Adele gestures after being interrupted by presenter James
Corden following her award for best British album of the
year during the BRIT Music Awards at the O2 Arena in
London. REUTERS/Dylan Martinez
Singer Adele had the tabloid press up in arms and TV
executives running for cover over a middle finger gesture after
her moment in the sun at British pop's biggest awards was cut
short for programming reasons.
The 23-year-old was midway through an acceptance speech at
the packed O2 Arena in her native London after picking up the
big prize - best British album for her chart-conquering "21".
But because the show was running late, and being broadcast
live on ITV, presenter James Corden stepped in to cut Adele
short, prompting the "one finger salute".
The Sun newspaper, Britain's best-selling daily, had a
picture of the gesture on its front page above the headline
"Someone dislikes you", a reference to her hit "Someone Like
You".
The rival Mirror featured a similar image accompanied by the
words "Adele: Go to hell!"
Speaking backstage after the two-hour show, Adele said she
was upset by the interruption.
"I flipped the finger but it wasn't to my fans," she told the
Sun. "I'm sorry if I offended anyone, it was the suits that
offended me."
The incident comes weeks after U.S. television network NBC
and the NFL apologised for an offensive finger gesture made
by British rapper M.I.A. during singer Madonna's televised
show at the Super Bowl.
Madonna slammed M.I.A.'s behaviour as juvenile, negative and
out of place.
Both ITV and the BRIT Awards issued apologies following the
show, which ended on a sour note after what had been another
triumphant night for Adele.
Fresh from her record-equalling six-Grammy haul in the United
States earlier this month and return to live performing after
surgery on her vocal cords late last year, Adele bagged two
BRITs -- best British female and best British album.
"Nothing makes me prouder than coming home with six Grammys,
then coming to the BRITs and winning album of the year," she
said to loud cheers after winning the album prize, considered
the most important.
"I'm so proud to be British and to be flying the flag and I'm
so proud to be in the room with all of you." At that point
she was cut short, prompting boos in the crowd.
There was some good news for TV bosses -- audience ratings
showed a peak viewing figure of 7.4 million, the highest in
seven years. The average audience was 6.2 million.
Yet some critics felt the night was more about "suits" -
corporate executives focussing on record sales and viewing
figures - than music.
Performers included Adele with "Rolling In the Deep", Ed
Sheeran with "Lego House" and Coldplay with "Charlie Brown".
Andy Gill of the Independent newspaper called the awards
"perhaps the dreariest two hours that TV viewers have sat
through in decades."
He wrote in his review that every award winner was
predictable and many performers, including Coldplay, Florence
+ The Machine and Noel Gallagher, were dull.
Rihanna livened up proceedings when she emerged from a
transparent box smeared in paint, while Adele and
singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran put others to shame, Gill said.
Sheeran, a 21-year-old who sang accompanied by an acoustic
guitar, was the other big winner on the night, scooping the
British breakthrough and British male solo categories.
Both he and Adele have been disparagingly referred to as the
"New Boring" in British pop, although they are selling plenty
of records which will cheer an industry in decline for the
best part of a decade.
In its 52nd week of release ending Feb. 19, Adele's 21 album
had its largest U.S. sales week with 730,000 albums sold,
more than the previous high of 399,000 copies in the week
ending Dec. 25, 2011, according to industry benchmark Nielsen
SoundScan.
The record has sold more than 15 million copies worldwide.
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