine covers.

How anyone could even question whether this cover is airbrushed is beyond me. My first thought was that they must have used other women's bodies (AND airbrushing).
45 posted on 04/26/2003 12:13:13 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("There was abuse in my family; it was mostly musical in nature.")
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To: MeeknMing
Footnote: while loading up at the Spokane Costco yesterday, I noted that titles in the CD section were selling briskly - as evidenced by short stacks and the empty bulk pack boxes that hadn't been taken away yet. The stack of the latest Dixie Chicks release, however, stood tall in unopened bulk packs above the rest. In the one open box, perhaps a half dozen had made their way into shoppers' carts.

IOW, Spokane ain't buyin' it, Natalie.
46 posted on 04/26/2003 12:13:19 PM PDT by Noumenon (Don't immanentize the eschaton!)
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To: Bonaparte
Major oinkage!
47 posted on 04/26/2003 12:14:29 PM PDT by Noumenon (Don't immanentize the eschaton!)
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To: Bonaparte

Natalie Maines, 25, lead warbler of the Dixie Chicks, and actor Adrian Pasdar (Pompatus Of Love), 35, tied the knot at the famed Little White Chapel in Las Vegas on June 24. Maines was formerly wed to musician Michael Tarabay. The couple met last year at the wedding of Dixie Chick Emily Robison. She and the other member of the country trio - Martie Seidel - joined the newlyweds for a round of gambling after the nuptials.

48 posted on 04/26/2003 12:14:44 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: Scothia
"Exactly, and we've all bought into it. Dang."

How many of "we" read Entertainment Weekly? Or watch Diane Sawyer on ABC's Primetime Thursday?

The Ditzi Chicks no longer care about their Country Music fan-base. If that wasn't apparent before, it certainly is now. Consequently, they are targeting a new Pop Music fan-base. And are using the current publicity to do so.
49 posted on 04/26/2003 12:15:44 PM PDT by Search4Truth (When a man lies, he murders part of the world.)
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To: gg188
LOL!

That nude airbrush pic is one big FU to all their former fans! Don't be fooled by the media into thinking its anything else.

50 posted on 04/26/2003 12:16:42 PM PDT by Walkin Man
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To: Noumenon


51 posted on 04/26/2003 12:16:55 PM PDT by kcvl
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To: annyokie
Maybe it's a miracle of The Atkins Diet.
52 posted on 04/26/2003 12:18:05 PM PDT by El Sordo
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To: MeeknMing
Let these Saddam lovers tyr and play their music in Iraq (no not Iraq, that will now be free), in Saudi Arabia, Egypt.

Dixie Disty Dopey, whatever their name is, I hope they never sell another album.
53 posted on 04/26/2003 12:18:48 PM PDT by BJungNan
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To: MeeknMing; All
Now all y'all need to remember the liberal speak dictionary....they said "no airbrushing" not "no alterations"....there are other tools in Adobe Photoshop 7 besides airbrushing that would allow them to make her look slim...such as the rubber stamp tool, drawing tool, etc. So *technically* she isn't lying. {g}(note sarcasm)
54 posted on 04/26/2003 12:20:38 PM PDT by cherry_bomb88 ("It's better to be hated for what you are, than loved for what you are not" ~Andre Gilde)
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To: Paul Atreides
LOL!!!!
55 posted on 04/26/2003 12:22:06 PM PDT by Eaker (64,999,987 firearm owners killed no one yesterday. Somehow, it didn't make the news.)
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To: cherry_bomb88
Their heads could have been transplanted on model bodies.
56 posted on 04/26/2003 12:25:54 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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To: Paul Atreides
EXACTLY!!! We need to remember to translate "liberal speak" before we understand what they are saying. {g}
57 posted on 04/26/2003 12:26:57 PM PDT by cherry_bomb88 ("It's better to be hated for what you are, than loved for what you are not" ~Andre Gilde)
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To: FITZ
Maybe her clothes just make her look fat

I have that same problem....LOL

58 posted on 04/26/2003 12:28:35 PM PDT by SouthernFreebird
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To: MeeknMing
(And in answer to the first question this photograph will spark, an Entertainment Weekly spokeswoman asserts: "That's them, their bodies. There were no computer tricks, no airbrushing.")

Right. And "the check's in the mail".

They found the only three women alive that have perfectly smooth skin with perfectly even color, with absolutely no flaws and no excess weight (even though one recently delivered a child,and one has a moderate weight problem) - and they just happen to be in a band together.

I work out at a VERY upscale health club/spa (that offers a comprehensive range of skin treatments), and I can tell you that I've never seen ONE woman who looks anything like that.

Please. Even professional models are airbrushed.

59 posted on 04/26/2003 12:30:02 PM PDT by DaughterOfAnIwoJimaVet ("There was abuse in my family; it was mostly musical in nature.")
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To: kcvl
Dang! I don't know which is more desirable: seeing her nekkid or in those ridiculous clothes.
60 posted on 04/26/2003 12:31:14 PM PDT by Paul Atreides
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