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Friday, 25 December 2015

Selena Gomez Says She’ll ‘Always’ Love Justin Bieber: ‘We Grew Up Together’


Selena Gomez On Getting Back Together With Justin Bieber
 

After being together for roughly two years, it’s not surprising for Selena Gomez to say she’ll ‘always’ love Justin Bieber! While the two couldn’t work things out, Selena opened up about her past relationship and revealed that she will continue to love and support her former flame.

The heart wants what it wants. Although Selena Gomez, 23, and Justin Bieber, 21, went their separate ways after being on-and-off for roughly two years, the “Same Old Love” singer still has respect for her ex. In a recent interview, Selena bared her soul and said she’ll “always” love Justin. She even opened up about the type of relationship she has with her ex today. To hear more about Jelena, head over to iTunes and download the latest HollywoodLife podcast for free!

Click to buy Selena Gomez’s For You on Amazon

They’re just friends! In an interview with Elle, Selena revealed that she just wants everyone to know that she and Justin are “genuinely” friends, for now. “I’ll forever support him and love him in a way that… We grew up together. I think people want it to be different,” the 23-year-old explained to the magazine. “We’re too young for that. Nobody was married. There was no… I respect him. And I think he respects me, in a healthy manner.”
It makes sense for there to still be some love between the two. Selena and Justin were dating for quite a while, so those feelings are natural. But now that “Jelena” is over, is it finally the end of that relationship? “I don’t know!” she laughed after the interviewer asked her that very question. Never say never! Anything is possible, especially when two former lovers still have some feelings for each other.

Justin Gets Asked If ‘What Do You Mean?’ Is About Selena

Since Justin and Selena are both musicians, they both endure the same questions about their songs. After Justin’s “What Do You Mean?” single was released, it’s hard to not wonder if the tune was about his exEllen DeGeneres, 57, grilled JB about his new song when he stopped by her show and he simply said, “I wrote the song for women in general.”

What do you think, HollywoodLifers? Are you surprised by Selena’s admission about her feelings for Justin?

Justin Bieber Likes Watching "Scandal" and 20 Other Things You Never Knew About Him

1. Full name: Justin Drew Bieber
2. My first show was in: Tulsa, Oklahoma
3. I really want to collaborate with: John Mayer
4. Top three songs on my iPod: "Too Hollygrove to Go," "Hollywood," "No Longer Slaves" 
5. Go-to karaoke song: "Let It Be"
6. Favorite summer song: "Teenage Dream"
7. Favorite Canadian staples: ketchup chips, Tim Hortons doughnuts, poutine
8. I'm embarrassed to admit it, but I watch: Scandal
9. First drink I ordered legally: beer
10. I'm secretly terrified of: spiders
11. My favorite tattoo is my: owl
12. And the next one I'm getting is a: tramp stamp, LOL
13. Style I hate on girls: gladiator sandals
14. Style I love: booty shorts
15. One things I've learned about women is: They are complicated.
16. The sexiest thing about a woman is: her attitude
17. My first kiss was: at a snowhill
18. Pet peeve: waiting on slow Internet
19. Most embarrassing moment: running into glass
20. One thing even Beliebers don't know about me is: I can hold my breath underwater for two minutes. 
21. Best joke from my roast: Someone said that Kevin Hart had to be back on Shaq's keychain by the end of the night. 
This article was originally published as "The Fighter" in the September 2015 issue of Cosmopolitan. Pick up the issue on newsstands August 11 or click here to subscribe to the digital edition!

The Do's And Don'ts of Justin Bieber's Next Album

Justin Bieber attends the CR Fashion Book Issue N°5 launch party as part of the Paris Fashion Week Womenswear Spring/Summer 2015 on September 30, 2014 in Paris, France. 
PIERRE SUU/GETTY IMAGES

How does Bieber pull off the crowd-pleasing redemption story? By following these simple artistic and personal steps.

Bieber season is coming. You can feel it in the air, in the whispers of the blogosphere, in each and every endlessly favorited tweet and Instagram post. In the last gasps of 2014, a year that Justin Bieberbasically took off as a recording artist, the embattled pop star and his longtime manager Scooter Braun began teasing his next album, which would follow the downbeat 2013 Journals compilation. "My break is for a reason. U will soon see :) thank u for your patience," Bieber posted on Instagram, while Braun declared in a separate post tagging Bieber, "2013 Was Practice. 2014 Was The Warm Up. 2015 Is Game Time." Rumors are already swirling that Bieber is recording with Michael Jackson's son, Prince Jackson, and on Tuesday (Jan. 6), the hashtag #JustinWereReady began trending worldwide on Twitter. While Bieber is a little preoccupied recovering from a foot injury and hoping to get back on his skateboard, the Beliebers are hungry for their leader's next musical chapter to begin.

So what will Bieber's next album cycle look like? It will surely involve some contrition from the Biebs, who has experienced a rather nightmarish two years resulting almost entirely from his own poor choices. Yet even at his lowest point, Bieber has proven that his musical talent is still intact; Journals didn't produce a hit single, but the collection was Bieber's most mature musical statement to date. 

With a lot of smart decisions and a little luck, Bieber can successfully write his own comeback story and rejoin pop's biggest stars. Follow these suggestions, Justin Bieber, and you'll be back on top sooner than anyone would have thought:

DO record some sort of apology song. One of the major criticisms of Bieber's second feature film, 2013's Justin Bieber's Believe, was that it didn't honestly portray or even acknowledge the chaotic nature of Bieber's last world tour, downplaying his transgressions as minor missteps instead of symptoms of a full-blown breakdown. A PR stunt like a 3D concert film is not the best platform to plead forgiveness, but some sort of general mea culpa on Bieber's next album would go a long way toward restoring his image. Bieber needs his own version of "Shadow Days," John Mayer's effectively earnest 2012 single, on which he basically declared that he's acted like a dick, but that's not who he was, and those days are behind him.

DON'T base your album around your Selena Gomez breakup. Look, Selena Gomez seems like a very chill girlfriend and the on-again/off-again thing must be tough, especially while her single "The Heart Wants What It Wants" haunts you from afar and continuously creeps up the Pop Songs chart. But, Biebs, you already made a song called "Heartbreaker" and let those feelings simmer in 2013 with Journals; the tears on your guitar strings have long since evaporated. Your next project should be about moving on from a certain phase of your life and embracing the future, even if it means chilling by the fire and eating fondue with *SOB* another girl. 

DO look toward Usher for guidance. Ursh has served as a big brother for the Biebs through thick and thin: "I can say I'm not happy with all the choices my friend has made, but I'm supportive of him," Usher said of Bieber in his recent Billboard cover story. Bieber has needed the elder superstar's positive reinforcement from a personal standpoint, but he also learn a thing or two from Usher's career trajectory. After all, Usher was only 15 years old when his self-titled debut album was released in 1994, and over the past 20 years, the entertainer has confidently transitioned into and embraced adulthood with a steadiness that the Biebs should envy. Bieber would be wise to lean on Usher with this new project by picking his mentor's brain, figuring out how to arrange a killer live show and trusting a long-running hit-maker to help him crash back into the Top 40. 

DON'T make a full-on R&B album. Bieber showed real growth on his Journalscollection, resisting the urge to power through a shambolic period in his life with faceless party anthems featuring, who knows, Redfoo and the Vengaboys? It might not have performed well on radio, but his Journals compilation serves as the sort of offbeat pitstop that mainstream artists need every now and then to prove to themselves that they can successfully experiment with their sound (see also: Kanye West's 808s & Heartbreak or Madonna's American Life). That being said, we need Bieber to make a pop album pronto, or else he might not be regarded as an artist capable of reliably delivering hits anymore. Coming off of a prolonged hiatus, Bieber should return to the sugary hooks and high-BPM tempos that marked Top 10 hits like "As Long As You Love Me" and "Beauty and a Beat" -- something catchy and attention-grabbing. Back in October 2013, Braun told Billboard that Bieber has some "big, international dance records" in his vault that wouldn't have fit in with Journals. Well, it's time to hear those big, international dance records! Speaking of which… 

DO record another banger (or two, or three) with Zedd. The electro-pop wave has crashed, with the days of hyper-kinetic summer songs by Flo Rida, the Black Eyed Peas and Kesha ceding to slightly more leisurely tempos as heard on recent smashes like "Fancy," "All About That Bass" and "Happy." One of the few EDM artists who has been able to successfully toe the line between fast and slow, however, is Zedd, who co-produced "Beauty and a Beat" for Bieber before blowing up with "Clarity," "Stay the Night" and the Ariana Grande collaboration "Break Free." The latter track is what Bieber should be aiming for with his comeback single: zippy and immediate, with a synthesizer pileup but enough room for the 20-year-old to flaunt his vocal prowess. 

DON'T work with Timbaland. Timbaland is more than capable of bringing out the best in a young male artist -- look at what he's done for Justin Timberlake's solo career ever since "Cry Me a River." But that's also the exact reason why Biebs should steer clear of calling up Timbaland for his new album. If Bieber leans on Timbo's production too hard, the comparisons between Justin and The Other Famous Justin will flood in and capsize the Biebs' next project, especially if it falls short of the high-water marks ofFutureSex/Lovesounds or The 20/20 Experience. Maybe Timbaland can be the man when Bieber is older and is ready for his own 20/20 Experience, but right now, he's 20 and needs an experience (see what I did there?) that won't provoke endless comparisons to the world's most critically beloved male pop star.

DO revive Carly Rae Jepsen's career with a duet. Here are a few unassailable pop facts: 
1. Carly Rae Jepsen's 2012 album Kiss (you know, the one with "Call Me Maybe") is crazy underrated as a whole. 

2. Carly Rae Jepsen has been pretty quiet over the past two years, and could use a hit!
3. People still like Carly Rae Jepsen -- or at least, very few people actively dislike her -- and would be onboard with a mini-CRJ comeback.

4. The Bieber-Jepsen duet on Kiss, the flaccid "Beautiful," was surprisingly the weakest track on the album -- the chemistry was there, but the soft songwriting and slow tempo didn't do the pair any favors.  So give these two crazy Canadians another chance at capturing the magic! Imagine a sultry, "Love Me Harder"-esque jam in which Carly and her pal Justin wink at each other over some ace production from Tricky Stewart & The-Dream. Let's make this happen and rewrite history.DON'T hit up Lil Wayne… or Prince Jackson. There comes a time in every man's life where he must put down his skateboard and face reality. The Biebs may be landing kickflips with the ease of Bucky Lasek in Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 3, but he doesn't need to emulate X Games enthusiast/Trukfit king Lil Wayne, who showed up on theJournals song "Backpack" to portray an alien being carried around in the Biebs' backpack (?) and actually spat the line "My swag is out of this world" (?!) while his swag was very much tethered to Earth's gravitational pull. Weezy has started to slow down his career losing streak with the Drake vs. Lil Wayne tour and singles like "Believe Me," but another Bieber-Wayne collaboration, by nature, has the potential to be as witless as "Backpack," so we'll pass.

And while we're at it, Biebs: Prince Jackson, and the rumors that you're making music with him? Maybe let those demos stay demos, or gift them to mutual pal Floyd Mayweather for his birthday or something. Let the Prince of Pop settle into a musical career (if he so chooses) before he shows up on your next album.

DO show some skin. This is the easiest favor ever asked of Bieber! The equation of Nick Jonas' recent solo breakout goes something like this: Solid Single x Shirtless Pics = Swooning Fans. The Biebs should be sure to pair any promotional opportunities with ample chest shots, which he's already provided countless times for magazine spreads… and on Instagram… and in public. Show some skin, young Justin, but maybe not in the airport security line, cool?

DON'T revel in trashiness. Bieber's next album will likely be released after he turns 21 on March 1, but that doesn't mean his first music video should be a shot-by-shot re-creation of Spring Breakers. The Hedonism Pose may have worked for Miley Cyrus' career reinvention, but too many mop-bucket-pissing hijinks have damaged the reputation of a male artist whose supposed foundation is wholesomeness. There's a way for Bieber to grow up while also getting parents back on board with his music and image, and that solution is closer to the stylish glass-sipping of Bruno Mars, not the leopard-print puking of LMFAO.

DO make the album rollout a prolonged event. Public opinion of Bieber is still low enough that, if the pop star were to "pull a Beyonce" and plop an album on iTunes without any forewarning, he risks a lukewarm reception that negatively impacts radio play and quietly pushes the album into the past. Instead, Bieber's next project should follow the Taylor Swift blueprint for 1989: create a fan-driven event for the lead single release, dish out juicy interviews, own the awards show and morning-show circuits, stop by The Voice. He needs to pummel pop fans with the fact that he's back and still a big deal, while energizing his Belieber base and extracting squeals from across the globe. Want to be as big as Taylor Swift? Start by becoming as inescapable as her.  

DON'T get furious if your album doesn't debut big. Back in June 2012, Believedebuted with 374,000 copies sold in its first week, at that point the biggest initial sales week for any album that year. The proper follow-up album to Believe is not likely to debut that big, or even start with half of that, when it's released in 2015: too much time has passed without an album or hit single for Bieber, and album sales have deflated over the past three years. And that's okay! Whatever his next album sells in its first week, Bieber shouldn't react the same way that Lady Gaga did when 2013's ARTPOPstarted with roughly a quarter of the sales of 2011's Born This Way and many derided the album as a "flop." The reality is, huge sales weeks are increasingly difficult to come by, and Bieber's goal should be to spiral multiple singles off his album and keep the sales consistent, just as artists like Ariana Grande, Ed Sheeran and Sam Smith have done in recent months. No matter what that final number is, Biebs, it doesn't warrant a Twitter rant.
DO constantly remind everyone of your charity work. Bieber's next album cycle will be a combination of music promotion and a personal redemption story, one showing that Bieber is not such a bad guy despite the poor choices he's made leading up to his 21st birthday. The easiest way for him to win back the hearts of the non-Beliebers is to emphasize his philanthropic work, from meeting with tsunami victims to his PETA work to his Make-A-Wish contributions. Revisit the It Gets Better project on the Ellen show; stress the fan outreach that has millions of people defending Bieber online. The Biebs needs to turn the public tide by underlining the fact that he's done a lot of bad, but a lot of good, too. 

DON'T be a bonehead. If there's one thing Justin Bieber needs to do in 2015, it's not be an idiot. Seems easy enough, right? But for someone prone to lashing out at paparazzi, driving recklessly, destroying his neighbors' sanity and giving in to the temptations of South American graffiti, this simple act of not being a moron may sound like an impossibility! Simply stated, if Bieber can survive 2015 without the legal issues, caught-on-tape wildness or un-swaggy outbursts that have plagued him over the past two years, he's going to win. No matter how well his singles place on the Hot 100 or how many metallic wings he dons during his arena shows, Bieber will view 2015 as a positive if no new stains are collected onto his reputation. You could once again be pop music's platinum, its silver, its gold, Bieber. Just keep yourself clean and dance forward.

Justin Bieber says 'What Do You Mean?' is 'about women in general'

Justin Bieber’s latest single, “What Do You Mean?”, is not about anyone whose name may or may not rhyme with “Melena.”
That’s what he told Ellen DeGeneres, anyway, when he stopped by for Tuesday’s Ellen DeGeneres Show. “I wrote the song for women in general,” he said, dodging the host’s attempt to get him to talk about his ex, Selena Gomez. “I just never know what women are thinking ‘cause they say one thing and they meant another thing and then they’re like do this and don’t do this and then I’m like … what do you mean?”
And there you have it — easy enough. Another fun fact about the song is that when you’re hearing what you think might be a synthesizer, it’s actually Bieber’s voice. “That’s actually my vocal, they just chopped it up. … They pitched it up and they messed with it and stuff.”
In the clip ahead, Bieber also talks about that infamous butt Instagram and whether he’s single. 

Justin Bieber Biography

Justin Bieber is a Canadian pop star who was discovered via YouTube. His debut album, My World, went platinum in the United States, Canada and the United Kingdom.


Synopsis

Born in 1994 in Stratford, Ontario, Canada, to a single mother, Justin Bieber took second place in a local talent competition at a young age and later turned into a YouTube phenomenon. He signed a record contract with Usher and became the first solo artist to have four singles enter the Top 40 before the release of a debut album. His album My World has gone platinum in several countries, though he later experienced a ton of media exposure resulting from offensive activity. He nonetheless made his comeback in 2015 with his first No. 1 song, "What Do You Mean?"

Childhood

Born on March 1, 1994, in the small town of Stratford, Ontario, Canada, Justin Bieber was raised by a single mom. Bieber, whose debut album, My World, hit stores in November 2009, is a true overnight success, having gone from an unknown, untrained singer whose mother posted YouTube clips of her boy performing, to a budding superstar with a big-time record deal, all in just two years.
Bieber always had an interest in music. His mother gave him a drum kit for his second birthday and, as he tells it, he was "basically banging on everything I could get my hands on."

YouTube Sensation

But it was an obscure talent contest in his hometown, in which the 12-year-old Bieber finished second that put him on the road to superstardom. As a way to share his singing with family, Justin and his mom began posting clips of Bieber performing covers of Stevie Wonder, Michael Jackson and Ne-Yo on YouTube.
Within months, Justin was an Internet sensation, with a large following of fans and an eager manager arranging for the teenager to fly to Atlanta to consider a record deal. There, Bieber had a chance meeting with Usher, who eventually signed the young singer to a contract.

Hit Album: 'My World'

Bieber's first single, "One Time," went certified platinum in his native Canada shortly after its release in May 2009. His album My World matched that success, selling more than 137,000 copies within a week of hitting stores. Bieber broke into the Billboard Top 10 in early 2010 with "Baby," which also featured rapper Ludacris. Bieber soon released My World 2.0 (2010), which offered his growing fan base ten new songs.
In 2011, Bieber took to the big screen in the concert documentary Never Say Never. His fans crowded movie theaters to catch him in action on stage and get a glimpse of his life behind the scenes. The movie, which eventually earned more than $73 million at the box office, also had guest appearances by Kanye West, Miley Cyrus and Bieber's musical mentor Usher. That same year, Bieber released an album featuring his own take on such holiday classics as "All I Want For Christmas Is," his duet with Mariah Carey.
Bieber had another hit single in April 2012 with "Boyfriend," which appeared on his album Believe.

Tarnished Image

While still only in his teens, Bieber survived his first public scandal. A woman filed suit against Bieber in 2011, claiming that he was the father of her child. But a DNA test proved that the young pop star was not the father and the woman dropped her lawsuit. Bieber sang about the scandal in the song "Maria."
That was only the beginning of a string of scandals, bad behavior and unfavorable press for the young pop artist, though he did manage to have another Top 10 hit with the party anthem "Beauty and a Beat," featuring Nicki Minaj. In March 2013, Bieber's neighbor accused the singer of spitting on him, in addition to making threatening comments. Two months later, denizens of Bieber's neighborhood in Calabasas, California, complained about that he was driving too fast in a residential area.
On April 15, 2013, Bieber visited a museum in Amsterdam that paid tribute to Anne Frank. Upon writing that the young journalist "would have been a Belieber," he faced more backlash from the public. On July 9, 2013, his image was scrutinized once again after he was recorded urinating in a janitor's bucket and yelling "F--- Bill Clinton," holding a photo of the former president. Although he later apologized, his previously squeaky clean image began to tarnish even more.
On January 14, 2014, Bieber's home in California was searched after he was accused of egging a neighbor's house. Nine days later, Bieber was arrested for suspicion of drag racing and driving under the influence. After a Breathalyzer test showed that Bieber wasn't sober, he was taken into custody where he stayed until he posted bail, which was set at $2,500. The charges however were reduced to only resisting arrest.

First No. 1 Single

After being featured in a prominent Calvin Klein ad, Bieber was able to make a big comeback in 2015, nailing a summer Top 10 hit with the Diplo and Skrillex collaboration "Where Are Ü Now." Then in October, Bieber landed his first No. 1 single with "What Do You Mean?," with both tracks helmed by R&B songwriter Poo Bear. 

Personal Life

Teen idol Justin Bieber broke the hearts of many of his young female fans in 2010 when he started dating television actress and singer Selena Gomez. It wasn't easy for Gomez to be Bieber's girlfriend, as she was accosted by some of his devoted followers. There were even death threats posted against her on Twitter after the pair was photographed kissing while on a 2011 vacation. The couple ended their relationship in November 2012.
 
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