Saturday, 27-Jun-2009, 8:09PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the July 6th issues of People, Life & Style, Star & In Touch weekly magazines; and the June 23rd edition of the Algerian daily newspaper Liberté.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Lotfi

Sunday, 14-Jun-2009, 12:26AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Nick: "I Love Mariah's Curves!"
From the June 22nd issue of Us Weekly, Love Lives section, page 45.

I Love Mariah's Curves!
"I always tell her, 'Girl, you've got all those curves and me with no brakes,'" Nick Cannon, 28, tells Us of loving Mariah Carey's voluptuous body.

And though the singer, 39, has gotten attention for her weight fluctuations, her hubby says she's happy with her shape. "It's something that everyone deals with. Everybody is different for a reason; it ain't about trying to be super-skinny. That's not what's hot. It's about what's inside."
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Wednesday, 10-Jun-2009, 12:08PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the latest issues of Life & Style, OK!, In Touch and the French Gala.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Sam

Sunday, 31-May-2009, 4:51PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah & Nick's New LA Home Featured in In Touch
Mariah & Nick: Their First Home Together
In Touch Weekly - June 8, 2009 Issue

A year after they wed, they're ready to move into a $7 million LA love nest. Is a baby next?

Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon may have seemed impulsive when they tied the knot after dating for a few weeks in 2008, but they remain as devoted as ever. "We're proving people wrong," says Nick. "They said we wouldn't make it – we're making it!" To celebrate, the couple recently treated themselves to a $7 million anniversary present: an 11,750-square-foot home in the Bel-Air section of Los Angeles.

While Mariah already owns a triplex apartment in NYC's Tribeca and a compound in the Bahamas, this will be their first new home together. And it's a perfect "starter" house for an A-list couple.

"Bel-Air has a very prestigious zip code," says celebrity real estate agent Chad Rogers. "This property is very appealing because it gives them land. It is on about three acres with the most incredible 360-degree views of the city lights, the canyons, the reservoirs and the ocean. It's total seclusion on a quiet street, and they're minutes from anywhere they want to be in LA."

A place to start a family
Mariah and her siblings lived in 13 different houses after their parents divorced, so making a permanent home is important to her. "I remember saying to myself, 'I want to have a good life and feel secure,'" says the singer. And though she once admitted that she didn't know how many bathrooms were in her NYC apartment, this enormous home features eight, plus seven fireplaces and five bedrooms – plenty of space for kids. "I don't think Mariah ever loved someone like she loves Nick. They are well-matched in every way," says a friend of Mariah's. "She very much wants to have a child with him."

That's definitely part of Nick's plan, but he seems content to settle into domesticity with his wife. "Right now, we're trying to enjoy the newlywed aspect," he says. "The first year of marriage was amazing. I can't for the second."


Note: In Touch's so-called "exclusive" pictures of Mariah & Nick's new LA home were previously posted here. See our April 28th post for more pictures to view.
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Tuesday, 26-May-2009, 1:15AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the June 1st issues of Us, OK!, Life & Style, In Touch, Star magazines; and from the May 21st issue of the Croatian magazine Gloria.



Source: MariahDailyJournal | Bojan

Sunday, 10-May-2009, 11:00AM EDT | Posted by Liron
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the May 18th issues of In Touch, Star, Us, Life & Style and OK! weekly magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 12-Apr-2009, 1:14PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the April 20th issues of People, Life & Style and In Touch weekly magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 06-Apr-2009, 7:31AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the April 13th issues of People, In Touch, OK!, Life & Style and Us weekly magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Tuesday, 24-Mar-2009, 7:24PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions
Our magazines section, On The Cover, has been updated to include 3 more magazine cover issues: In Rock 1995, Touch 1999 and Breakout 1999.

Babe in the Hood
Touch (UK)- December 1999 Issue

After the demise of her marriage, many assumed that Carey's career would be on shaky ground. After all, divorcing your boss isn't exactly Rule Number One In The Book Of Career Advancement. But in the immediate period after the split, Mariah managed to have another successful album in 'Butterfly' and also won a Best Song Oscar for 'When You Believe,' a duet with Whitney Houston taken from the Prince of Egypt soundtrack. For the record, Mariah maintains she and Whitney are friends and not the warring divas suggested on some publications. For many reasons (not least because she also has a sexy image and is romantically linked to Tommy Mottola), Jennifer Lopez's name cannot fail to crop up in the conversation. The normally very opinionated and talkative Mariah goes very quiet when asked what she thinks of Jennifer Lopez's new found music career. She's diplomatic alright, but her diplomacy is easy enough to read into. When asked if she thinks Jennifer's image is following a blueprint successfully used by herself, Mariah offers, "I think I'd rather not comment on other artists and particularly not single out any individuals. However if we're talking about artists in general, usually you work with what you have. For instance, if you're the sexy dancer type of girl, you make the most of it. While the ballad singer will just stand there and sing and be plain. I can't speak on anybody else's image, though."

Mariah has forged a career which has seen her go from being an 18 year old wannabe to one of the most successful female artists of the decade. Many of today's young starlets, your Britneys and Billys, will probably be grately to still be around this time next year. "When my record company first put me out, there was a conscious decision to not market me as a teen act, because that only lasts so long," says Mariah. "I mean, either you really have to grow into your artistry or you're part of a fad, and fads end. They wanted to make me very plain and not about any kind of clothing or whatever. They wanted me simply sitting on a stage singing so people would notice the voice. So it didn't matter if I was 18 or 30. No one really would have known either way. It was about getting people to notice me as a vocalist. I think that worked in my favour. Now I can have fun and do what I want."... READ MORE »



Mariah Carey Exclusive Interview
In Rock (Japan) - December 1995 Issue



Mariah Carey Exclusive Interview
Breakout (Holland) - October 1999 Issue


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Kerry

Saturday, 21-Mar-2009, 11:21PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in This Week's Star and In Touch Magazines
Did Cat Get Mariah's Tongue?
Star, March 30, 2009


She turns 39 this month, and megamillion-dollar songbird Mariah Carey is making sure age doesn't affect her most valuable asset: her voice. To preserve her golden throat, Mariah won't utter a word before noon — and she's worked out a sign language to communicate with her hubby Nick Cannon, 28.

"When she licks her lips, it means she wants a kiss," a source explains. "When she tips an imaginary cup, she wants her Earl Grey tea. When she puts on her reading glasses, she wants to see the newspaper." When Mariah has a request that's too challenging to sign, she whispers it in Nick's ear. "He loves that," the source adds. "He thinks it's sweet."

And there's an added bonus for the newlyweds (their one-year anniversary is April 30): They never yell at each other! "When they fight, they talk it out," says the source. "Mariah would never scream at anyone. It would ruin her voice!"

Nick & Mariah Plan Another Wedding
In Touch, March 30, 2009


Just in time for their one-year wedding anniversary, Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon are planning to tie the knot again! In an exclusive interview with In Touch, Nick revealed that he and his wife have a big party in the works. "We have spoken about it, and it's coming up — that's all I can say," the 28-year-old told In Touch during a party sponsored by Grey Goose vodka at Underground club in Chicago on March 5. "We are going to do what we said we were going to do from the very beginning."

After their intimate surprise wedding in the Bahamas last April, Mariah promised Ellen DeGeneres that she and Nick would throw another huge wedding for the family members and friends who weren't there the first time. "Instead of trying to be like, 'You're invited, but shhh, don't tell anybody,' we're just going to have another one next year," she explained.

Mariah and Nick have another project on their to-do list — having a baby. On February 19, they were spotted at the Southern California Reproductive Center, a fertility clinic in Beverly Hills. "Mariah admitted that they are getting some help to get pregnant," an insider says. According to a friend, Mariah, 40, is serious about being with Nick forever and is finally at a point in her career and her personal life where she feels it's the perfect time. "She can't wait to have his baby," the friend adds.
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Saturday, 14-Mar-2009, 5:46PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Nick & Mariah Still Going Strong

OK!, March 23 issue

With their whirlwind romance and surprise marriage, no one thought newlyweds Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon would last. But a month shy of their April 30 one-year anniversary, they definitely "seem like the real deal" says an insider, who spotted them at NYC's Japonais restaurant recently.

The lovebirds are so happy, in fact, that they're in secret talks to take a second trip down the aisle before the year is done. OK! caught up with Nick, who revealed how marriage has changed him. "It made me a more responsible person," Nick, 28, tells OK!. "It made me someone who really monitors my steps in a way to where it's not just about me anymore, it's about a union."

As for his blushing 39-year-old bride, Nick adds, "I'm married to the most gorgeous, most beautiful, most incredible woman in the world!"
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 08-Mar-2009, 12:10PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the March 16th issues of In Touch, OK! and People weekly magazines.


The Dream looks back on his biggest hit with Mariah Carey. "Touch My Body" It was actually easy to write. We sang into the same mic on the demo, trying to come up with the words. It was a surreal moment singing with MC. (People)

Related Article:
Nick Cannon dished to The Boots Girls Thursday night at Chicago's Underground about his life with Mariah Carey, their plans to have children in the future.

BootsGirls: So, I heard that Mariah was going to make an appearance on America's Go Talent?
Nick Cannon: That was a lie. I don't know who made that up. People said that is the reason why I got the job. People just make some stuff up in the press.

BG: Are you trying to trick us... or maybe surprise us?
NC: I swear. That's one thing, I never lie about anything. If you look in the history of all of my interviews, if I say something it's usually true. But yeah, I don't know who made that up. That's a weird rumor too. I mean she might come to a show or two in the back, but I doubt you will see her sitting next to somebody's grandma in the audience.

BG: And onto your personal life. There's been a lot of rumors going on... pregnancy rumors. Can you fill me in?
NC: Oh no. More lies.

BG: Do you see kids in your future?
NC: I hope to see kids in my future. I mean that's the whole purpose of starting a family and getting married and all that stuff. If you're saying like right now, nah, not right now.

BG: So, it's not in your near future?
NC: The press was saying that we were at fertility clinics. I'm just saying all my stuff is working very well. I don't need that!
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 02-Mar-2009, 10:21PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from recent issues of In Touch, OK! and the French Gala magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Sam

Tuesday, 17-Feb-2009, 1:34PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Interview in France's Télé-Loisirs
Below is a brand-new Mariah Carey interview published in this week's issue of the French TV magazine Télé-Loisirs.

Successful singer Mariah Carey reveals her passion for France, its great fashion designers and its pastries in particular...

Télé-Loisirs. Could you live in France?
Mariah Carey. After New York, Paris is my favorite city. When I'm in Paris, I ask my driver to take me to the large avenues where there are a lot of fashion stores. I could buy everything within minutes.

What do you prefer in French people?
Haute Couture. I'm fascinated by the genius of some fashion designers. Attending a fashion show in Paris, it's like going to heaven. Paris is the capital of fashion.

What would you trade with a French?
I love pastries and your bakers are without any doubt the best in the world. Unfortunately, I have to watch my figure. But just looking at pastries in France is a pure delight.

What can you say in French?
Bonjour and Merci!

What's your biggest character defect?
I'm a very hard working person but I need to sleep a lot. I could spend hours in bed. I need to sleep well to stay at the top of everything I do.

What's the quality you're the most proud of?
Tidiness. At home everything has to be shiny. I'm a maniac I wash my hands at least twenty times a day.

What gets on your nerves?
It gets on my nerves when I think of all the sacrifices my parents had to make to succeed in life. When she was 16, my mother left Springfield, Illinois, to try her luck in New York where she met my father. Despite racism she married him.

What do you like?
I like working with my husband. Ever since I got married, my music has evolved a lot. Nick and I wrote a song for my new album. It's a real pleasure working with him. I hope we could work together again because it's great to be by his side.

What artists do you admire the most?
I think Meryl Streep is fantastic. I love Marilyn Monroe as well, like my mother who was fascinated by that woman, and Sissy Spacek too. There are so many people I admire I can't name them all.

What's your remedy against stage fright?
I go for a swim! It allows me to relax.

What's your motto?
What doesn't kill you, makes you stronger. For a long time I felt chained on a professional level in particular. Now I feel free at last. I suffered a lot from the the situation I was in. But now I feel like I'm invincible. I think everything happens for a reason or another.

What's your remedy when you're feeling blue?
Music and faith. When I listen to music I forget all my problems and believing in God allows me to face my doubts.

What's your favorite piece of clothing?
A skirt... a rather short one!
Source: Télé-Loisirs | Scan: Mayrah | Translation: Sam

Saturday, 07-Feb-2009, 7:07AM EST | Posted by Lynn
In Touch: Is Nick Too in Love with Mariah?
In Touch, Feb. 16 Issue
Nick Cannon's devotion to his wife, Mariah Carey, could destroy their union

It has been nine months since Nick Cannon wed Mariah Carey in a secret ceremony in the Bahamas, but the honeymoon is definitely not over. He's so thrilled to be married to the superstar, he'd do anything for her. "I've got the most gorgeous wife in the world," Nick gushed to In Touch as he worked out at the Gatorade G Gym in Park City, Utah, on January 16. "I want to keep her, so I've got to hit the gym."

Ever since their wedding, Nick, 28, has followed Mariah, 38, around the world. He's been spotted escorting her to the ladies' room and acting as her bodyguard by clearing a path for her so she could exit an event. "Mariah treats Nick like her little boy toy," says a witness. "I saw her literally toss him her coat so she could go do interviews."

Call him Mr. Carey!
Nick, who tattoed "Mariah" on his back soon after their wedding, doesn't even get upset about his nickname. "I make fun of me all the time," he's said. "I'm like, 'call me Mr. Carey, who cares?'"

And although Nick - who was executive producer of his own show on MTV, Wild 'N Out - has had success as a rapper, actor and club DJ, he's now focused on taking on a bigger role in his wife's career. Nick is set to direct a video for Mariah's new single, "My Love."

But getting involved with her career may be the last straw. "Nick needs to develop his own identity for this marriage to be healthy," warns Dr. Patricia Farrell, author of How to Be Your Own Therapist, who does not treat the couple. "People who are close tend to mirror each other, but you reach a certain point where it's too much. He's probably smothering her and eventually she will become angry. It's like you are being swallowed alive."
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 02-Feb-2009, 1:25PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the February 9th issues of People, Star, Us and Life & Style; and the Feb. 2009 Ebony.


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Che

Sunday, 25-Jan-2009, 1:25PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the Feb. 2nd issues of People, In Touch, Life & Style, Us; and the Feb. 2009 Red Book.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Janel

Thursday, 22-Jan-2009, 4:44AM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from recent issues of Life & Style, Us and Indi Star (US); Celebs (UK); and El Michouar (Algeria).



And scans from the Nov. 2008 issue of Miami magazine where famed photographers Markus Klinko and Indrani mentioned Mariah in a cover interview.


MIAMI: Most of your subjects aren't new to the fame game. How do you get celebrities who've been photographed countless times, such as Mariah Carey or Kate Winslet, to give you their all?
INDRANI: People tend to do a certain look that they know works well. Our approach is to really get to know them and understand what their new project is about. KLINKO: Mariah's a great example. Our first shoot with her was after Glitter, when her career was at its lowest. It was a great experience because we got to meet this wonderful, powerful woman who eventually opened up to us. We listened to her music and came up with a concept that we felt suited her best at that particular point in her career.
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Bernard | Marc | Brenden | Lotfi

Sunday, 11-Jan-2009, 1:26PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the Jan. 19th issues of Us, In Touch and Life & Style magazines.



And scans from the Almanah Agenda 2009, the annual publication of the biggest newspaper in Timis, Romania.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Manuela

Monday, 05-Jan-2009, 12:40PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the January 12th issues of Jet, OK!, Us, In Touch, People, Star, and Life & Style magazines.


Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 23-Nov-2008, 1:09PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Who's That Hot Guy?

Andrew Karelis seduces Mariah in her 'I Stay In Love' video

Andrew Karelis, a Boston financial adviser who models on the side, got to see Mariah Carey up close in her new video, "I Stay In Love."

"Her husband, Nick Cannon, directed, and Mariah and I have a bedroom scene," Andrew, 29, tells Life & Style. "Nick broke the ice when he introduced us. He said, 'You guys are going to be getting close the next few days - but not too close!'"

"It was funny going back the next day watching the stock market when the day before, I was in bed with Mariah Carey."
Source: Life & Style, Dec. 1, 2008 | MariahDailyJournal

Thursday, 20-Nov-2008, 6:09PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in In Touch Magazine
RUMOR ALERT: Has Mariah's Baby Dream Finally Come True?
In Touch Weekly - December 1, 2008 Issue

An insider says Mariah Carey is two months pregnant -- and she's over the moon

Vacationing in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, with her new husband, Nick Cannon, Mariah Carey turned heads -- but not for the usual reasons.

Known for sunning herself in barely-there bikinis, Mariah was clad in a baggy cover-up that masked her midsection. "It was weird that she dressed so conservatively," says an onlooker on the beach November 15. "She kept her hand on her belly a lot."

A day before she left for Cabo, Mariah, 39, had people talking at the opening of Miami's newly renovated Fontainebleau hotel -- again, because she wasn't acting like herself. "She said no to a champagne toast backstage," says an insider. "She toasted with a water bottle instead."

According to an insider, Mariah's un-Mariahlike behavior stems from one very happy reason: She and Nick are expecting a baby. "Mariah has always wanted a baby," says a close friend of the singer. "She knows she is getting older, and to her, a baby is a beautiful cherished gift."

Mariah's dream may have come true -- a source says she is eight weeks along -- but her pregnancy wasn't planned.

"Mariah had been on birth control pills. She got sick, and she was on antibiotics, and that made her birth control less effective," the source explains. "That's how she got pregnant. It was a surprise."

A child of divorced parents, Mariah once said she wanted to wait to have a baby until she was in a stable relationship with "someone who would be a great father." And it appears that she's found exactly that with Nick, 28. "Nick is such a great man," Mariah's friend says. Mariah couldn't agree more. "I think we would make good parents," she says, "and that we'd be able to figure everything out together."

Source: In Touch Weekly | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 16-Nov-2008, 7:41AM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from this week's issues of Rolling Stone, Entertainment Weekly, In Touch, People, OK!, Us, and Life & Style magazines; and from UK's Daily Mail.


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Tom

Thursday, 13-Nov-2008, 2:11PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Red Book: Mariah's Sweet Dreams of Christmas
Here's what Mariah Carey's winter wonderland looks like: A tree decorated with gold and silver butterflies. A manger in the front room. Christmas music blasting from every speaker. A new husband Nick Cannon to snuggle up next to in the horse-drawn sleigh. by Julia Dahl

Mariah Carey has a lot to celebrate this year. Her 11th studio album, E=MC², was a massive success; she released a new fragrance, Luscious Pink; and Time magazine named her one of the 100 most influential people in the world. But for Mariah, 38, the year's biggest thrill is much more personal: In April, after a whirlwind romance, the star married 27-year-old Nick Cannon in a small ceremony in the Bahamas.

Six months later, Mariah is still glowing.

"I'm really looking forward to being in love on Christmas," gushes the singer, whose assistant calls her "The Queen of Christmas." We're sitting in the back corner of a Brazilian restaurant near Mariah's New York City apartment. "It's easy to be lonely that time of year, and in the past I just drove into that festive mode with a sort of I-don't-care attitude. The holidays are always great, but being in love is going to be the icing on the cake."

Mariah is clearly ready to jump headlong into the season. Step one? Figuring out the personalized Christmas card. She dips her French-manicured nails into her purse to produce last year's effort.

"It's my fantasy version of myself," she says, pushing it across the table, and indeed, the card features a cartoon Mariah in a come-hither pose, dressed in a skimpy Santa dress and knee-high boots. She's accompanied by her two dogs, Jack and Jack Jr., and they're all soaring through the air with Santa on his sleigh. It's actually pretty charming.

"But look, this is the best part." She opens the card and a tinny version of her hit Christmas song, "All I Want For Christmas Is You," fills the air. Mariah beams, but her elation reveals something more than just artistic pride. These days, the songbird who seems to have everything (a hot new hubby, more number one songs than Elvis, and a rumored baby on the way--or at least on her wish list) says she is spending more time appreciating life's simple pleasures. "So much of the season is about being thankful," she tells me. And in this spirit, Mariah settles in and shares her plans for her favorite holiday.

What's the theme for this year's card?
I have to figure that out soon! I started sending cards out about 10 years ago. But "Happy Holidays! Love, Mariah" became pretty played out, so a couple of years ago I started having fun with it, playing around with images and music. I like the cartoon thing, and I think it'll definitely be musical again--I've had a bunch of people tell me their kids play with the card all year long, so I guess it was a hit.

Will Nick be on the card this time?
If he wants to be. I haven't asked him yet. He might be doing his own thing--he's very independent, which is one of the things I love about him. But it'd be fun to do one together.

Have you and Nick talked about how you'll celebrate Christmas this year? What do you usually do?
I'm usually working right up until Christmas, but no matter what's going on, no matter where I am, whether it's right after a tour or a video shoot somewhere, on December 21, I head to my house in Aspen and start celebrating! I have an extended group of friends and family from all over--as far as Sweden and the United Kingdom, even--and every year we gather in Aspen to make it the most festive Christmas ever. We try to outdo ourselves every year.

This year, in addition to everything I love about celebrating the holidays, it's all going to be heightened because of Nick--in a really good way. I think he senses that Christmas is a big deal to me, so he's sort of just going with the flow, so that's cool. I'm pretty sure his family and friends will be out there too. We have to figure it out, but we're gonna make it work!

How does the week begin?
The first thing that happens is I get off the place and get into the car, they have Christmas music blasting and a bottle of champagne ready to pop open! It sounds awful, but I'm a big kid in that way. As soon as I get in that car, I am engulfed in Christmas. I think Nick will be up for that, I really do. He'll be laughing.

Aspen must be the perfect place for a white Christmas.
It is. Aspen is all about the snow and the environment, so it automatically puts you in that celebratory mood. I don't really do up my New York apartment for Christmas; I save everything for Aspen. The house there is all done up with lights and bells--not over the top, but quaint. It's like a gingerbread house. And then you open the door and the first thing you see is this enormous tree and a manger.

I started going to Aspen the year after my album Butterfly came out, and that year I collected a ton of butterfly ornaments. So every year, before we get up there, I have a woman who comes to the house and sets up what we call the butterfly tree. It's gorgeous, all silver and gold with angels and butterflies on it and gold, silver, and white ornaments. And we have a manger set up in the front room because, to me, the season is about celebrating, about being with friends and loved ones, but first and foremost it's about the birth of Christ, and I think it's important to remember that.

How does that religious aspect of the holiday fit into your celebration?
One year I did a concert for Camp Mariah, which is a camp I started that benefits underprivileged children. And every year I work with the foster kids of Denver. We do a holiday event for them, and the last couple of years--I worry about saying this in case any of them read it--Santa has come and he looks much like Santa, a real beard and everything! And all the kids get gifts and get to take pictures with him.

You grew up on Long Island in New York and lived with your mom after your parents divorced. What was Christmas like when you were little?
My mother, now she was festive. She always wanted Christmas to be exciting. We didn't always have enough money for a lot of presents, but she'd wrap up whatever she could--even an orange--and say it was from the cat or something, just so I could have things to open. I think that when kids are little, it's really all about opening things; it doesn't matter so much what they are. And my mother always made things very fun.

Your mother was a singer also. Was music a big part of celebrating?
Yes. She usually had a Christmas party where she'd make mulled wine and invite all her friends, and we'd decorate the tree and everyone would sing carols. So music is very important to me around the holidays. By the end of the week in Aspen everybody is ready to kill me, because from the minute we get there to the minute we leave, I have the Christmas music on. Usually it's satellite radio, but we throw our favorites in there, like the James Brown Christmas album and the Jackson 5 Christmas album. Oh, and I love the Chipmunks' Christmas album! It's such a throwback to childhood--just laughing and having a good time.

Are there places of your childhood you try to incorporate into the celebration?
Every year we do what we call "Charlie Brown Christmas tree," where we string up those big red and green bulbs and hang tons of ornaments--mostly ornaments my fans have sent me over the years. They did pictures of, like, me and the dog, just really cute stuff. A couple of years ago, one of my friends gave us the idea of taking Polaroids of each other and then decorating them and putting those on the tree. That was really fun; I think we might do it again this year. It's a wonderful time for us all to bond and really get into the spirit.

Last year I was very inspired by the movie Elf--how much do you love that movie?--so we set up one of the upstairs bedrooms like the North Pole, all covered in fake snow, with tents and an area where the kids could play with toys like Etch A Sketches. My friend's two children were 3 and 1 at the time, and they were in heaven!

It sounds like you really love the "traditional" Christmas stuff.
I do, but we try to make it our own. The focal point of the week is the 23rd, when we do a real sleigh ride! Depending on how many of us are up there, we get one or two horse-drawn sleighs, and we bundle up and go riding in the snow under the stars. We always drink cocoa with butterscotch schnapps to keep warm, and we sing at the top of our lungs, not even remotely trying to sound good. Later, we go in the hot tub in our Christmas bikinis, then roll in the fresh snow and jump back in the tub.

Christmas bikinis?
Of course! I like the Santa ones, but they don't stay on very well, so I usually just do a red bikini with a Santa hat.

Speaking of bikinis, what about lingerie? This year you'll be a newlywed at Christmas; are you thinking about some naughty Santa outfits?
Honestly, I always get Santa lingerie--even if nobody's going to see it! I mean, why not? But this year I'm definitely excited because it'll be appreciated!

You mentioned cocoa for the sleigh rides. Do you have any other holiday food traditions?
Every Christmas Eve I make linguine and white clam sauce for everybody. They always ask, "Are you gonna make your clam sauce?" I'd be worried if Nick hadn't tried it yet, but he did and ate the whole plate! I also make stuffed shells. It's kind of random because I'm not Italian, but the recipes were my father's, and he gave them to me before he passed away, so it's become a tradition. And we always have A Charlie Brown Christmas on TV [while we eat]. Before the kids go to bed, we leave out cookies and a note for Santa.

The rest of us stay up late that night, and I usually end up wrapping presents until the sun comes up! My problem is, I do too much shopping out there because I never get a chance before that, so I'm sitting up all night wrapping. Then I sleep in Christmas day, which kind of ruins Christmas morning for everybody.

Do they all have to wait until you get up to open presents?
Well, they don't have to! Definitely I always tell everyone to let the kids open presents before I get up. We do stockings; we all have stockings with our names on them, even the dogs.

Since you do a big Christmas Eve dinner, is Christmas night more relaxed?
Actually, that's the night we dress up for dinner. Last year, my pastor came and did a service for us and ate dinner with us. And when I say dress up, I mean I'm in a gown. I've got lots of vintage pieces and I wear either red or white, and jewelry. Usually, a couple of days before, while everyone else is skiing, I just sit around playing dress-up. I don't know what that's about--I mean, who does that?! But skiing means being cold and getting up really early, two things I'm not very good at.

Have you decided yet what presents you want to get for Nick?
I've had a few ideas, but I wouldn't want this to come out before Christmas and give all my ideas away!

How about you? What do you want?
Honestly, I haven't really thought about it. I just want to have a really good time--a restful, enjoyable time. I want to be ecstatic and have the best Christmas ever. And I know that's a really huge request right now. There's so much going on in the world that's pretty dismal, but I've always had that glass-half-full outlook. That's how I am. And I really think it'll be a memorable Christmas.


Source: Red Book, Dec. 2008 Issue | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Tuesday, 11-Nov-2008, 4:13PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
From the Nov. 19th issue of In Touch.

They said it wouldn't last... But Mariah's happier than ever
Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon celebrate their six-month anniversary


At Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon's Halloween bash at Marquee in New York on October 30, love was in the air. The happy couple changed costumes twice before Nick took over the DJ booth from DJ Reach, played three of Mariah's songs in a row and gave a special anniversary toast to his wife. "This is to six months, six years and six decades," he said. "I love you, Mariah!"

After dating for less than two months, Nick and Mariah's secret wedding in the Bahamas on April 30 took many by surprise. "People thought it wouldn't last," an insider says. "But Mariah is so in love, it's ridiculous. It's like she's a love-struck teenager whenever she's around Nick. It's very nice to see."

They're made for each other
When Mariah, 38, impulsively married Nick, 28, her close friends worried that the actor would sponge off of the pop icon, who is worth an estimated $225 million. "He is not her equal," a source told In Touch not long after the wedding. "He's basically around to attend to her diva-ish ways."

Sure enough, Nick has sometimes seemed more like Mariah's assistant than her husband. At public events, he often plays the role of her bodyguard, fending off adoring fans and escorting her to the bathroom. "She is used to being catered to," a pal says. "Mariah has always gotten what she wants when she wants it."

But obviously, Nick doesn't mind - and their relationship appears solid. "He has Mariah's back," the insider explains. "He's helped her blossom into a person who loves to go out and interact with people."

Mariah, who was in an unhappy marriage with music mogul Tommy Mottola for five years, is just as taken with Nick. "She loves that Nick works on his own projects and is financially independent," the insider adds. "This time around, it's genuine love."

And more scans from In Touch, Life & Style, OK!, Star, Jet, and Hip Hop weekly magazines.



And from the German TV direkt, OK!, Life & Style, In Touch, and Gala.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Dennis

Monday, 03-Nov-2008, 1:07AM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the Nov. 3rd and Nov. 10th issues of In Touch, Us, OK!, Life & Style, & People; and from the Dec. Celebrity Hair Now magazines.


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Andrew | Sofia

Wednesday, 22-Oct-2008, 1:17PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah on Fantástico Magazine, Brazil
Mariah is on the cover of the October 2008 issue of the Brazilian magazine, Fantástico, with other famous entertainers who have been interviewed by journalist Zeca Camargo. Inside, Camargo discusses his past interviews including one with Mariah in 1999.

Diva on the couch - How could it have been different? Maybe if I was the last one. It worked with Mariah Carey, why couldn't it work with Madonna? To finish the day of interviews seems to be the dream of every artist that submit themselves to a junket, and, as I learned with Mariah Carey, that can be a good thing. My interview with her was in a studio in New York, in a room especially decorated to receive the international press - which was made of a comfortable lounge chair, a table with an exuberant flower arrangement and a couch where the diva scattered herself. Literally.

Laid down languid on that furniture, she seemed to be crystallized in that position. The first scene I saw was a masseuse treating the muscles of her neck for spending the day in that pose. She received me with a smile that said, "Wow, I can't even believe this is the last one!" And as soon as the masseuse left us, we started one of the most enjoyable conversations that I ever had with a high profile celebrity. Part of the charm of the conversation involved the rehearsed chat ups of Mariah: a compliment to the pants I was wearing (who compliments pants without second intentions?), a strap of her dress that kept on slipping; a light reference to the sensuality of the Brazilian people (too generic for me to think it was directed only to me), a very daring opening of the skirt's chap - that even made her manager stop the recording for some minutes to erase part of the tape. The rest is up to your imagination...

Source: Scans: Leandro | Translation: Joao

Sunday, 19-Oct-2008, 3:07PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the October 27th issues of In Touch, Us, OK!, Life & Style, People, and Hip Hop weekly magazines.


Source: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 13-Oct-2008, 10:00AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the October 20th issues of OK!, In Touch, Star, and Globe magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Mandy

Saturday, 04-Oct-2008, 8:09PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Life & Style, October 13, 2008

Getting in mommy mode
One thing Mariah would have to change in her frenetic work schedule. She has several private appearances (similar to the one in Hong Kong) scheduled through the remainder of 2008. "She's been performing a lot lately," says the friend. "When you think about it, she hasn't been in one place for more than five days pretty much since she and Nick got married in April."

Of course, Mariah would be willing to give up all the hopping around to have a baby with Nick, says the friend. "Mariah's spent her whole life cranking out hits and working her butt off to be a top performer and singer," points out the pal. "She put aside the whole family idea -- there was never time. But things have changed; she's so in love with Nick and knows he'll be a terrific father."

Mariah didn't necessarily feel that way with her previous partners. "After her divorce from music executive Tommy Mottola in 1998, she focused on rebuilding her career without him," continues the pal. "She wasn't ready to have kids with him, nor did she want to. She was focused on work 100 percent."

Mariah also immersed herself in her career when she was dating manager-producer Mark Sudack from 2004 to 2008. "Mariah never even considered having kids with him," adds the insider. "And they were together for a long time and apparently in love." Read full article»



ELLE, October 2008
Letter from reader Jess Hobet of Palo Alto, CA

"Kudos to ELLE on a fabulous cover story, but can someone please find out what is in Mariah Carey's water that is making her so stunning? It's hard not to love Mariah for her sheer beauty and flawless chords, but this article also exposed her down-to-earth persona. It is inspirational for relationship-frenzied women like me to read about her finding true bliss with Nick Cannon, especially after her previously tumultuous romantic life. We already knew her music was irresistible, but this article reveals that her aura is too!"


In Touch, October 13, 2008
Mariah & Nick are #8 on this week's The List

They Love Showing They're In Love
8 Nick and Mariah want to renew their vows every year
Life imitated art when Mariah Carey cast Nick Cannon as her love interest in her "Bye Bye" video. "We really do feel we are soulmates," says Mariah. Since the couple's secret whirlwind wedding in the Bahamas in April, they're more than happy to show their love for one another -- and Nick wants to keep the romance alive. "We're just going to have another wedding next year," says Mariah. "His plan is to have one every year!"
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Wednesday, 01-Oct-2008, 6:22PM EDT | Posted by Casey
Mariah Covers Life & Style
Mariah and Nick are on the cover of the October 13th issue of Life & Style Weekly.

Hollywood's baby boom!

Mariah Carey's biggest fan was on hand as the 39-year-old pop diva performed at the 15th CLSA Investors' Forum in Hong Kong on Sept. 25. "She was with her husband, Nick Cannon, and they were laughing, kissing, holding hands," says an onlooker, who caught the couple arriving at the airport. "You could tell they were newlyweds."

The onlooker couldn't help but notice something else, too: "Mariah looked great, but she seemed to have put on a few pounds. Maybe she's pregnant - or at least planning on it!"

A friend of Mariah's says the star and Nick are definitely trying: "They've been trying during their travels, and Mariah has seen her ob-gyn several times recently in California, and not just for checkups. She's talking to her doctor about pregnancy and what to expect."

Note: As previously reported, Oprah Winfrey dispelled these rumors on her show last Friday saying, "We called Mariah, she gave us the word--it's not true." Nevertheless, scans will be posted soon.
Source: Life & Style

Tuesday, 30-Sep-2008, 1:23AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
From the October 6th issues of Star and In Touch magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 28-Sep-2008, 4:23PM EDT | Posted by Casey
Mariah Covers Elle Romania & Indonesia
Check out Mariah on the cover of the September 2008 issue of Elle Romania. Thanks to Manuela for the scans!



Mariah also graces the cover of Elle Indonesia, October 2008 issue. Click here to view a photo of the magazine cover.
Source: Manuela | Pieter

Monday, 22-Sep-2008, 2:31AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
UK's Colures Magazine Interview
The Wonderful World of MC
by Jessica Huie

Last night Mariah Carey got me drunk. I'd turned up at a studio by Manhattan's Hudson river for my 11:30pm interview with one of the globe's biggest superstars and three hours later... I was still waiting.

Whilst enjoying New York's breath-taking skyline from the 14th floor of the studio, I mentally quiz the woman who came back from an emotional breakdown seven years ago with the sensational ultra platinum The Emancipation of Mimi, an album that cemented her iconic place in pop history. Exciting stuff, and despite the jet lag creeping in, 24 hours after landing at JFK, I couldn't wait to get a peek inside the wonderful world of MC.

At 3am I get the ok to go through for the interview. Three French journalists are waiting behind me: one dozing on the couch, another downing espressos to ward off exhaustion, the third's discontent is apparent as Mariah's publicist has assigned me his slot to conduct the interview before sleep gets the better of me.

I'm asked to sit behind a large black screen on a director's stool where Mariah is seated on the other side. I feel like I'm about to audition for American Idol. I'm handed a glass of wine which I down quickly in the hope that the alcohol will awaken my dreary senses a little. I'm called in and there she is, a slimmed-down 5ft 9 vision of loveliness, even at such a ridiculous hour. Don't believe the hype or the paparazzi's unflattering tabloid pics, Mariah Carey is gorgeous in the flesh, although after my interview I'm not entirely convinced she knows it. Standing to give me a hug I'm bounced by her ample bosom, but aside from this surgical enhancement, there's absolutely no evidence of the alleged £150,000 liposuction which is supposed to have resulted in Mariah's fabulous new body. CONTINUE READING»


Note: This interview was first published in the May 2008 issue of UK's Pride magazine.
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 20-Sep-2008, 8:22PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
From Life & Style, September 29th issue:

Mariah's $18,000 Splurge
Is the honeymoon ever going to end for Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon? The newlyweds spent three nights -- at $6,000 a pop -- at NYC's Plaza Hotel during Fashion Week.

"Mariah has a gorgeous apartment in Tribeca, but that didn't stop her," says a pal of the singer. "She treats herself to whatever she wants, including room service several times a day and champagne, chocolate and strawberries."

And Nick's not complaining. "He loves every minute of it," adds the pal. "He's living it up as much as she is!"

And, from In Touch, Us, People, and Star magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Thursday, 18-Sep-2008, 9:06AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Interview in UK's Now
From the September 22nd issue of the UK magazine, Now.

MARIAH CAREY
She's one of the biggest selling recording artists of her generation. She has stacks of cash, the adoration of her fans and an army of assistants to cater to her every demand. Yep, it's fair to say that Mariah Carey, 38, is well and truly living the high life.

Since we last caught up with her, Mariah's had even more success, with two massive hit singles from her latest album E=MC², not to mention the small matter of getting married to rapper and actor, Nick Cannon, 27, who she'd been dating for just a month. But how will she cope with answering Now readers' questions? Well, as it turns out, she's not in the chattiest of moods...


IS YOU VOICE INSURED?
- Peta Masters, London
Wouldn't you insure it if you were me?

YOU'VE JUST BROUGHT OUT YOUR OWN PERFUME. WHAT MADE YOU DECIDE TO DO THAT?
- Karen Thompkins, Hounslow
I've always really loved the idea of a fragrance, but I'd never found one that felt like it was meant for me. When I was offered the opportunity to create my own, I jumped at the chance. M by Mariah Carey is for everyone, especially my fans.

WHICH MEN'S FRAGRANCE TURNS YOU ON?
- Mike Stott, London
Usually less is more when it comes to men's cologne. I don't like strong, overpowering scents but, that said, fragrance smells different on each person, so you can't rule anything out.

YOU SEEM TO LOVE BUTTERFLIES - YOUR PERFUME BOTTLE IS EVEN SHAPED LIKE ONE. WHAT'S THE DEAL?
- Susanne Elders, London
Butterflies are incredibly inspirational to me. I really love the fact that they represent metamorphosis and freedom.

DO YOU HAVE ANY PLANS TO DESIGN YOUR OWN CLOTHES RANGE?
- Fran Pinder, Hull
I plan on doing anything that inspires me creatively. Otherwise it's not worth doing it.

WHAT'S THE MOST AMOUNT OF MONEY YOU'VE EVER SPENT ON ONE THING?
- Bonnie McKelvey, Manchester
I've never been a fan of talking about money. I think it's a bit tacky to do that.

WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU CRIED?
- Rochelle Davies, Wimbledon
I cried just last night.

WHAT' YOUR FAVOURITE FOOD?
- Carol Browne, Manchester
Pizza, but I'm not allowed to eat it!

WHAT'S YOUR FAVOURITE ROOM IN YOUR HOUSE?
- Cathy Slattery, Cornwall
My bathroom. It's kind of my own personal spa. It's very glamorous and 'old Hollywood'.

WHAT ARE YOUR HOME COMFORTS?
- Vikka Calder, Chester
My fluffy comforter [duvet], my pillow and my bath tub.

WHAT'S IN YOUR MAKE-UP BAG?
- Renee Colt, Leeds
My lip gloss and my perfume.

HOW DO YOU CHOOSE WHICH BEAUTY PRODUCTS YOU USE?
- Pasty White, Middlesborough
I went to beauty school, so I know lots about make-up. Also, I get to work with the best make-up artists, so I learn from them.

WHAT DO YOU ALWAYS MAKE SURE YOU PACK WHEN YOU TRAVEL?
- Olivia Betts, Reading
Sun cream with a high SPF is a must, plus sunglasses and a huge sun hat. And I always pack a lip gloss and bronzing powder.

WHAT ARE YOUR ALL-TIME FAVOURITE BOOK AND FILM?
- Luci Anderson, Whitby
The only book I make time to read is the Bible. I love too many movies to pick one.

WHO'S YOUR STYLE ICON?
- Tina Koch, Edinburgh
Marilyn Monroe

TELL US YOUR FAVOURITE DESIGNERS?
- Sam Hewitt, London
Azzedine Alaia, Valentino, Roberto Cavalli, Donatella Versace, Gucci, Chanel and YSL.

HAVE YOU EVER MADE A FASHION FAUX PAS?
- Fiona Duncan
Duh!

WHEN DID YOU LAST KISS SOMEONE?
- Coleene Miller, London
Just now

PRIZE QUESTION? WHEN YOU GET TIME OFF, HOW DO YOU LIKE TO SPEND IT?
- Claire Chapple, Chester
I don't get much time off, but I make sure there are period on my schedule when no work's allowed. The best way is to go on vacation. I love tropical places and swimming in the sea. The more secluded a place is, the better.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | February-Sky

Sunday, 14-Sep-2008, 6:36PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the September 22nd issues of In Touch, Life & Style, OK! and Star magazines.


Also, a full-page "Luscious Pink" ad runs in the October 2008 issue of Marie Claire, page 65.
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 07-Sep-2008, 1:31AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
From the September 15th issue of In Touch magazine:

Nick wants to work with Mariah Carey again
Nick Cannon is ready to mix business with pleasure -- but only if his wife, Mariah Carey, agrees. "Of course I would work with her!" Nick tells In Touch, but adds, "I am going to leave it up to her." In the meantime, he's keeping busy with his solo projects. "I've been working on some other stuff, so I don't think we'll do a record soon," says Nick, 27. Of course, their past job together turned out nicely for the couple -- they fell in love shortly after he starred in Mariah's music video for "Bye Bye." Something else they could do together? Nick says that he wouldn't mind having kids soon. "That would be a beautiful thing," he says.

And more scans. From Star, Life & Style, and Cosmopolitan magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 24-Aug-2008, 9:50PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Addition: Full Effect 1991
Mariah Carey Reveals Her "Emotions"
Full Effect - Issue #9 1991

Paying Her Dues
"Most people don't think I've paid any dues, but I condensed ten years of work into three. It was like fast-forwarding. I worked around the clock. I would waitress until midnight, then go to the studio and work till seven in the morning on the album, then sleep, then do the whole thing again, day after day. No one helped me out, and I lived on very little money."

Less Is More
"I wanted Emotions to be more sparsely produced than the first one, and for the most part it is. I also wanted to use the influence of all the music I loved, like Motown stuff and Stevie Wonder. I felt the uptempo songs were a little overproduced on the first record."

Comparisons to Whitney
"A lot of people compare me to Whitney Houston, and I feel very uncomfortable discussing the comparisons. All I can say is, I know that when I'm doing an album, I like to be involved in the whole process: Songwriting, producing and singing. I'll go into the studio and have forty ideas of what I want to sing on a particular track and choose the best. I think Emotions will show a total separation between me and Whitney."

Different From Madonna
"I'm not Madonna who demands attention, revels in controversy and loves performing. I don't want to be about hype and media. I don't want to put myself in everyone's face and make them sick of me at this early stage of my career. I make pop music. That's what I do, and it makes me happy. I want to be around for a while."

Read the full cover story here.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry - MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 23-Aug-2008, 2:33PM EDT | Posted by Liron
Mariah Scans
From In Touch, September 1 issue:

Mariah Wants To Have A Baby

As she raised a glass of champagne at a party in their honor on August 9, Mariah Carey only had eyes for Nick Cannon. "We have never been so happy. He is my other half," she declared as she toasted her husband of four months at the bash at L.A. Reid's mansion in New York's Hamptons.

Since marrying on April 30 in the Bahamas, Mariah has been busy promoting her new album E=MC² - but that's not the only important project the 39-year-old singer is working on. "She really wants a baby," reveals a friend. A witness at the Hamptons party says the couple may already be trying. "They slipped away early in the night to the guesthouse where they were staying," says the source. "They couldn't keep their hands off each other."

For Mariah, it's a big change of heart. A few weeks before marrying, she confessed that she wasn't ready for a baby. "It's hard to have kids in this world," she admitted. "I don't think I could properly educate a child right now. Maybe in the future, but for now, I enjoy my dog Jack's company."

But there could be one thing stopping Mariah and Nick, 27, from starting a family - her career. "She's so driven," the friend explains. "Work has always been her number-one priority." Dr. Joyce Brothers, who doesn't treat the singer, adds that this superstar diva might have some trouble putting a child's needs before her own. "The attention the baby will need will be difficult for Mariah," she tells In Touch. "But if she really wants it, she can make it work."

Mariah knows she's going to have to change for a child. "You have to take a backseat a little bit, and as someone in the public eye, you're not used to doing that," she admits. But friends of the couple are confident Mariah and Nick will make it work. Nick's pal Entertainment Tonight host Kevin Frazier, tells In Touch, "The timing couldn't be better. Nick would be a perfect father." Mariah couldn't agree more. "I couldn't imagine anybody that I've ever met being a better dad," she says.

More scans. From Vibe, Life & Style, Us, and Hip Hop Weekly magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Wednesday, 13-Aug-2008, 4:07PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Ocean Style Magazine Interview
Va-va-Mariah! As we go to press, the blogosphere is abuzz with Mariah's confirmation of her "secret" Bahamas wedding to the dreamy Nick Cannon -- matching tattoos and all. Her latest smoking-hot album E=MC² remains at the top of the charts, and she's never looked better (have you seen MC in a bikini lately?!) Yes, lambs, it's looking pretty fabulous to be Miss (Mrs.?) Mariah Carey these days.

Our own Editor-at-Large Jasmine Dotiwala caught up with her best friend -- our cover girl -- before the latest media storm, to bring you inside the marvelous world of Mariah Carey. Read on...

Tell us about E=MC²
This album, it's so much about fun and freedom and just the continuation of me feeling emancipated. It's sort of like emancipation equals Mariah Carey times two. This is me, 100 percent... having fun, just being real. People ask me all the time: "How do you stay relevant, how do you stay current, how do you make music that people continue to respond to?" You just keep being real, keep being you. Stay true to who you are from the beginning.

How was working on this project different from your last album?
It's really interesting because I didn't know what was going to happen with The Emancipation of Mimi. I was, of course, hoping for success, but the fact that it was such a massive worldwide phenomenon - I was so grateful and thankful to God for that gift and that blessing, that getting back in the studio was really, you know I really prayed to have something that I could be proud of and that I could be really inspired to go in there every day and sing or write a new song. CONTINUE READING»

Source: OceanStyle, July 2008 | Diana | Text: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 10-Aug-2008, 6:32AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in Fashion Rocks Magazine
MARIAH CAREY
Lay, Lady, Lay. The Diva in repose.

by Michael Joseph Gross

Over the years, many have dismissed Mariah Carey as nothing more than a freakish vocal acrobat. Her melismatic runs commonly hit a dozen or more tones in a single syllable, and her range pierces the whistle register; few but dolphins can sing higher. Some sneered at her weakness for hot pants and halters in the 1990s; others called Carey a lightweight because of her kitschy passion for butterflies and Hello Kitty. (She has described herself as being "eternally twelve" innumerable times). Yet in fact, Mariah Carey is Long Island's answer to Dolly Parton, a woman whose bodacious body and over-the-top style have distracted many people from her rare and substantial talent.

By the time you read this, Carey's newest single will probably have inched her one notch closer to overtaking the Beatles' world record for the most number-one songs. (They had 20; this spring, she knocked Elvis Presley out of second place with "Touch My Body," her eighteenth.) At the age of 38, Mariah Carey is the best-selling female recording artist in history. She has written and produced more number-one songs than any other female composer or producer, and was the first mainstream artist to blend pop with R&B and hip-hop.

Carey's multiethnic background is often cited as a source of her eclectic sound and style. (She was raised by her mother, an opera singer of Irish heritage, and barely knew her father, an aeronautical engineer who was part African-American and Venezuelan). Less noted, but equally important, is her ambiguous class identification. As with most bling-besotted female singers, Carey's aspiration to G4 style seems an effort to make up for her bridge-and-tunnel background. Unlike some other strivers', though, her reaching seems optimistic, not angry. Carey's appeal, again like Parton's, owes much to her mirthful candor about the longing that drives her. "From the time I was little, I had such a huge desire, and such an enormous ambition, driven mainly by the fact that I didn't have the money to get the latest outfits, or even really enough food," she says. When describing her new love--after a courtship that lasted exactly one month, Carey was married in April to the 27-year-old actor and rapper Nick Cannon--she roots her remarks within a childhood memory: "When I was a kid there was an ice storm in the suburbs," she says. "We went to Manhattan to stay with a friend of my mom's. There was nobody on the road. It was this moment that could have been scary for a kid, but she made it festive. That's what Nick is like: He takes the hard part of a situation and makes it celebratory."

These days, Carey has much to celebrate. In addition to the success of her new album, E=MC², which debuted at number one, she won praise at the Tribeca Film Festival for her performance as a waitress in the independent movie Tennessee. Next, she'll play a social worker in a film adaptation of Sapphire's verse novel PUSH, then make a feature-length HBO musical adaptation of Merry Christmas, her 1994 holiday album--which is, by the way, the best-selling Christmas album...of all time.

Source: Fashion Rocks, Sept. 2008 | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 10-Aug-2008, 6:29AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the August 18th issues of Us, In Touch, OK!, Life & Style, and Star magazines.



and from the July 2008 issue of the Japanese magazine, Blenda. Thanks to Shishangzazhi and FansChina for the scans.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Bernard

Friday, 08-Aug-2008, 1:50AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
OK!: Mariah & Nick's Romantic Getaway
The honeymoon continues for Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon. The newlyweds, who married in a low-key ceremony in the Bahamas in May, were the picture of wedded bliss as they frolicked by the sea in the West Indies. Nick surprised his wife with the luxurious trip after she finished her new video for the single "I'll Be Lovin' U Long Time."

A source close to the couple says, "Nick loves to whisk her off for romantic breaks." And judging by the way they cuddled and kissed, Mariah clearly loved her present. "It's really sweet to see them together," says the source. "They're always laughing. Mariah's got a wicked sense of humor, and she's found her match in Nick. We've never seen her so happy!"

From the August 18th issue of OK!, now out on newsstands.


Source: OK! | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 03-Aug-2008, 4:52PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
U.S.A.
From the August 11th issues of TV Guide, In Touch, Life & Style, Hip Hop, and Us weekly magazines.


Germany
From the July issues of OK!, In, In Touch, and Life & Style weekly magazines.




South Africa
From the August 2008 issue of Longevity magazine.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Franco

Sunday, 20-Jul-2008, 3:39PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions: Magazines from 1998
Five magazines from 1998 have just been added to our On The Cover section: The Look, Highlife, OK!, Top of the Pops, and TV Extra.

So Why Can't Mariah Find True Love?
The Look (UK) - 1998

Mariah is the equivalent of showbusiness royalty, and although her manner is relaxed it's obvious that she likes things done in a particular way. The left side of the limo is hers, she tells me, because she prefers to be seen from the right side.

Mariah may be a diva, but she is no prima donna. She has just finished 12 hours of TV interviews that ran way over schedule. And even though she has had barely three hours of sleep. she is now on her way to oversee the editing of a TV special.

This is the new, sexy Mariah Carey -- the girl learning to have fun again after the end of her claustrophobic high-profile marriage to the man who discovered her, 49-year-old Sony record boss Tommy Mottola. READ MORE»

Iron Butterfly
Highlife (UK) - September 1998

On paper, Mariah carey is the modern-day fairytale princess who had it all. Mini-series are written about people like her; she's the real-life Danielle Steele heroine who came from nothing to conquer evil.

As the biggest-selling female recording artist of the '90s her bank balance stands at $300 million. She has sold 80 million records worldwide and her Disney-esque rags to riches rise from the drug and vice-riddled streets of New York has become legend.

She is the product of a broken home. Her Irish-American mother -- former opera singer -- left her Venezuelan father when Carey was three years old, and struggled to raise her three children alone, moving house 13 times in as many years. READ MORE»

Mariah Carey
OK! (UK) - July 1998

The best-selling female vocalist of the decade, Mariah Carey - the singer talks about enjoying the freedom of a new, single life in her Manhattan townhouse.

'You wanna see something funny?' asks Mariah Carey, standing in the spacious kitchen of her new townhouse apartment on Manhattan's Upper East Side. She walks over to an oil painting hanging on the wall, opposite an enormous stained-glass window. It's of a butterfly - the name, coincidentally, of Mariah's last CD. 'I noticed it after I moved in,' she says in her husky, sultry voice. 'Butterflies are always following me.' Inscribed at the top are the Latin words leviour aura, which translates as "lighter than a breeze." But Mariah sees the painting as having 'something to do with freedom.' READ MORE»

"My All"
Top of the Pops' SongWords (UK) - May 1998



Een Openhartig Gesprek Met... Mariah Carey
TV EXtra (Holland) - May 1998

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Monday, 14-Jul-2008, 2:50PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions: Magazines from 1997
Two magazines from 1997 have just been added to our On The Cover section: Modern Woman and Veronica.

Is Mariah Misunderstood?
Modern Woman (Canada) - December 1997

I realize why I've disliked Mariah Carey up to this point. Her five octave trills, skimpy gear, and primping and prancing for the camera have always come off as showy and insincere. Insecure people almost always overcompensate.

Now I'm having a great time tripping down memory lane with a woman I thought was a Diva with a capital D. "A diva can be a kind of cool, fun thing to be," says Mariah, seeming to consider the possibilities, "but it also has a connotation of being difficult." A bitch, I clarify. "Exactly," she says, nodding her head, "and that couldn't be more opposite of who I am."

She may not be a diva, but she's definitely in control. "I'm under enormous pressure because the creative stuff -- nobody can do that for me. I don't trust anybody to do it the way I want." She's not complainng. That's the way Mariah likes it. READ MORE»

Vlinders In Je Buik
Veronica (Holland) - September 1997

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 12-Jul-2008, 8:41PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
U.S.A.
Star, In Touch and OK! - July 21st issues


CHINA
Hits - June 2008, "Mariah Carey: That's an Attitude"


In Music - July 2008, "Mariah: The Diva is Back"



MALAYSIA
Cleo - June 2008, "Girl We Like: Mariah Carey"


JAPAN
Blenda, "A Woman in Love" and Luire, "She is a Shining Diva" - July 2008

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Nick | Kane | Bernard

Thursday, 10-Jul-2008, 1:23PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Letter from Elle.com
"As someone who is notoriously late for appointments and dinners (I have shamelessly made dates wait for hours while I perused sample sale racks), it would be hypocritical of me to scoff at Mariah Carey's multiple-hour tardiness when meeting with ELLE editors for the interview and photoshoot in the August issue. But there is nothing like the ultimate diva to remind us that we are mere peons in a world that is ruled by superstars of her ilk. As we run amok in our own harried fashion industry schedules, it's fun to imagine the life of a five-time Grammy winning songstress--because who among us hasn't sung one of her hits in the shower? Don't miss our exclusive interview and photo shoot with the one and only Mimi."
--Rachael Nichol, Associate Fashion and Beauty Editor, ELLE.com
Source: Elle

Tuesday, 08-Jul-2008, 10:44PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah on Elle.com
The Mariah Carey cover story, "She Owns The Night," in the August 2008 issue of ELLE is now available online at Elle.com. The accompanying photo slideshow includes a new picture of Mariah in hot pink dress not found in the printed edition.

The August issue is now available on newsstands. Grab a copy today!

Thanks to Jessica for alerting us about the article and for sending us HQ pictures. View the pictures below.

Source: Jessica Chanen from Elle.com & ElleGirl.com

Monday, 07-Jul-2008, 6:18PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
ELLE: "She Owns The Night"
With her other worldly pipes, a lusty younger husband, and a record-shattering album, Mariah Carey is on the verge of all-encompassing world domination. But as Dan Crane quickly finds out, that doesn't mean she keeps regular office hours

"Do you hate me?" asks Mariah Carey, absorbing me into her well-toned figure with a firm hug. "I'm so sorry I'm late," she says, gazing into my eyes as she pulls away and flutters both hands in the air to illustrate what I can only assume is her rationale. "The nails are still drying!"

It's 12:37 A.M. I'm in the living room of a sprawling suite on a high floor of the Beverly Wilshire Four Seasons in Los Angeles, and "Mimi" is, in fact, over two and a half hours late for our Friday night interview. It's classic diva: Make journalist cool heels down stairs in hotel bar while Mimi - what...? Has her nails done? Yes.

Why don't I mind? Unlike today's breed of talentless manufactured star churning out pop drivel, Mariah has been paying her dues for nearly 20 years - and the dividends continue to roll in. With the April release of her latest album, E=MC², and its tongue-in-cheek sing-along "Touch My Body," the seven-octave vocal acrobat topped Elvis' record for most No. 1 Billboard chart singles. Now, with 18 No. 1's, it's likely she'll soon bump the record-holding Beatles (who have 20) from their top spot, all - with the exception of just one track - with songs she's either written or cowritten. Her eponymous debut was released in 1990 and went platinum nine times; she's put out 10 more studio albums since and is the third-highest-selling female artist, behind Barbra Streisand and Madonna. She escaped a disastrous marriage to a former Sony record exec Tommy Mottola and survived an "emotional breakdown" in 2001. With 2005's The Emancipation of Mimi, the biggest-selling record of that year, she led a comeback coup, nearly erasing our memories of the critically and publicly eviscerated 2001 film and accompanying soundtrack train wreck known as Glitter.

And for me, at this late hour on a Friday night, it's no small compensation that at 38, her youthful face radiates an irresistible blend of beauty and charmed innocence. Poured into perfectly fitting Louis Vuitton jeans ("The new Lou-ees," she declares, in her self-mocking, outer-borough accent) topped with "an old sweatshirt from 1991" over a black Wolford bodysuit, she ensconces herself on one side of a love seat, legs extended. Her black patent Azzedine Alaia heels elegantly crossed one ankle over the other, she conjures a hip, fully clothed, modern-day version of Titan's Venus of Urbino.

Most of all, Venus Mimi seems happy - "festive", as she says. Why shouldn't she be? With another hit record under her belt and two new movies (Tennessee, which has already garnered her decent reviews on the festival circuit, and a cameo in the Adam Sandler vehicle You Don't Mess With the Zohan), and having just been named one of Time's 100 most influential people in the world - complete with gushing tribute penned by her hero, Stevie Wonder - Mariah has plenty of reasons to celebrate. Oh, and there's that recent little surprise marriage on the island of Eleuthera to 27-year-old actor-rapper Nick Cannon, who's slumbering in the next room, I'm told. The new Mister is certainly a sound sleeper ("Nothing can wake him up," Carey says), considering the loud barking that occasionally erupts from behind the bedroom door.

Though I've been warned of M.C.'s nocturnal reputation, I foolishly begin our conversation by asking the night owl if she's tired.

"Do I look good?" she responds in a silky voice. CONTINUE»



ELLE BEHIND THE COVER

Madame Butterfly
At 8:30 on a Saturday night, Mariah Carey slipped into Milk Studios with her 10-plus entourage, wearing a teal dress she's owned for "eight years," Valentino bow heels, and her signature oversize sunglasses. She was immediately drawn to anything pink--her favorite color--specifically, body-hugging dresses by Dolce & Gabbana and Versace. By 3:30 A.M., the shoot was still going strong, thanks to M.C.'s latest album blasting on the stereo, a stack of pizzas, and a surprise appearance by Carey's new husband, Nick Cannon, who helped her squeeze into the blue Versace dress she's wearing on the cover. When the crew wrapped at 7 A.M. (!!), the newlyweds cuddled on the couch, looking at photos from a recent trip, where Cannon surprised his bride with a private evening at an amusement park, and giggled about how their love affair has been one wild and exciting ride.
Source: ELLE | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 07-Jul-2008, 1:41PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
ELLE Editor's Letter
Power Chord
I first met Mariah Carey 10 years ago at a party we threw for her on the occasion of her appearance on the cover of Mirabella. It was an intimate dinner of 50 -- and it being my party, I naturally seated her next to me. She was convivial, polite, and every so often she seemed to escape into her own world, sitting quietly with a dreamy look on her face, and sort of singing under her breath. It was thrilling! That voice! Even at a quarter decibel, I could still hear the rich, multioctave, crystal-clear quality that moved her recent single "Touch My Body" to the top of the charts.

Mariah has a lot to sing about: In addition to the record she just broke -- more No. 1 singles than Elvis -- there is her recent marriage to the supercute Nick Cannon, a star of, among other things, the best movie ever, Drumline, which is played on TNT so often they should just give it its own dedicated channel. Mariah is a notorious night owl, and unfortunately I had to leave the shoot at 1:30 A.M., after Joe Zee and photographer Alexei Hay had completed just the first shot. Had I stayed, I would have gotten to meet Nick, who showed up at three and gamely posed with his new bride. Mariah sits down with writer Dan Crane (after midnight, of course), who finds a woman very much at home in the world and with herself, displaying an easy confidence and wicked sense of humor that is not usually part of her public image.

Mariah has been famous for her entire adult life, and she understands the vicissitudes and requirements of stardom well.

Roberta Myers
VP/Editor-in-Chief, Elle
Source: ELLE | MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 06-Jul-2008, 7:01PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions: Magazines from 1994, 1996
Three magazines have just been added to our On The Cover section: Q (1994); and In The Charts & Update (1996):

The Making of Mariah Carey
Q (UK) - June 1994

"I tell my stories in my own way," she insists. "Not everything has to be soul-searching, gut-wrenching, heart-rendering. I'm not going to kill myself digging in night and day for that inner pain. If I did, I think it would be too heavy. I would hurt people and I would hurt myself. I'm not ready for it."

She gathers herself for one final free-form crescendo, like Streisand or Ethel Merman belting out a Broadway showstopper.

"Right now, I'm 24 and my style is what you hear. Mostly I'm choosing specifically to write lyrics that might inspire someone because I've been blessed with a positive and incredible life, I've been blessed with this ability - no matter what I went through, no matter how horrible I felt growing up, no matter how inadequate I felt I was, no matter how poor I was, no matter what - I'm here." READ MORE»

Mariah Carey
In The Charts - January 1996

By her high school years, she was determined to be a singer. Every night, she would go out to Manhattan to meet some musicians and hang out with them all night, catching up sleep the next morning and missing her classes. Because she was absent from her classes very often, she earned the nickname of Mirage. The teachers of her high school say that she was indifferent to the academics and the only thing that seemed to occupy her mind was becoming a singer. Once comedienne Whoopi Goldberg, hosting the annual Presidential Gala at Ford's Theatre (site of President Lincoln's assassination), jokingly referred to Mariah as "Pariah Carey," and that remark seems to describe humorously the kind of situation that Mariah was in during her high school years, with virtually no involvement with school and concetrating on her musical efforts. At this time she also started to write her own songs and make demo tapes, inching her way toward her dreams. READ MORE»

Tutje Met Ballen
Update (Holland) - August 1996

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Wednesday, 02-Jul-2008, 5:51AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions: Magazines from 1993
Two more magazines from 1993, Music and TV Guide, have been added to our On The Cover section.

Mariah Carey, Queen of the High C's
TV Guide - November 1993

A Doberman named Princess was sitting regally in the lobby of a Manhattan skyscraper, tethered to her mistress by a chrome choke chain. The sleek young woman was decked out in bohemian black, profiling Ray Charles shades and studded with mall-sized diamonds in her jewelry. I asked if I could per her dog. Coolly she glanced at her canine, then eyed me for a long second and with a slight smile said, "Sure. Just don't get too close to her face." Here was a woman who liked protection. Still, I hadn't exactly expected "Dreamlover" diva Mariah Carey to bring a Doberman to an interview.

It was all the more disconcerting because her image is alternately that of a come-hitter video vixen, a Tinkerbell with Aretha pipes, or the girl next door. But in the lobby, Carey acted more like a songbird in the federal witness-protection program. READ MORE»


Mariah Carey: Music Box
Music - 1993

Mariah Carey's stunning, multi-octave voice has dazzled millions since her 1990 debut launched what was to become the decade's biggest success story. Now the 23-year-old New Yorker gives her admirers her greatest gift to date...a "Music Box" that no one will be able to close.

On this, her fourth release, the singer/songwriter displays all the finesse and emotional range that her fans have come to expect--plus, "Music Box boasts her most finely-crafted lyrics and adventurous arrangements to date. The bouncy, uptempo hit Dreamlover is trademark Mariah, complete with enticing beats and a lush, soaring melody. She really lets loose, though, on the vocal tour-de-force Hero and a stirring remake of Nilsson's early-'70s hit Without You. READ MORE»
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Monday, 30-Jun-2008, 7:18PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions: Magazines from 1991
Our On The Cover section has been updated with three magazines from 1991. Check them out below. More magazines will be added in the coming days, stay tuned!

Q (UK) - September 1991
Mariah Carey
For her second album, The Wind (released in September and trailered by a new single, Emotions), co-writer Ben Margulies has been sidelined, as have the host of studio wizards. Now it's just down to Mariah and two producers/co-writers - one for the dance tunes, the other for the ballads - as this self-confessed "introverted person" copes with the stardom so recently thrust upon her.

"When you start believing the hype, that's when you go downhill. I definitely feel the same person I was two years ago when no one wanted to listen to my tape. That's what keeps me grounded. Maybe because I'm doing the same thing, music - that's what gives me the most pleasure. The rush of being new and hot can fade - it will fade - but the music will always be there."

[ Click here to read the full article ]

Music - 1991
Mariah Carey: Emotions
The solidly groove of the smash title track has already slithered its way up the charts, with the Grammy-winning singer showing off every note of her magnificent multi-octave voice. She's in similarly perfect form on such moving ballads as So Blessed, while her purring adds sensual beauty to smoky night-club crooners like And You Don't Remember. But don't think you can just sit there--the energetic vibe of danceable tracks like Make It Happen and You're So Cold will positively drag you from your seat!

Mariah's more than just another pretty voice, of course. She's further developed her remarkably mature writing skills (check out The Wind and To Be Around You) and this time around, she's even co-produced the set...in tandem with groove wizards Robert Clivilles and David Cole (of C + C Music Factory fame).

[ Click here to read the full article ]

Suosikki (Finland) - March 1991
Mariah! Mariah!

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry & Teemu

Sunday, 29-Jun-2008, 8:00PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Below are scans from the July 7th issues of Life & Style, Hip Hop and In Touch magazines;


and from Algeria's Star Club (July 2008), UK's Touch (June 2008); and the Philippines' Manila Bulletin (June 29).


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Lotfi | Allan | Tom

Sunday, 22-Jun-2008, 1:40PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
From the June 30th issues of Entertainment Weekly, OK!, Star, and In Touch magazines,


and Life & Style.


Also, HQ scans from the June 2008 issue of UK's i-D magazine, finally. Read the cover story, Mariah... You're on fire!.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 15-Jun-2008, 3:38PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
From the June 23rd issue of In Touch magazine.

Nick Works Hard to Please Mariah
Being married to a diva can't always be easy, but Nick Cannon is doing a good job keeping Mariah Carey happy. While the multi-platinum artist, 39, was hard at work shooting her next music video in Oahu, Hawaii, on June 8, Nick kept busy as well. "He got off the plane and went straight to Macy's in the Waikiki Kahala Mall, looking for his new line of PNB hoodies. He also picked up some treats at See's Candies for Mariah," an insider tells In Touch.

Several purchases later, the 27-year-old actor/rapper stopped by Tiffany & Co., where "he spent time choosing a gift for Mariah and put it in a regular paper bag so he could surprise her," says an onlooker. Nick's day ended with a dance party at Mariah's estate. "He arrived at sunset, just in time for the hula dancers' performance, arranged by Mariah," the insider says. Maybe she should dedicate her video, "I'll Be Lovin' U Long Time," to her doting new husband.

AND MORE SCANS from the June 23rd issues of OK!, Us, and Star magazines;


and from the June 2008 issue of Singapore's Lime magazine.


Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 08-Jun-2008, 2:17PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
U.S.A.
From the June 16th issues of Hip Hop, Us, In Touch, Life & Style, OK!, and Star magazines.




AUSTRALIA/NEW ZEALAND
From the May 26th issue of OK!.



CHINA
From the June 8th issue of Information Times.


SWEDEN
From the June 2008 issue of Nu! (Now!).


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Bernard | Sofia | John

Monday, 02-Jun-2008, 5:52AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in Magazines
From the May 2008 issue of UK's Pride magazine.

The Surreal World of MC
The nicest diva in the music industry, Mariah Carey is back with a vengeance, boasting a brand-new album and a slender physique. She talked to a tipsy Jessica Huie about the stress of dieting, the importance of friends and her relationship with God.

Half an hour later and my carefully planned line of questioning is forgotten. The situation isn't helped by the fact that we are sitting in a darkened room lit only by scores of scented tea lights that, while creating a lovely chilled-out ambience, make it impossible for me to see my notebook. Mariah's lovely assistant Jim appears and signals that my time is up. "No, Jim we're not done! It's my fault, I've been distracting her - we need five more minutes." A tipsy half an hour later, and we're talking men. I ask MC if she has someone, and she responds: "I don't know... do you have someone?", which prompts a conversation into whether you ever really have somebody or if a relationship is merely a transient thing that is never assured. Fascinating stuff, even at 3am. Despite my being happily ensconced in a relationship, MC's trying to set me up with her nephew. "He's 33 and has just graduated from Harvard Law School. He was even voted one of the world's most eligible bachelors... you'd be perfect together!" What I really want to know, however, is why, at 37, with beauty, brains and a wicked sense of humour, Mariah herself hasn't been snapped up. READ MORE »


And, from the June 9th issues of In Touch and Life & Style magazines.


In the latest issue of Entertainment Weekly, Mariah is again on their "Bullseye." She is in the red circle closest to the bullseye with this comment:

"Add this to your summer playlist ASAP: Mariah's "Touch My Body (Seamus Hall and Paul Emmanuel Club Remix)"
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Emily | Jason

Tuesday, 13-May-2008, 2:57AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
VIBE Magazine: Body Language
Mariah Carey has been pop's queen--the real queen--for nearly 20 years, and she's not giving up the throne. But at M.C.'s lavish Caribbean birthday bash, Shanel Odum witnesses the record-shattering diva in all her glory: Calm, cool, and damn-near naked

Eagle's Landing, Jumby Bay, Antigua.

2 P.M. The heavens above Antigua are as smooth and playful as a handful of cobalt marbles. But on the island below, a frenzy is brewing. Mariah Carey's $12,500-a-night villa on the 300-acre tropical island is alive--almost antsy--with anticipation. Rob Payne, her stone-faced bodyguard, slips into a cotton tee as he escorts a lipstick-toting assistant into the ballroom-size living room, where a video crew is gingerly unpacking.

"Absolutely no one can go through those doors there," booms Payne, who's built like an All-Pro defensive end. "That's Mariah's bedroom. And smokers better light up in the front yard--she'll have a fit if she smells cigarettes!"

A gang of hairstylists, fashion assistants, photographers, and makeup artists race around the open-air bungalow, each on their own mission to please. Almost everyone else in the all-but-humble abode frantically taps away at a MacBook, BlackBerry, or iPhone.

Then, disaster strikes.
The manicurist is missing.

But there's no it's-my-party-and-I'll-bitch-if-I-want-to tantrum from the illustrious pop icon. The bluster is coming from a couple of men. It's Benny Medina, Mariah's longtime über-manager (the man known for his super-successful, hands-on approach with clients Jennifer Lopez, Usher, and Tyra Banks), and Michael Richardson, her dapper, Cockney-spouting tour manager. They're both outraged by the potential beauty crisis.

"If this slows us up," Medina roars, sporting a pink Polo and matching shorts, "I'm going to get really upset."

While waiting for Carey for more than 90 minutes, the resort's lone manicurist bounced.

"Wehw, wot villa is she in, den?" demands Richardson in a thick British accent. He whips out his cell and makes the necessary heads roll.

It's still early and the estate is already in a state of chaos. The Grammy winner? The diva? The sex symbol? She sleeps through the whole thing.

Somewhere on the same island, a very tan Paul McCartney strolls lazily across the starfish-studded beach. The 65-year-old Beatle has retired from hitmaking, but continues to hold the title--along with the rest of his iconic English pop band--for the most No. 1 singles on Billboard's Hot 100. With 20 chart-toppers, The Beatles hold the only record left for Mariah to shatter. This spring she skated past Elvis Presley with "Touch My Body," her 18th No. 1 single.

But it hasn't been all stardust and rainbows for Mariah. In 2001, what was supposed to be her film breakout, Glitter (20th Century Fox), fizzled. That was followed by a well-publicized 2001 breakdown on the set of MTV's TRL. Who could forget the strip tease? And the ice cream cart?

Then came liberation. Her last album, The Emancipation of Mimi (Island, 2005), sold nearly six million copies. It was that kinetic endeavor that helped Mariah reclaim fans that had dismissed her as a casualty of her own ambition. Continuing in the same triumphant vein, E=MC², aka Emancipation Equals Mariah Carey to the Second Power (Island), her 11th studio album, is a beautifully addictive lesson in dichotomy. Her claims of deliverance and growth have merit, but the butterfly-obsessed star still vacations in Neverland. The Mariah- and Swizz Beatz-produced "O.O.C."--as in "Out Of Control"--proves she hasn't lost touch with her youthful spirit. The song is bursting with instant messenger acronyms. "Side Effects" shows a deeper side of Mimi: Candidly detailing the aftermath of her tumultuous marriage to Sony Music bossman Tommy Mottola, she paints the picture of a woman stung by real heartbreak. Though she's sacrificed her famed vocal acrobatics--dolphins are still the only mammals that can top her five-octave range--for a greater pop presence, her limber tone and midrange belting work better with the album's synth-heavy beats and tickling treble. If anything, Mariah is the ultimate chameleon. She's evolved from sweet, soul-stirring ballads to booming hip hop hooks; from floor-skirting gowns to hot shorts and patent pumps. And most recently, to the Pistol Panties bikini she's rocking--with confidence--today.

5 P.M. The afternoon turns to evening, and a twister descends on Eagle's Landing. The cyclone hits the beach in a blur of blush brushes, hair spritz, and double-sided tape. Even the manicurist has returned, but only to remain on-call. She doesn't paint even one of Mariah's digits. So much drama, so little action. Every few moments, there's a glimpse of the eye of the storm--it's Mariah, emancipated. The 5-foot-9 mirage prances past the overly attentive pack and heads toward a rickety boardwalk, which instantly transforms into her runway. A magenta silk robe whips against those endless, copper legs; black Christian Louboutin heels stab the sand; a wild halo of corkscrew curls flies...

"Can we get some towels and a Diet Coke ASAP?" Medina demands for his artist, to no one in particular. The throng of attendants freeze in their tracks, eyes darting nervously from one person to the next, afraid to abandon their assigned duties but more afraid to disobey. After some confused stares, Mariah's longtime personal assistant Melissa Ruderman, races off to fetch the items.

At the end of the petite dock, Mariah breezily tiptoes through a knot of rocket wires as technicians--hired to prep the evening's fireworks display in honor of M.C.'s 38th birthday--pace anxiously. Their hand-wringing and panicked warnings float out to sea, unheeded by the singer. She's too busy hamming it up as if she were on a tightrope, occasionally grabbing at her manager's outstretched arm. Even traipsing across a minefield of pyrotechnics. Mariah is perfectly poised. Delicate. Dainty. Ultra femme. Constantly aware of how she looks, she makes sure a wisp of hair is swept across her forehead. She's rarely caught tilting her head to the right--the right's her best side.

"I'm That Chick"--a swinging future single from E=MC²--drifts above the photographers' encouraging banter, and everyone's feeling it. As the album flows seamlessly from dance track to love song, Mariah sways to the sound of her own voice. She doesn't need for this record to be a smash, but it inevitably will be. She'll stay relevant. She'll stay rich. She's that chick.

As she perches on a sharp formation of rocks, Medina simultaneously tends to her dangling sandal and regulates minutiae.

"Can we get more volume in her hair?"
"Robe, please!"
"Give me more eyes, Mariah..."

For the next setup, she saunters through the water in a bronze Ashley Paige one-piece and a pair of 4-inch heels, grinning like a pageant contestant. Miss Mimi perpetually flirts with an imaginary audience and doesn't stop winking, pouting, and writhing in the waves even for a moment. Even without an ogling entourage. Even when the photographer takes a break to change his flash. She rarely stops hip-popping and sashaying. And she looks damn good doing it.

"I'm getting really nervous about the overhead lighting," she raspily purrs, glancing down at her washboard abs. "My tummy... can I get some lighting from underneath instead, please?"

There are a few final flashes, followed by revelry from the crew. The shoot wraps, and party time is about to begin.

After tying a tiny, white button-up above her belly button, a chrome-colored, American Apparel bikini becomes Mariah's birthday suit. By now, she's a real-life Malibu Barbie, and one very few going-on-40-year-olds who can get away with rocking a belly chain and a gemstone butterfly appliqué on the small of her back. Her record weight loss is undeniable--Mariah is clearly more sculpted than scalpeled. But it's not just her blow-up doll aesthetic; it's her unapologetically larger-than-lush lifestyle--and M.C.'s B-day is no exception.

7:30 P.M. Mariah Carey's 38th birthday banquet is a Sweet 16 dream. Beckoning palms welcome guests to the entrance of the veranda, where a spouting stone fountain sits on Moroccan tile. The scene inside is a strawberry-frosted pubescent fantasy; purple, pink, and white balloons dance in the balmy Caribbean breeze floating through the spacious flat. Fuchsia feather boas drip from the arms of every chair. Kitschy gold crowns, tiaras, and noisemakers adorn each place setting. French doors are slung open to frame a cascading infinite pool that overlooks the Caribbean sea a dive's length away. This is how a superstar does her born day.

In the Mediterranean-style kitchen, a culinary crew decked in freshly pressed coats and stark white chef's caps are prepping pots. The scent of roast chicken waltzes in the wind. And then Mariah's posse begins to appear. Longtime confidante Shawntae "Da Brat" Harris breezes past, swimming in oversized jeans, a red tee, and a bandana over bead-studded braids. Recent acquaintance/music video director ("Bye Bye") Nick Cannon grabs his laptop and goes to the buffet to fix a plate. As her guests fawn, Mariah drifts from friend to friend, beaming and blowing kisses.

Suddenly, the sounds of silverware clinking and Perrier hissing are interrupted by a pop. Louis Roederer Cristal--not calorie-packed hard liquor, mind you--is served by a staff of three. Outstretched flutes salute the birthday girl as her nephew Shawn McDonald, 30, an attorney, delivers an eloquent toast. He salutes her generosity--Mariah paid for his Cornell undergrad and Harvard Law education. According to McDonald, Mariah's real beauty--the side she protects from the paparazzi--can't be photographed. "She's more like a sister to me," he says, as they clutch each other affectionately. The intimate party lets out a chorus of awwws.

As soon as McDonald finishes his speech, the sky erupts in a fiery pink explosion, a dazzling fireworks display. Someone in the small crowd shrieks in surprise--but not Mariah. She's peacefully sipping on a glass of champagne. She seems high on life. It's just another day for the birthday girl. Everything's a production--for her entourage. Like the pink conflagration overhead, Mariah fits and floats above it, unscathed by the pandemonium.


Source: VIBE | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 11-May-2008, 12:22PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
i-D Magazine: Mariah... You're on fire!
MARIAH CAREY is a goddess and self proclaimed diva, known as much for her hair, her body, her boobies, her butterflies, her breakdowns, tears and tantrums as she is for being THE BIGGEST SELLING FEMALE ARTIST OF ALL TIME! Currently riding high on the crest of her 18th American Number 1 with Touch My Body, she secured the double whammy by going top of the Billboard 100 with new long player E=MC², which sold 155,000 units on the first day of release. Impossibly perfect, talented and tantastic she is synonymous with glamour, luxury, extravagance, hip hop, Christmas, puppies, bling, ice, men, money, designer clothes, high heels, extravagant videos, sex, seduction, life and love, ever since she first warbled her way to the top of the charts and the top of our hearts with her self-penned worldwide mega smash Vision of Love. Mariah had achieved both massive commercial and critical success by expertly straddling both mainstream and hip hop fans alike and seamlessly taking them on the ride of their lives. In a worldwide exclusive, we meet with Mariah in New York where she stripped off to reveal her new and improved, to die for beach body. There truly can be miracles... when you believe!

A brief conversation with Mimi about 'festive' :)
HERE IS MARIAH CAREY. The real-life, genuine Mariah: huge Disney smile, vest, tight Miss Sixty jeans, next season's Balenciaga's footwear, vast hair, even vaster vase of white wine poised in one hand, refusing bread with the other ('I'd really rather you not torture me with it,' she implores an attentive flunky). Mariah is sitting on a chaise longue as the clock turns towards 12 midnight. It is her equivalent of two in the afternoon. Every close Mariah-watcher knows that her clock is set, with an alchemically genius star's touch, to Mariah-time. She rises late afternoon and sleeps some time after sunrise. Sometimes, when she wants to re-tool another impeccable vocal to add to her boisterous cannon she will call in her musical playmates at 4am. Refuseniks to the power of Brand Mimi will huff and puff at the mild inconvenience of it all but it seems only reasonable that her press commitments should follow suit.

On this occasion, Mariah is lit almost entirely by what looks like IKEA tea lights. The low lighting makes you squint. Mariah is in a New York studio, cornered against a fluorescent skyline that includes the twilit sheen of the Empire State Building (straight ahead) and The New York Times offices (to the left). In the mid-to-nothing lighting, I just about manage to make out some contraption or another beside her. Because Mariah is Mariah you just want to absorb the detailing.

What's this thing here, Mariah?
This thing? Oh, this thing is like dead to me. I don't know, somebody was trying to be festive and give me a fan, I think. But it doesn't work. Does it work?

Oh my God, I love your use of the word 'festive.' It's the best thing ever. [Mariah howls her big, Disney laugh]
I'm always feeling festive! I hate, hate, hate when it's not festive. Don't you hate a non-festive moment? It's rancid! Seriously. And I love how if something isn't festive and amazing, it's just like rancid and horrible. No, honestly? I don't even know what made me start to say 'festive'. I just am! It's always about being festive. Sometimes when you get smacked around the face with whatever it is, when you have a non-festive moment or whatever, you just have to come back at it with all that much more happiness.

With more festivity?
Festivity! Yes! Bring it on! Bring on the festive! People just do not need bleak moments. Or what I call... bleakocity.

Excuse me? Bleakocity?
I actually have a song that goes [starts singing in full-on upper register Mariah mode, the voice that launched a million young girl's All American Dreams] Bleeeeeeekocity... Bleeeeeeekocity...

Amazing. Is Bleakocity likely to make it to vinyl? It needs to happen.
Honey, it happened. It was a ring-tone that I wrote. We went through a moment, and when I say 'we' I mean me and my friends and it's just... oh, people think that I take myself so seriously but maybe they'll finally start to get it. The thing is that I think having festive themes really is necessary. You seem like a festive person.

Believe me, honey. I am now.

It's all about Mimi: the bleakocity :(
HOTHOUSED at the back end of Long Island, NY, by an opera singing single mother that let her out of piano lessons aged six, Mariah comes from nothing. By way of comparison to the astronomical turns the singer's life has taken, her sister Alison's story works as a pathos-addled comparison. Mariah made no secret of Alison's HIV+ status from career launch, but as lil' sis's life continued its astral ascent towards world domination, Alison was arrested for prostitution and has battled with multiple addictions throughout. To lend a dark cloud over the family from the outset, Mariah's mother's family had disowned their daughter when she married a black man.

Mariah's metaphorical use for music as a means of escape is way closer to Dizzee Rascal's than it is Celine Dion's. If Mariah can play the ditzy cheerleader par excellence in pop culture, it hides a variety of harder depths. One of the cuter details of her early years was that she was known as 'Mirage' at High School, such was her busy absenteeism. And that is before we even get to the much-publicised breakdown she suffered in the early '00s.

The Cinderella story goes that she met her Prince Charming and ticket to the royal palace aged 17. The name Tommy Mottola, the head of Columbia records who she married in an extravagant ceremony with the world's press circling above them in helicopters in 1993, only to divorce six years later, is dropped into every Mariah interview, as if she were incubated in a test tube by the mogul.

She claims to suffer from a kind of arrested development that ends aged 12, but Mariah has at least learnt not to mince her words in adulthood. "I don't think it's been easy for anyone to have a grasp or understanding of who I am because my career was so much about keeping me like a... well, there's a line on this new album [from the song Side Effects] 'Keeping me there under your thumb, because you were scared that I'd become, so much more than you can handle.' It's about the private hell we built. And I dealt with it."

From the outset, Mottola and Mariah had different ideas about where she should be positioned as an artist. He saw her in Whitney's then squeaky-clean lineage. She wanted to step herself into the '90s. Mariah had demoed the whole of her first album outside of Mottola's reference with her earliest collaborator, Ben Margulies. "Do you know what's funny?" she says now, remembering back to the time. "My demos were much edgier than my albums became. I wish I could have gone back to the essence of what those records were when they were demos. Even the demos that I was working on with Ben. When it became time to work on the first album everyone was so obsessed about competing with these other records and to produce them up. Any producer I was supposed to work with had to be that much smarter than me. At that point I was so much younger than everybody else involved in putting my record together. And I felt like I was so much more in tune with what was really going on in terms of music. For me a lot of that edge was... honed. They smoothed it, honed it and toned it because it worked better for mass appeal. I understand that because people don't want you to be too in their face. I understood it then but I was this skinny little twig and I couldn't walk in short tops and heels. I didn't try to be sexy... and I don't know what would've happened in my personal life if I had, whether I would've been completely shut down. But fortunately I was taken seriously as a singer so it wasn't about what I was wearing. It was about me as a songwriter and me as a singer. They stuck me in that... like, they made me change my hair texture. I was like 'hello, can I get a little blowout, maybe? I'm a little tired of the curly locks. Done that already.' But it's all good, you know?"

Eleven studio albums in, surely this is all the stuff that goes towards making the Mariah Carey that's here now?
Exactly.

Do you like that person?
I do. I feel like I've had to grow into this place. Honestly? I've so not arrived at the place that's the best person I can be. But I'm trying.

The Mottola years saw the singer operating at a phenomenally prolific, almost 1970's music business work rate. "They took an old mentality and put that on me," she says. "I was cool with that, you know? It was a corporate thing but I had no problem with it at the time." An album a year, with an MTV acoustic gig and a Christmas set which packaged her up and rinsed the commercial potential out of the girl that emerged from backing vocalist to superstarlet overnight. Working with the cream of urban American production talent, from Clivilles & Cole to Babyface, Puffy to Jam & Lewis, Mariah always managed to sneak in one track towards the end of each album that hinted at the sadness behind the aggressively marketed fairytale that was supposed to comprise her story. She looks genuinely astonished that anyone might have been paying attention.

"Some bitches just look at the same old story on the internet and change three words and write it. The End. Nobody looks at those lyrics. And the people that do are the ones who... well, I write it for real music lovers who care about what I do. I guess you could quote some music lover who hates what I do. People have different tastes and what not. But there's a song called Close My Eyes on the Butterfly album. Did you hear that? What a sad lyric." There were four years that she couldn't bring herself to perform the song live. "I was in a weird place. That was the time that my first relationship, I mean not my first one but my first as a quote/unquote adult... prior to adulthood, really. It was interesting, tough, and unique. A lot of times, back in the day, I would get shut down from doing that. If people weren't monitoring what I was writing I could've got away with saying what I wanted. There's a song called Looking In on the Daydream album... I got in trouble for that song. I did. For being real.'

History should allow a flipside to the Carey/Mottola coin. Without Mariah it is unlikely that the words 'Tommy Mottola' would have ever been heard outside of the music industry. The most famous girls that Mottola has taken charge of since losing the reins of his ex-wife's phenomenal talent, from Jennifer Lopez through Shakira, have been launched with an uncanny similarity to his most famous charge. Shakira entered Mottola's world as a dark haired Alanis-a-like singing folky rock songs in Spanish. By the time she had been through the Mottola tumble dryer the curly, fair locks, the occasional evening gown, the racial element buffed to the point of non-existence, the tutored sexuality and the world-beating power ballad -- all reliable Mariah staples -- were neatly locked down. Tommy Mottola was just doing his job with Mariah. As a record company executive he was charged with turning ordinary people into extraordinary figures of aspiration. It was Mariah that was living the aspiration and lending her whopping great voice to the world.

"I feel that's why I've been given the gift to write and it's why I've gone through so much crap, I think. You have to go through something to have a testimony."

Talking of testimonies, a brief interlude for some of Mimi's thoughts on the American Presidential race *=

ONE OF MARIAH's ongoing preoccupations is being mixed race. Her mother is Irish/American, her absent father Venezuelan/African American. It follows her everywhere. For popular consumption this has turned out to be a fortuitous blessing that works very much to her advantage. She didn't have to go through any Jacko-like surgery to hammer home the multi-purpose crossover of her appeal. She can be white Mariah, in a Versace evening dress and Van Cleef ice. Or she can be black Mariah, in hot pants with a hip hop don on her arm.

But one gets the feeling that Mariah doesn't operate only as a commercial entity and that much of her adult professional life has been about presenting a buffer to that. She still feels like the eternal outsider.

"If I do it's because I am."

With this in mind, the United States of America could turn into a very interesting place for Mariah Carey over the next year.

Do you think that Barack Obama could change America, Mariah?
Totally. I do think so. I do. I'm an eternal optimist and nothing would make me happier than to see that part of the world change. To see the whole perception of race and particularly when people have to deal with someone who is biracial, that is not easy for this country to do and for the world to do. I don't want to do it a disservice by even saying that. But I've lived it and I know what it is and there are seven-year-old kids still going through that. I meet them. They tell me.

It's all about Mimi: the festivity :)
MARIAH CAREY entered 2008 in fine fettle. She is not only preparing to service the world with 11th studio record, with some net serendipity she also still fits into her 11th grade jeans. "Yes, I'm still my eleventh grade size. Which is amazing. Is that a splash of wine?" It's a splash. "Can you give me a splash too? I feel soo unhip. Thank you. It's incredible how much of my life is based on what size jeans are what, a 26" waist I always think I have to lose weight from my thighs but I've always had that. No, but seriously, it isn't fat."

Mariah begins punching her own thighs to prove the point. "Even that doesn't hurt me," she trills, delighted. Warming to the treat of her own thighs, she asks me to punch them, too. She is nothing if not game, Mariah. And truly Amazonian. There is something slightly frightening about the invitation to hit her. I tell her I cannot possibly hit Mariah Carey. "But I'm a fighter. I'm a scrapper."

You are also, though, Mariah Carey, a carefully built legend.
Oh, you know what? I so didn't try and build a type of legend anything. It just sounds so foreign to me. If you only knew me.

How does it happen then?
You know what it is? It's so weird now. It's like celebrity is so fast moving and you just kinda have to be on the internet and you're famous and that's great... if that's what you want. If that's gonna make you happy. For me it's about music and my love for music and creativity and the fact that, you know, I don't even have to grow up doing this job. Which is really cool. Honestly, music has saved my life.

After seven straight months working on it, she was beginning to put the finishing touches to her 11th studio set, E=MC², by January of this year. The evergreen jollity of her classic All I Want For Christmas Is You lent the forthcoming campaign a little burst of festive pre-publicity. In the download area, her most festive joint had been buoyed by, of all things, a DFS soft furnishings advert to give her an unprompted Christmas UK smash.

Mariah considers the gestation period of making the new record. "This one? Seriously? It was like having a child."

Carey's records split equally and decisively between two camps. One popular perception of the singer is emoting the saccharine ballad, Hero, pinkie shaking against the microphone, hair voluminously waving against a wind machine. It is a distinct part of her oeuvre. But as early as her second suite, Emotions, MC was resting her immaculate vocalese against tougher street grooves. Rarefied DJs will still to this day tip a wink to Clivelles and Cole's Latin hip hop dub of its breakout hit, Make It Happen. After her split from Mottola, Carey's hip hop instinct rose from bubbling undercurrent to tsunami. As the clothes shed, the beats grew heavier. The delectable Heartbreaker, Fantasy and Loverboy all became block party favourites.

Since being famously bought out of her contract by Virgin records, the ravishing urban variant of the Mariah aspect has been allowed to develop at its own rate. Unsurprisingly, after finding a more natural home at Island/Def Jam. Her new set, E=MC², is its slickest, beefiest incarnation of street Mariah yet. The blowout disco joint That Chick sounds like it could've been dusted off from the West End Records back catalogue in the late '70s. The fresh, multi-layered, contemporary Philly bounce of I'll Be Lovin' You Long Time jumps along as if performed by a singer half her age. The whole set is Mariah on world-beating, market-leading form. The odd ballad moment, Thanx 4 Nothin', still grooves and finds a neat counterbalance a bass heavy reggae lilt to Cruise Control and the brilliant party bangers O.O.C. (Out of Control, naturally enough), Migrate and Heat.

Three different titles had been mooted by Billboard magazine before camp Mariah -- and believe me it is -- settled on audacious Einstein pun for the record. It's the second installment of glistening, modern funk that comprises the rebirth of Ms Carey. "People decided to roll with the wrong title," she says, a little snippily. "I never said it was called 'That Chick'. People were coming up to me and saying 'please don't call it That Chick'. I mean, whatever, even if I did, when I told people I was coming out with an album called The Emancipation of Mimi some people hated it. All this is just" she pauses, to accentuate her feeling vaguely disgusted at the word "opinion. Until something is proven".

The idea of her Emancipation sounded preposterous until it turned out to be precisely that, hiking her career back from the dip of its predecessor, the more 'classic' Mariah of Charmbracelet. Finally the idea of urban Mariah had bedded into the public consciousness, aided by the stopgap brilliance of her Busta Rhymes duet, I Know What You Want. The Emancipation was the Mariah that Mariah wanted to be. "Exactly. And 'Mimi. People were just like 'what-ever!' But the people that know me know what it is. With this one, E=MC² is kind of the same thing. Emancipation equals Mimi times two. It's kinda cool. It doesn't have to mean Emancipation. It could mean anything. Let's see."

The quintessential and oft forgotten disco contingent that love a Mariah remix will clearly take the E to mean Ecstasy. Mariah looks delighted at the prospect. "You know when someone says 'Bingo' when you get the right answer? You got it. Bingo, Yatsi, checkmate. I give you a bingo for that. I love that. It's hot!"

Some time around the release of the second single from her Emancipation, Mariah Carey -- the greatest MC -- cemented her position as the defining female artist of her era again with effortless mid-pace love story, We Belong Together. This pure Grammy fodder once more. The track squeezed lyrical references to Bobby Womack and Babyface, thus traversing some of soul's lengthy history in the space of one couplet and intermittently slipping her voice into its lineage. Another stone could classic under her belt, The Emancipation went on to become her biggest selling album in a decade, spewing out hits, blaring out of hummers, filling airwaves, nightclubs and wedding receptions and putting into metaphorical parentheses her dark years. The preamble to E=MC² sees Mariah at her hottest point yet. Which is exactly as it should be.

Operating in a space outside of irony and reliant only on her immediately identifiable and mostly magnificent gift for singing and telling simple, literal truths through song, Mariah is the modern music industry's own watermark for international success. With a breezy defiance, two weeks after our meet in NYC, she deftly hangs up the phone live on air during a Radio One chart show interview as the DJ attempts to wow at her 80 million plus recorded sales. The subsequent media scrum on this incident attempted to deride that 'diva' status that haunts Mariah as a sometimes inconvenient but nonetheless fabulous shadow. But the fact of the matter remains that the interviewer had been wrongly briefed, to the tune of an extra 80 million sales. Mariah is the singer and mostly the author of 160 million records the world over, making her the most successful female artist of all time. She is allowed and should be encouraged to be proud of that fact and to not accidentally have it halved for public consumption.

Her only real competitor in terms of repeatedly touching a public chord and turning it to commercial gold dust is Madonna, though in terms of simple execution their careers could not be any more starkly opposite. While Madonna's career has been one long, glossily art-directed, gym-honed, buff, superstyled succession of smoke and mirrors, Mariah can repeatedly do the wrong thing and get away with it. Her raw gift is the foundation on which her career has been erected. Even at her lowest ebb, the gift is still discernibly present. Sometimes she's allowed to be a catastrophe. Because she is blessed.

A week after the Radio One incident, the first single from E=MC², an immaculately saucy R&B joint, Touch My Body, pulsing beat echoing Mary J's Real Love with a neat grown up twist, nudged her ahead of Elvis as the performer with the most US Number 1's in chart history by becoming her eighteenth. Though Mariah is 38 and just shy of 20 years into her incredible career, her immediate peers now stretch from the young whippersnappers nipping at her ankles -- let's say Rihanna (Leona is a touch too obvious) -- to the bona fide legends -- let's say Barbra Streisand, if ever (if only) she'd made a record with either Ol' Dirty Bastard and Westlife.

The luxury, platinum groove at the heart of Mariah's success is beyond statistics. Her importance runs deeper than all that. She has become The American Dream. She is rags-to-riches multiplied by a million, the most fundamentally fascinating beacon of the pre-American Idol generation that apes her every vocal tic and performance manoeuvre for inspiration.

You got me feeling emotions... Two little stories Mariah tells in our audience highlight the duality at either end of her lifespan so far. :) :(
Just before her debut single and Number 1 Vision of Love went to US radio, Mariah was driven to the nrighbourhood she grew up in. "By the time I was 12 I had experienced more than people who are freakin' 40... Because of what I'd seen. The world sees somebody on TV and they're like 'we get you' and they want to put you into something because it's easier to think 'OK, she falls into this box. Pop diva.' Whatever. But it makes them a little uneasy that I don't fit into that box. I moved 13 times as a child. I stayed in one place for the longest and I went there once afterwards. Someone I grew up with had passed away when they were 20. They were older than me but not much. I knew that my song was coming out and they would never get to see it. It was my door neighbour." She thinks about for a moment. "That was sad."

Mariah's current New York incarnation could not be further from her humble origins. Why, only the other week she was being courted by the latest in a succession of visionary men in the American music history to be enthralled by her. Let her take the tale...

"I was at a friend's house. I don't wanna talk about her because she is a very prominent person but she's private. She's a private person with a lot of very famous friends. And she just happened to like me as a person. She's cool. So I was at her house and Quincy Jones was there and Chris Tucker was there and a few other people and..." Sounds like a fun party. "She has amazing parties. But whatever. So I'm sitting there and I'm playing this song from the new record just for a few people who were on and Quincy was engaged in another conversation and when he heard this one song he stopped and said 'play it again'. And I am like 'that is Quincy Jones!' He was really breaking he song down for me, musically, and saying why this bit was his favourite and what you did with this bit and I was like 'you definitely know the technical moments'. And I feel like an imbecile there next to him."

Mariah is nothing if not literal. Great swathes of her mass appeal like in her simple truisms. Her habit prior to the vaguely preposterous new album titling motifs was to utilise the language of the teenage girl -- Charmbracelet, Butterfly, Music Box, Glitter, Rainbow, Daydream -- and give each easy symbol a pointed visual interpretation to cement the theme. These little symbols of girlish affectation tie with her confessions of arrested development. She claims to love the job she does because it allows her not to have to grow up. She doesn't want children of her own just yet ('maybe one day'). Perhaps they wouldn't fit into her Mariah timeline.

In the flesh she is as easy to read. There is little in the way of deeply held analytical momentum behind Mariah. As your eyes attune to the light you realise that she's wearing a diamond butterfly. "I bought this for myself and then they ended up kind of giving it to me, the Van Cleef butterfly." It seems rude to ask the price of the gift, or indeed to probe too deeply into its possible significance. "I was never thinking this is going to be my new thing. I'm going to walk round the town with butterflies. No, this is just something that people have said 'oh my God, you are obsessed by butterflies!' It became this thing and it's like it's not that deep.' I'm not part of, like, the magma of life, the lava of life. It's sooo not about that. Magma, wrong word! That'll be my Austin Powers moment. Seriously, it's just like emerging. The whole butterfly moment in my life happened purely by accident. I was writing the song Butterfly and then left a relationship like a butterfly and then I kinda like was as fragile as one for a while and everyone was a little bit concerned when I left that relationship because it was, you know, not your everyday story... so I guess all these things kind of build up and become sort of mythical moments."

In a world of confusing multimedia symbols. In an age of ironic overload and backhanded sales pitches, Mariah is a focused and breathtakingly successful emblem of simplicity. It is its own skill.

She seems unquestionably relaxed, no doubt helped by the top up in the wine glass half way through the interview. Her approach to music, post her Emancipation, is similarly reductionist. "I'm like, 'OK! Jermaine likes it, then I like it," she says, referring to the man who executive produced Mimi and was brought back to the studio for E=MC², Jermaine 'Mr Janet Jackson' Dupri.

"What does it take to create one of these albums?" she says, reverting back to her process. "It depends. Maybe I took longer with the last record. Maybe it was the same amount of time. You know, honestly, when LA Reid gives me a suggestion about working with somebody I listen and I enjoy that. I like making him happy. I like making records that are fun for me."

Mariah has played out her professional life in reverse. Her records get more youthful, her beats hipper, her voice more tangibly sweet and, of course, her clothes tighter and lesser the older the artist gets. E=MC² is a particularly festive record, I comment.

"It's very festive," she beams.

Source: Scans: PinBoard | Jayden | Text: MariahDailyJournal

Thursday, 08-May-2008, 5:07PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
People Magazine: Mariah & Nick's Island Wedding Album
With just a few friends on hand (and four boxes of Maine lobster), surprise couple Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon tie the knot at a sunset ceremony on the beach in the Bahamas

They hadn't even gone public with their relationship--in fact, they had only recently begun seeing each other--when Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon decided to take the plunge. "We got tattoos!" says Carey. "His is on one shoulder to the other and it says 'Mariah.'" And hers? "It's on my lower back and it says 'Mrs. Cannon,'" she says. Only after that did they ink a marriage license--and pull off the surprise wedding of the year. Carey and singer-actor Cannon first met in 2005 at the Teen Choice Awards but only started dating in late March. Just weeks later, to the shock of a lot of their friends and family, they whisked off to Carey's Bahamian estate and wed in a sunset, ocean-side ceremony April 30. While still on their honeymoon, the giddy newlyweds spoke exclusively to People's Liz McNeil about their whirlwind courtship, Cannon's candy-themed proposal and--yep--having kids.

So, how does it feel to be married?
Mariah: [Laughing] Who wants to go first? You go first.
Nick: It feels amazing. My cheeks hurt from smiling so hard. I've been smiling for days.
Mariah: It's comforting--and something I've never felt before. Which is really being in love and happy with someone who really understands me and isn't trying to do anything but make me happy. It's wonderful.

It happened pretty fast, didn't it?
Nick: In our minds, it was a love-at-first-sight thing. Since we've been together, we've been inseparable.
Mariah: I don't think anyone realized what we already know--that we were going to get married.

When did you first know that?
Nick: I'd always admired Mariah from afar, but once we connected I felt it was destined: This has to be my wife.
Mariah: I definitely knew. Of course, everyone is running the photo from the 2005 Teen Choice Awards...
Nick: From then on, I thought, "I have to get closer to her and express my true feelings." I was praying I'd have the chance to share them with her.
Mariah: People were very skeptical and told him, "You can never get past her people." I only knew that he'd say nice things about me. So I thanked him when [I saw him again].
Nick: I said, "I meant every single word. Hopefully I can express more to you." She was down-to-earth. From that point, we built a friendship.

In late March, Carey flew to Antigua to shoot a music video for "Bye Bye," from her new album, E=MC². She cast Cannon, 27--star of MTV's Wild'N Out, and an entertainment minimogul with his own record label and clothing line--as the romantic lead.

Mariah: I told people, "I like him and want him to do it." The song was a love story. It was perfect for us.
Nick: From the first time we sat down to discuss the video at the Beverly Hills Hotel, we connected. We had so much in common spiritually, and we laugh at the same things. I didn't have to put on my Mac Daddy suave mode. I was able to be myself with her. We are both eternally 12 years old.
Mariah: [Laughing] We were having a such a good time on the shoot.
Nick: I brought her little pieces of candy. I'd write little third-grade notes instead of being over-the-top.
Mariah: He wrote the note, "Will you be my girlfriend?" with boxes for yes or no. In the video, we're boyfriend and girlfriend. It seemed very natural.

Were all your friends surprised by your marriage?
Mariah: Some were, but some weren't. One thing [few people] knew was we got tattoos a few weeks earlier. So anyone who saw my [Mrs. Cannon] tattoo wasn't surprised.
Nick: To me rings are special and exciting, but tattoos mean more than anything. They're forever and ever. They professed our love.
Mariah: And they hurt!
Nick: A lot.

Why did you keep your engagement and wedding plans a secret?
Mariah: We only told people who had to know. [To everyone else] we said we were [going to the Bahamas] for the video. If we brought a million people with us, it would've been obvious we weren't shooting a video.

The week of the wedding, Nick and Mariah traveled to her estate on the Bahamian island of Windermere on a Gulfstream jet. They also flew in boxes of live Maine lobsters, fine china and Dom Perignon champagne. Just a dozen guests attended, including BFFs like rapper Da Brat.

Mariah: Only about four people know we were going down there to get married. Once we were there, they gave me a bachelorette party. Everyone calls me Mary Poppins. No matter how provocatively I might dress, I'm very pruddish. So they did everything they could to shock me. They had a grab bag full of silly things they think a bachelorette wants. They were so happy they got to embarrass me.

Describe your wedding dress.
Mariah: It was a simple, slim-cut dress [by Nile Cmylo] in an off-white that turns into a very pale pink to match the sand. And [Christian] Louboutins--I can wear high heels with Nick because he's tall. Flats are not in my repertoire. Nick looked beautiful in his tux.
Nick: I think it was Balenciaga.

How was the ceremony?
Mariah: We got married at sunset on the beach. We were trying to get the really golden light. It was late--of course I was late, it's just in my DNA. We had a white carpet on the sand that went to the water's edge. My pastor Clarence Keaton flew in from New York. The whole wedding was really beautiful and sweet. Being there with loved ones under the sky... it was a spiritual moment.

What were you thinking then?
Mariah: When I walked down the aisle, I was thinking, "My veil is blowing all over the place!" It was really windy. I was nervous. We didn't know if they would make us speak.
Nick: I haven't been shy in years, but I was speechless. I was elated, but I was thinking, "Don't pass out." What the pastor did was really cool. He said, "The eyes are the window to the soul," then gave us an entire minute to stare into each other's eyes. So I was saying, "Don't cry."
Mariah: With the sun setting on the turquoise water, we kissed.
Nick: We had our passionate wedding kiss. Then I swooped her off her feet.
Mariah: He carried me to the water.

And afterward?
Mariah: The cake came out. Everybody stumbled over their toasts. They didn't know what to say. They thought they were coming to a shoot!

What about a honeymoon?
Mariah: That was being here [in the Bahamas] after the wedding. Some friends stayed, too, but it was really time for Nick and I to be together.

Have you thought about kids yet?
Mariah: It's part of the whole purpose of getting married. I'd just want our children to have the best childhood and upbringing they possibly could.

So you have thought about kids?
Mariah: Yes.
Nick: Absolutely.

What do you love about each other?
Nick: She is beautiful on the outside and 10 times as beautiful on the inside. She is such a giving, nurturing spirit. Someone who has spent their entire life making others happy.
Mariah: We really do feel we are soulmates. I never felt a love like this was in the cards for me. I was always so career-oriented. I would hope and pray for my friends to find love, but I never did that for myself. And then? Everything just fell into place!

The Proposal
On April 25 Cannon took Carey to the roof of her N.Y.C. apartment to see the Empire State Building, lit pink and lavender to honor her album E=MC². As he often did, he gave her a Ring Pop--candy shaped like a big jewel. But inside the wrapper was a 17-carat pink-diamond ring created by Jacob & Co.'s Jacob Arabo. Her reaction? "He had ribbons around it, so I said, 'I think mine's broken,'" says Carey. When he dropped to one knee, "she ran away and got all shy." he says. Finally, she said yes--twice. Cannon, who filmed it all, proposed again to get a perfect take, this time on a helicopter. "That," says Carey, "was beautiful."

*Pictures removed due to the request of People Magazine.
Source: People | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 05-May-2008, 1:09PM EDT | Posted by Liron
Sneak Peek: Mariah on the Cover of Vibe Magazine
ME & MARIAH

Vibe's exclusive sneak peek and editor's note from the sizzling June 2008 issue, available on newsstands May 13!

EDITOR'S LETTER

VIBE and Mariah do go back like babies and pacifiers. There was a Mariah cover in April 1996, around the time of Daydream. That excellent story was written by Elysa Gardner (now of USA Today). In 2003, around the time of Charmbracelet, Lola Ogunnaike (now of CNN's American Morning) wrote another fantastic cover piece.

As for myself, in 1998, when I was editor-in-chief the first time, I flew to San Francisco (on Mariah time, you have to be ready to get up and go anywhere at a moment's notice) and then rode north to hilly Sonoma County, in Northern California's wine country. Carey and I drank red wine until late into the night. She'd just left her marriage. I think she was releasing a greatest hits package (#1's). She was in a good, if tough, space. That space from which good art and new beauty is sometimes born. She was fun. And open. Soon after, she went through some well-documented rough times. But she's been back for a while, and the new album is an homage to Einstein's theory of relativity, first introduced in a 1905 paper called, "Does The Inertia of a Body Depend Upon Its Energy Content?" I thought you knew.

People forget, because Mariah is so pretty and so about hair and boobs and antics, that she is a songwriter who will go down in history as one of the best, one of the most prolific, and one of the most successful. The sales and radio records she's breaking are mammoth, and crucial too--because with every one she topples, it's clearer that Miss Carey is the true People's Choice. She writes and sings music that people sing to themselves, music that we move our bodies to. She is redefining--in these complicated cultural times, times in which niches are nich-ier than ever, times in which even the sale of creative content is in question--what it is to be popular (believed, embraced, or perpetuated by ordinary people). She's buttah fly, for sure.

The staff (Robyn Forest, Memsor Kamarake, and Shanel Odum) and I got on Mariah Time, this time during the last week of March. First the shoot wasn't happening. Then we were going to Paris. Then the shoot was going to be in Manhattan. Then we got on a plane to the West Indies, bound for a pearl of a private island off the coast of the exquisite isle of Antigua. Odum describes Jumby Bay beautifully in her second cover story (she wrote abut Mary. J Blige for the February issue), but be clear: Over and above the grass tennis courts, crystalline waters, the Cavalier Rum-glazed prawns, and the flawless, breezy-sunny climate, it's the people of Antigua and Jumby Bay--Thelma, Lissue, Elaine, Glenroy, and everyone else--who make the place. They keep a staff blog, too. It's as cool as they are.

As ever,

Danyel Smith

P.S. The VIBE staff as a whole went above and beyond for this issue. If I could, I'd blow up the whole masthead right here on ed. note. Thank you for pushing it.


Source: Vibe Magazine | Casey

Thursday, 01-May-2008, 7:07PM EDT | Posted by Jeane
Mariah on UK's i-D Magazine
Mariah is on the cover of the UK magazine, i-D that goes on sale May 8.

"It's incredible how much of my life is based on what size jeans I can fit into!"

The world's biggest selling female artist of all time talks hip hop, bagging more self-penned #1's than Elvis and how her life is totally dictated by fashion.

Source: i-D | Stewart

Thursday, 01-May-2008, 2:45PM EDT | Posted by Jeane
Mariah Scans
U.S.A.
From the May 5th issues of In Touch, Life & Style, OK! and Star magazines.



France
From recent issues of Soul R & B (Apr/May), Chocolate (Jan/Feb), and McDonald's Restaurant magazine (April).


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Antoine

Wednesday, 23-Apr-2008, 7:32AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Us Weekly - April 28, 2008
How I Lost 20 Pounds!

Turning Point. That time came about eight months ago, after fatty food indulgences while on tour undid the 2006 shrinkage that took her from a size 8 to a 4 (via high-intensity water aerobics and a "bleak" diet). "If you're on the road and you can't prepare foods in a healthy way, room service menus are usually the only thing good," says the star. Witnessing the change, her "dear friend," Vogue editor at large Andre Leon Talley, issued a wake-up call. "He was helpful because he is honest," she says. "He said, 'Darling, you've got to lose some weight.'" And while Carey admits, "I wasn't miserable as a size 8," she says years of "comfort eating" had taken her to a place she didn't want to be. "It might have been because I was unhappy," says the star. "I think I wasn't having a personal life that was fulfilling... and everything was focused on my career." So Carey, who's been romantically linked to music producer Mark Sudack for more than three years, decided to turn it all around and made what she describes as "a life choice" to commit to new habits.
READ MORE -->



Shangay Express (Spain) - April 2008
Mariah Carey, now with a well-learned success formula
S.E: How do you feel about Madonna having recorded an R&B album?
M.C: Interesting (pauses). It's very interesting.
S.E: On it, she collaborates with Pharrell, with whom you worked, Mimi. Perhaps you gave her some inspiration?
M.C: I don't know, I don't have any idea about her intentions. I'll just say that it's very interesting (she tries not to laugh, and I'm able to notice it, despite the shadow).
S.E: You a 90's icon. With which 80's icon would you collaborate: Madonna, Prince, or Michael Jackson?
M.C: I've loved Prince ever since I was a little girl. And as a matter of fact, we worked together once, even though we didn't finish the song. So I would love to work with him again, because I consider him a true genius. READ MORE -->

Ahlan! (U.A.E.) - April 2008
It's All About Mimi - The Big Interview
Ahlan: How would you describe your personal style?
Mariah: I've got my own style. I'm not some rich bimbo in high fashion duds. I can buy a top at a market stall for five dollars. I customize my jeans myself, add a pair of heels and I feel sexy.
Ahlan: How many pairs of shoes do you have?
Mariah: Okay, you got me [laughs]. I don't know. Certainly a lot. Probably too many! But I still have a pair of hand-me-downs from my mother, which I used to wear to school. Whenever I sign a new contract, I open my closet and look at those shoes. They remind me of the times when every cent I earned brought me joy.
Ahlan: What is luxury to you?
Mariah: Free time. I have less free time than money. READ MORE -->

David (Atlanta, Georgia) - April 16, 2008
MC² = Chart History
Miss Mimi undoubtedly has one of the most precious voices in the music industry, so she should stick to material that best showcases her talent, while resisting the temptation to hit every note in her considerable octave range in every song, and foregoing her inclinations toward hip-hop. The image is incongruous with her talent and puts off some dedicated fans of her early work.

THE SECOND SINGLE from "E=MC2" is "Bye Bye," a mellow salute to lost loved ones. With "Touch My Body" making such a big splash, it's a risky move to follow up with a song about death and loss, but it's a beautiful track that recalls a sound more like past Carey hits "We Belong Together" or "Don't Forget About Us." READ MORE -->

And more scans from:

USA
April 28th issues of Entertainment Weekly, In Touch, OK!, People, Star, Us, and USA Today.


Canada
E=MC² reviews from The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, and Toronto Sun.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Mandy | Jeremy | Al | Bernard | Aladerri

Sunday, 20-Apr-2008, 1:04PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah On UK's The Observer Music Monthly
The ultimate pop princess enjoys a very intimate encounter with Paul Morley

It's an hour or two before midnight. For some people in some situations this is seen as the beginning of the day. 'Here's the thing,' says a chatty, relaxed Mariah Carey, clad in costly stretchy skintight black from neck to ankle, wearing shoes that blend the architectural and substantial with the glossy and ephemeral. Her legs are coyly folded underneath her body. Her long hair is tightly pulled back from her face, which is expertly made up to conquer tiredness and appear fresh. Her skin glows with success. There is no hint of any dubious celebrity tightening or enhancing around the eyes, nose, ears and mouth. Her figure implies a certain amount of almost surreal attention has been paid to maintaining fantasy curves. Oddly, when in the presence of pop performers whose image has been defined for many years by cliched magazine covers, glamorous videos and spiteful internet gossip, you find yourself checking out such things.

The singer turned 38 a few days before, and maybe this is the reason she's got a comfortable sofa all to herself. I'm on a stiff-backed dining chair to her left at the correct journalist distance from her superstar shape. We are alone in the dimly lit room except for a member of her management team who sits a careful few metres away from us concentrating on a laptop as though he isn't listening to a word we say.

'Here's the thing,' confides Mariah, softly, extremely skilled at talking about herself to a total stranger and pretending it's a very natural thing to do.

'Here's the thing,' firmly decides Mariah, definitely not clutching any fluffy animals.

'Here's the thing ... As a human being, this is a very abnormal state to be in,' admits Mariah Carey about where she finds herself these days, trying out new ways to say things that she has found herself saying for years, for her benefit as much as anyone else's.

'To have people meet you who have already formed an opinion of who you are prior to meeting you based on these sweeping generalisations that they have read, well, not that it doesn't happen in other jobs but clearly it happens more in this job ... which happens to be a job even though people don't think of it as a job, but it is ...'

She laughs one of her sudden, winning laughs. She has many laughs for all sorts of purposes: some defensive, some cute, some really quite lusty, some fake, some perfectly calculated to woo the listener, some to demonstrate that she's got charm, some because she just likes to laugh, some to make you see that she is very aware of the absurdity of her situation and the fact that she's Mariah Carey, which if it is a joke and there is a world where it has been turned into a joke then: 'I get the joke. Most of the time I am not taking stuff too seriously. Sometimes I will have a serious or cathartic moment when I am writing a song and doing whatever ... but the truth is that this is freaking entertainment, you know, and I get "the joke". A lot of the things I do are done with a wink.'

When she uses the phrase 'the joke' - and it is another one of her favourite phrases - she likes to represent with her fingers and her eyebrows that she is placing quotation marks around the words. Sometimes she will use the phrase 'quote unquote' occasionally in collaboration with the finger and eyebrow movement, when she is using certain of her other favourite phrases, or when she wants to indicate her suspicion of certain words, or when she is describing how there are those that 'get her' and those that 'love to take a shot at her'. When she talks about those that hate her, mock her, repeat lies or even just unsettling truths, because of what she wears, or because of what they've read, or because of her obsession with butterflies, or because she's always late, or because she has a personal masseuse on call 24 hours a day, she wears an expression that communicates much of the following:

1. Everyone is always passing judgment on me based on an image of me that's not even real! Well, judge not, less thou be judged!

2. 'Everyone has to have something that makes them easy to categorise. It makes people very uneasy if they cannot put you in a box. First of all me being bi-racial already makes people a little freaked out - it messes with their head, it always has and it always will.'

3. When I go to church, I can have that Mary Poppins look going.

4. I have a real connection with my fans, truly fans, who have listened to albums and not just seen a couple of videos and read some tabloid stuff. They fill a void like an unconditional love type of thing. I know that sounds strange but it's true.

Eventually, as long as you have been invited, you get to meet Mariah Carey. You may have to wait a few hours, as the closer you get to meeting Mariah Carey, particularly when she's got a new album to sell, the more you notice that there are other people waiting to meet Mariah Carey. Many of these people don't know that they're not the only ones waiting. I have been given a time slot of 5.30 in the early evening. I notice that other people expecting to meet Mariah have been given the same time slot. We are all waiting in the George V Hotel in Paris; naturally, because this is as much fairy tale as routine business, Mariah is occupying the most expensive suite in the city.

Five thirty comes and goes. It appears that journalists are slowly getting to meet Mariah and talk to her, no doubt, about her one time 'complete emotional breakdown', the tragic Glitter movie and subsequent fallout, her aborted multi-million record deal with Virgin, the question of whether she was the creation, prisoner and possession of her former husband, Sony president Tommy Mottola, her immense Nineties success, her 1998 divorce from the controlling Mottola, her notorious princessy behaviour, her insecurity, the falling from her pedestal in 2001, her five-or six-or seven-octave range singing, her surprising 2005 comeback with the club-pop classic The Emancipation of Mimi.

There are so many journalists waiting to see her some of them go in two at a time. Eventually, after five hours, which I spend in splendid meditation, it's my turn. I follow the Sun, whose 5.30pm slot turned into a 9.30pm slot. There is a sudden sense of urgency as I am ushered through the grand hotel lobby, not towards the most expensive suite in hostelry history where some of Mariah's outrageous, or mundane, secrets might be strewn across a vast luxurious bed, but a more anonymous conference room. Arranged in various states of boredom, patience and attention outside the room are signs of an entourage, a gathering of what Truman Capote called 'social protection' when he wrote about Marlon Brando holding court in a Japanese hotel in 1956. The entourage helps give the impression that even though nothing exciting is going on, this particular hotel corridor by the toilets is the most happening place on the planet.

A door opens, and there - flash - in an ornate Parisian room the size of a basketball court smiling out of her skin like her day's just beginning is Mariah Carey. She looks like she'd be tall even without her earth-defying heels. She does not look like she's just been through hours of repetitive interviews. She seems indifferent to any idea that the schedule is running five hours late, or even that there is a schedule. The only thing that gives away the fact she's been talking all night about such things as her spaced-out TV appearances, the strange, bewildered messages she left on her website in 2001, the death of her strict Venezuelan father in 2003, her Grammy awards, her Long Island accent, on marrying again, on lack of sleep and hardly ever eating, working with Jermaine Dupri and Will.i.am on her skilful, sparkling genre-blending new album, her new video directed by Brett Ratner, her mysterious breasts, her time in rehab, is the rich huskiness of her voice.

She seems pleased to see me. This might be because I am officially the last interview of the day. It might be because it's her job to seem pleased. It might be her way of apologising for keeping me waiting, or she can sense, with the extra-sensory perception of the private jet set famous, that I consider the five-hour wait to be a vital part of the international superstar thing and I'm pleased to see her. Under the circumstances, I would have considered punctuality disappointing, and was quite happy to let time and to an extent space dissolve while I waited so that by the time I get to meet Mariah Carey I'm disorientated enough to feel I have entered the correct metaphysical zone. A grim-looking nutritional shake with bendy straw is handed to a hungry Mariah, who sighs a little pretend-sadly 'Lovely, lovely, lovely ... I so totally want to eat French fries ...' in a way that instantly communicates:

1. I am very plain and simple in my taste, although I am not averse to luxury.
2. I really want to have some fun, and I'm a fun girl, but I guess I'm working.
3. I am not really going to eat French fries in front of someone I don't know.
4. It tastes really foul but what can you do?
5. I'm in control of fame, it is not in control of me.
6. I will answer your questions with a particular kind of honesty that gives nothing away about anything other than the fact I know how to conduct an interview whatever the angle. I will seem eager to please not because I necessarily am but because it makes for a better story. I don't want any trouble. I'm not bitter. I'm happy. I just want to be nice. Don't be nasty. I believe things will in their own way turn out for the best.

Within minutes of us meeting, despite or perhaps because of the third person in the room, Mariah is remembering when she would be less relaxed in such an interview. 'We're having a conversation, whereas back in the day, if this was happening, my answers would just be one word or one sentence. That's what I was told to do. People around me didn't want to think that I had my own thoughts. Whatever. I'm not going to delve into that and give a "woe is me" moment. It's done, who cares, whatever, but at least I'm sitting here with you being myself and even if I never see you again you are seeing me at this moment as me and I don't really know how to be more down to earth as I feel now ... I mean, I've met a lot of famous people and a lot of them have disappointed me because I'm a huge fan and maybe they're in a bad mood on the day but they don't look you in the eye ...' She looks me in the eye. 'And there's no one there.'

She wants me to know that with her, when you look here in the eye, there's someone there. I do notice this within seconds of being with her - and also that she's harder, in a pleasant, straightforward way, and more sophisticated, brighter and aware than the tabloids and the celebrity bloggers would want you to believe. 'I'm still the same person I was prior to quote unquote fame and people maybe expect me to be twisted by the fame situation and are actually disappointed if they find out I'm not. They prefer it that I have been.' She looks at me, and smiles a steel and silk smile that is all of the following:

1. Resigned.
2. Defiant.
3. Distant.
4. Friendly.
5. Knowing.
6. People have said so much about me at this point that who really cares.
7. 'Jay Z "gets me". He knows that there is a person with a good heart and a sense of humour and a talent who can look good in a picture every now and then ... and it's OK to be all those things!'
8. Melancholy.
9. Guileless.
10. Shrewd.

A couple of days later, Mariah and supporting company are in London. The entourage seems to change size and personnel by the hour, depending on what business needs to be done and how far from midnight it is. Engineered attention-seeking promotional stunts have been carried off with the necessary tabloid-rousing aplomb. Various early morning radio interviews have been cancelled. The simple excuse I am given is that Mariah and entourage were up late drinking champagne in celebration of her 18th US No 1 - which takes her past Elvis, and two behind the Beatles' all-time record. The cancellations cause tabloid outrage in those convinced that this confirms Carey is obnoxious, fragile, narcissistically deranged and addicted to attention even if it is negative.

Early afternoon, I line up among management, record company, Coca Cola-with-bendy-straw-fetchers, nail technicians, hair, make-up, dancers, musicians, in a corridor curtained off from the studio where the raucous, gaudy Paul O'Grady is recording one of his Channel 4 teatime shows. A live audience is having hysterics at a mundane conversation between John Barrowman and O'Grady. Mariah, looking nervous and jumpy in the studio but just dreamily disconnected on screen, performs her super light, electro-lithe YouTube inspired new single 'Touch My Body'. Sat politely chatting with O'Grady and Barrowman, she wears a moist white smile whipped up into an incandescent emptiness that says:

1. I'm no threat to anyone. Honest.
2. I'm not the girl you think I am.
3. I haven't a clue what they're talking about.
4. I can fulfil my duties as mildly damaged middle of the road diva even as my mind wanders.
5. I'm alone. I'm trapped. The media is so powerful, its grasp so insistent and seductive. The image is the message.

In Paris, I've been given 45 minutes, but I don't take that for granted, and assume from the start that the next question I ask is going to be the last question I'm allowed. For my first question, which might be it, I decide not to ask anything about her white opera-singing Irish-American mother Patricia, about the time Mariah thought Marilyn Monroe was speaking to her through her piano, how most of the female contestants on pop talent shows try to emulate her voice, her love for Ol' Dirty Bastard, her relationship with Eminem, what she spends her money on, the lovely song on her new album about her father, the brave one about Mottola, the bright one or two or three about love and/or sex and/or about playing at being Mariah singing about love and/or sex - if anyone needs to know any of this, there is plenty of information instantly available on the internet.

We're sat in front of a large blow-up of the cover for her new album E = MC2, which uses the idea of a sultry, provocative Mariah draped in nothing but a feather boa. Selling yourself so blatantly as a sex object surely distracts from you being taken in any way seriously as an entertainer, or the kind of expressive, inventive soul singer you want to be seen as, and plays into the slimy hands of those who like to reduce you to a cartoon, a figure of fun, a dumb female money-making puppet.

'To be honest, I just like to have fun with my covers. It's like playing dress up. I call myself eternally 12, because I am, and if I was 12 that would be the photo I would like to have of me. I have pictures of me at eight on a piano wearing a boa. But at nine I was reading Norman Mailer on Marilyn Monroe ... The funny thing is ... and you're probably going to be, "Yeah, right," but honestly, this is how I would dress whatever I did, if I was a waitress or whatever. I dress this way not because I'm a promiscuous person ... and on the album cover I'm just selling the idea that I like the boa and it's festive and it's got freaking pink lettering because I like pink and I've turned Einstein's Theory of Relativity into my album title. It's not that deep, it's not that tacky. It is what it is. I've taken so long to be able to have fun with this, so I am now.'

But does the 12-year-old dressing up, and rumours of tantrums, emotional meltdowns, and babyish demands, help explain to people that you are an award-winning songwriter in control of her image, music and career?

'Here's the thing. Calling yourself eternally 12 and wearing a boa is one part of who I am. Then there's the writing of certain songs that I do feel could enhance people spiritually and there is real talk, real words from me about people in my life that I am trying to say something positive to. This is something that is very personal and very real to me. So clearly, I am somewhat of a conundrum and I know that there is a dichotomy between a lot of what I do and the visual presentation. If I had a guitar in my hands all the time and my hair was really wild, there might be more credibility, but half of those people are acting up anyway. The minute they get the chance they lose the guitar, they throw on a bra top and a pair of low-waisted jeans, get a blow out and put on make-up. The thing with women performers is unless you see them behind a piano for the first eight videos that they do then you are not going to think of them as a songwriter if they look remotely pleasing.

'If you're a solo woman and you want to be taken seriously without playing a guitar or sitting behind a piano you have to dress obscurely or differently and not too sexy. If I tried to change my image to get more credibility, well, even though praise the Lord I have accomplished what no other woman has in the music business, most people don't want to believe that I'm capable of anything other than being the person they think I am.'

The day after the O'Grady show I watch her rehearse in another studio for an appearance presenting The Friday Night Project, C4's crude version of America's Saturday Night Live. A non-neurotic, matter-of-fact, dutiful and mostly shut-off Mariah is treated by ingratiating hosts Justin Lee Collins and Alan Carr as decorative bait, stooge, sidekick, moll, younger sister, hostess, alien, superstar, target, camp icon, and delicate flower. Collins seems determined to nickname their stoical guest Fine Ass Carey.

Game Mariah reads from the autocue a series of weak, squalid jokes and works hard to put up with the slapstick joshing without slipping into the touchy, demanding diva mode everyone in the studio seems on the look out for. The one real glint of potential, frustrated prima donna behaviour is when the production wants to musically represent her with her melodramatic bland soul version of Nilsson's version of Badfinger's 'Without You'. She politely grimaces, hoping without wishing to hurt anyone's feelings that they don't go to heavy with the 'Without You' because :

1. That song did a lot for me but it's not really representative of me as an artist. 'Fantasy' in 1996 was a classic moment in music and I'm saying that in a humble way because people have told me, in terms of the pioneering fusion of hip hop and the song, it was groundbreaking because there was me having huge success in the pop charts and there was Ol' Dirty Bastard, who was in the hottest, grimiest rap group ... It became the norm for R&B stars to combine melodies with rapped verses after me. Other people have pointed out that it was me who established R&B and hip hop as the sound of pop. Right back in 1993 on 'Dreamlover' I was using freaking loops.

2. A lot of my collaborations have not been on the radar of people who only look at the pop charts.

3. It is the vain, virginal-vamp, straining to impress, panic-stricken voice of the early Nineties, Sony Mariah, the one people confuse with Celine Dion, which seemed to contain no knowledge, and no soul, and no life. Her new downbeat, digitally detached voice, for her trickier, wittier 21st-century sound, a Tamla-techno hip hop cabaret, pulses with synthetic subtlety, wired intimacy and computer-generated mystery. It's more artificial but more emotional, less real but more sincere.

4. She didn't write it. She would like them to use something she's written, even if it's 'All I Want For Christmas Is You'.

I tell Mariah that I'm surprised she's doing all the Euro interviews, telling her soapy story again and again. I'm amazed that she's booked in for all the lightweight radio programmes and the trite trashy TV shows - surely all this will undermine her picky-perfectionist determination to be seen as something special.

'You mean it's like I'm doing what a new artist should be doing ? You're not wrong, but I want this album to be successful. It's a science these days reaching the people you need to reach, and you have to do what you have to do. I don't want to get into a saga that's been told 20 million times but no one seems to remember it ... I grew up without a lot of money .... We moved around a lot when I was a kid and my father's black and my mother's white and I had a lot of issues as a kid and we moved 12 or 13 times, whatever it is. I don't want to be inaccurate but the point is that I always had this fear that the rug could be pulled out from underneath me at any time ... And so I think that got carried over. I'm a hard worker and that's part of it ... I'm almost afraid of losing what I've got. I'm very ambitious. People say MC, no one works like you.'

Doing the trashy stuff might not be the best way of keeping what you've got.

'It's what you have to do now, find ways to stay in the public eye without giving away your real life. Honestly, every time you walk out of the door it's a YouTube moment, it's a blog moment, a whatever website moment. When you appear in public it instantly travels the world ... The self-promoting situation in the world now has reached the next level - it's people's relationships, it's porn videos - and I have to find whatever ways to compete with that ... I'm doing promotional shows but the other people use their lives as promotional vehicles. I don't want to say anything negative about anyone else but other people just have their relationships in order to promote their careers and enhance who they are and be talked about in the tabloids. I do what I can to make sure whatever is said about me in the tabloids, it still connects to the music.'

As I watch the Friday Night rehearsal surrounded by crew and entourage, Mariah sits next to me, removing herself for a moment from the role she's been playing. I'm surprised she even recognises me. Perhaps someone has whispered in her ear about the presence of a journalist.

She's wearing shoes of such elevated flamboyance it makes you proud to be a biped. She stretches out her legs on the seat in front of her, sucks on the bendy straw in her non-diet Coca Cola, and asks me how's the story coming. She asks this because :

1. She really wants to know.
2. She knows it will look good in the story that she sits next to me and asks how the story's going.
3. She's probably heard I wanted to ask her some more questions and she's given me the opportunity, even though this time I've probably only got a minute.

I tell her that I'm at that point in the story where I asked her what she makes of Leona Lewis at No.1 in America, representing all the blank Cowell-driven Mariah Carey wannabes that there's ever been.

Mariah keeps a perfectly straight face. 'Honestly there has been so many "this is the new her" ... and I'm like, "OK, show me the new her. Can she come and work for me and be my double?" And I'm not talking about this particular girl, because I only heard her once and I didn't really see a true similarity, particularly in the style of music. It is what it is and they have compared me to so many people who are not really singers and they're certainly not writers. If I was to focus on this and really dwell on that, it would really bring me down and so I just try to pray for, like, OK, lose the spirit of jealousy, it's not a good one - envy is a really powerful thing. Not good. I don't have anything to be concerned about because there is no new me. I am me until the day I die. Whenever that is, that is when it is.'

Are you worried about getting old and being replaced by younger, fresher candidates ?

'I'm eternally 12 and I'm going to stay 12 for ever by saying it for ever! I may change how I dress or how I change my hair or whatever but the point is that you look at people who I look up to and who can still stand on a stage and command your attention, be it Aretha Franklin or Diana Ross. You look at them and you think, "You can grow up without losing your place," and I'm hardly putting myself on the same level, it's just that we're all Aries...'

You seem happy with how old you are considering you're always saying you're a 12-year-old.

'It's because I'm not getting old. Because if you think and act old and look old then you're old but if you don't then you ain't... OK!!!!!'

You can almost see the exclamation marks pour out of her mouth, confirming that my time is up and that she can rejoin her entourage, if not travel back to her life.

Mariah sits next to me before she has to return to the Friday Night Project rehearsal. By now she has replaced Leona Lewis at No.1 in America. For a moment we're both quiet, not sure of our roles outside the 45 minutes in Paris. I have no idea who she really is, just a fair idea of who she is when she plays at being the sweet, kind, slightly anxious and insubstantial, sexy singing Mariah her fans and those who make money from her like her to be. I tell her she's honest and revealing in interviews and songs, but really, that's still just a mask. She gives nothing away about who she actually is. She answers as a self-conscious 38-year-old mind and media manipulator who skilfully runs her own successful business in the friendly disguise of a professionally immature pop star.

'Well, if you want to come out with me and my friends on a festive night then you can see who I am on a night like that... Look, for the media, if I was to be in this interview with all my friends around me laughing it up and joking it with our private jokes, just like if you were spying on anyone at home with their best friend and family on their private lives, they'd be like, "Who's that? Why are they acting like a totally different person." Why? It's because I'm with people who love me and who don't judge me... The media are always judging me, that's their job, so I have to hide behind whatever and have fun as much as I can, and make my music. That's my job.'

She gets up and returns to "the fun". She waves goodbye to me with her 12-year-old wave, walks down the steps without throwing a tantrum, and gives me a final look that says:

1. Here's the thing, whether you like it or not, I'm quite good at my job.


Source: The Observer Music Monthly | Scans: Kerry

Saturday, 19-Apr-2008, 6:19PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Paris Match Interview: "I'm Eternally 12"
"My ex-husband loved me to the point of being obsessive, abusive. I was the image of myself in his hands."



After announcing the release of her 11th album E=MC2 last November, it was pushed back until this week. The ex "American Cinderella" put all her time and energy in re-discovering her punch, her voice, and her spirit: "Touch My Body" the first single from the CD, is already at the top of the charts in the US. Ten years after divorcing Tommy Mottola, the head of Sony, the five-octave singer has finally overcome her demons. The death of her father in 2001 was traumatizing for her, though they not only reconciled before he died, but she re-discovered her the faith that strengthened her as a child. Sexier than ever, she is significantly slimmer and lost 17 kilos over a few months. And she's already sold more than 165 million albums in 18 years, but her career is still the beginning for her: at 38 years old, she's re-found the purity of her debut.

Paris Match. Like Barack Obama, you were born to a mixed couple. Do you have difficulty finding your identity like him?
Mariah Carey. When I was little, I would never have imagined we could have a mixed candidate for the president of the United Sates. We are in the middle of an enormous period for our country. In my childhood, I felt like an outsider. I tried not to cling to one identity in particular. I felt like couldn't be myself anywhere. My parents divorced when I was three. I cannot say I faced the same racism that my older brother and sister experienced. I was the youngest and it was easier for me because society was more tolerant. But within myself, I always that sense of exclusion, of being an outsider. I couldn't talk to my parents about what felt like a crisis to me in those days. I didn't want to burden them with my problems, even if they were very real to me. All the mixed people I meet can tell you the same story. We carry with us a sense of ambiguity. Growing up in an environment filled with people who go by external appearances is often difficult.

Did music become your identity?
Definitely. Music fills an immense void in my life. I started singing when I started talking. After that, I learned to whistle. My father taught me. [She whistles the music to "The Godfather", and then apologizes for her performance]. My mother was a singer. She taught me to sing. Religion also played a big part in it.

God has a big place in your life?
I never doubted His existence, even when I wasn't always praying. I've always kept the positive memory of me as a little girl, with this pure and innocent relationship with God, close to my heart. I come back to it all the time. I have a gift of music and it comes from God. When I was going through difficult things as a child, faith always helped me to look to the future. Every time I have sad moments I always go back to the little girl in me. In a sense, I am eternally twelve.

Do you think, as the female singer who has sold the most records in the history of music, that you haven't changed?
Honestly, I don't think I've really changed. Maybe I seem like an idiot, but I think that everything happens for a specific reason. This is what I feel in my relationship with God when I pray. I am in harmony with myself and immerse myself in the Bible. I've read the whole thing three times, and I believe that all the little things that are written in it have helped me to become a better person.

2001 was a difficult year with the death of your father...
Very difficult. His illness more than anything. We all had hope for a long time and it was very difficult. I really had just begun to know him. At the very end of his life, he told me: "You never had to be a star for me to love you. To me, in my heart, you were always my star." It was strange to hear those words because I never felt his love like that before. I felt like I was going back to my roots. For me, I was at the height of my career. For my father, sadly, it was the end. I've become stronger from that ordeal. I came back to the true essence of my father, to being his little girl, always a little girl.

Do you regret certain choices in your career?
Of course. How can anyone not regret the film Glitter? However, I don't think it was the worse thing ever produced in the world, like it was written. You have to admit, the film did not have a plot. And then the choice of September 11th release date was not the best, was it [laughs]? And like all artists, I'm human, and I learned a lot from that experience. I wasn't portrayed well, but my optimism to finish and gain the upper hand kept me going. There have been quite a few singers whose films weren't all they'd hoped, either [laughs].

By marrying Tommy Mottola, head of Sony, you didn't just marry a man but also a CD shop. Was this a mistake?
Yes, it was obviously a mistake. He loved me, but to the point of obsession. Today, I would like to think that he doesn't have bad intentions. But the relationship was abusive, and whoever has been in an abusive relationship needs to talk about it. Me, I talk about in through my songs. "Side Effects" from my new CD E=MC2 refers back to that time in my life. I have to talk about it, it's important. The time that I was with him, everyone thought I was living a fairy tale. I lived vicariously through the me I saw on television. But at the heart of it, I wasn't that image. I wasn't happy. If I could do it again, I wouldn't marry him.

The image of Mariah Carey, the one we see on CDs, would she like to explore other types of music? Do you ever feel like you're nothing but a product?
Yes, that's what happened. My roots are in R&B. My label wanted me to be pop. But what can you say about pop? It's huge, but when you think about it, there's nothing to say about it. All of that is a question of image. They had a specific idea they wanted me to be and they just wanted me to sing. It is difficult to be innovative in that context!

You said you aren't going to make any more decisions based on money.
I said that right after I made a really bad decision based on money [laughs]. What I can say about that is that I grew up without money. Then, in one day, I suddenly had a lot of money. And after that moment, it was hard not to make decisions within that scope. When I was young, there were times I only had one meal a day because there was nothing to eat. I didn't have trouble keeping my figure! Now I do...I am back to my jean size that I had when I was 17 but I have to put a lot of effort into that, all kinds of exercises. I had to adopt a very French eating style. My trainer's name is Patricia and she comes from Bordeaux.

Do you visit France often?
I'm starting to. I remember my first time in Paris very well, I think it was in 1991. I was in my room before doing a television interview. I was getting made up and was straightening my hair with an iron. I didn't realize you needed an adaptor. After a moment the iron started getting really hot and my hair started to burn. I had to cut part off a part of my hair, luckily not the bangs! I was terrified. This was a time in my life when I'd never been out of the United States. What impression did it leave me with? In the end, everything worked out. This misadventure didn't keep from coming back to France and meeting the best hair stylists and make up artists in the world, and who are happy to travel with me today.
Source: Paris Match | Scans: Sam

Wednesday, 16-Apr-2008, 2:05PM EDT | Posted by Liron
Mariah on The Cover of Us Weekly, Local Magazines
Us Weekly
You saw her looking great on this week's Oprah and American Idol. Now learn how Mariah Carey lost 20 pounds and three sizes! She dishes up her exact diet and workout plan that got her teenage body back in this week's Us Weekly, on newsstands now.

See Mariah's Slimmed Down Body on American Idol



Local Magazines
Mariah was featured on the covers of "Quick", a free publication of The Dallas Morning News (April 14) and of "RedEye", a free publication of The Chicago Tribune (April 15).

Source: US Weekly | Raymond | Julie

Monday, 14-Apr-2008, 6:52AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
U.S.A.
• From the April 12th issue of Billboard magazine.


• From the April 21st issues of OK!, In Touch, People, Star, Us and Entertainment Weekly magazines.




U.K.
From the April 2008 issues of The Guardian, Heat, National Enquirer, Reveal, Star, Sun, The Ticket, and Woman.






South Africa
From the April 17th issue of You magazine.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | MariahCareyCollection | Jacque

Saturday, 12-Apr-2008, 9:39AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Jet Magazine: "Mariah Carey Reigns As Queen of No. 1s"
Mariah Carey is hitting even higher notes these days.

Her new hit song, Touch My Body, has reached the top of the charts--bringing her total of No. 1 singles on the Billboard singles chart to 18, overtaking Elvis Presley's record and placing the songbird only behind the Beatles, who have 20.

"I really can never put myself in the category of people who have not only revolutionized music but also changed the world," Carey says about the milestone. "That's a completely different era and time. I'm just really happy and grateful."

With another record-setting 286,000 downloads in its debut week on Billboard's digital songs chart, Touch My Body is the first single off of Carey's new CD, E=MC², which goes on sale this week. A follow-up to her smash comeback CD, Emancipation of Mimi, in 2005, Carey considers E=MC² a continuation of the multi-platinum disc. "Emancipation equals Mariah Carey to the second power," the pop superstar explains.

Though she says she is "no Einstein," Carey, 38, has proven she has the formula for success. She has remained relevant since being crowned best new artist with a Grammy in 1990. Now, after 18 years, nine studio albums and a dark time in her illustrious career, Carey is making history and cementing her legacy as a music icon.

"There has to be peaks and valleys. You can't live life without ups and downs otherwise it would be boring," she says. "When you come out of difficult circumstances you learn from them and understand that's why you went through them. So you can hopefully help other people get through their circumstances."

Music has always been therapeutic and cathartic for Carey. But in 2001, working 21-hour days to make hit albums every year took its toll on her and she suffered what has been reported as an emotional breakdown. Carey then endured scathing reviews of her debut movie Glitter and months later she was dropped from her record label.

However, like a true diva, Carey came out on top. She signed a reported $20-million deal with Universal's Island Def Jam and then gathered three Grammy Awards and sold 10 million records worldwide. Carey admits it's not the platinum success but her faith and music that have been her saving grace.

"A lot of positive things have transpired in my life that I do attribute to having faith and a personal relationship with God... just reading the Word really has helped me," says Carey, whose trademark inspirational songs on E=MC² are Bye Bye and I Wish You Well.

After being in the business so long, a lot of Carey's working relationships have become friendships. Carey is excited to have worked with one of her friends Da Brat for this new project.

"We've done a million remixes together, but this is the first time we've done an R&B song together," Carey says of the smooth and sexy cut, O.O.C. "Collaborating with Brat was probably the most fun I had because she is one of my best friends. She really is an amazing writer. She knows my little idiosyncrasies and my little words so it was cool to have a female perspective too."

Carey also reunited with star music producer Jermaine Dupri. The two won a Grammy for We Belong Together, one of the most-played singles in radio history.

"Jermaine and I write the best together because we really sit there from the inception of the track to the completion and then deal with lyrics and stuff, or sometimes it's simultaneous," Carey explains.

Dupri, the So So Def Productions CEO and Island Records' president of Urban Music, agrees their bond is unique.

"We formed a friendship way, way back when I got a chance to do a record Always Be My Baby. We always kept close from that point on. We speak the same language when we get in the studio. It's not a long process, we both try to get to what we want to get to very fast."

Aside from acting, music has been the focus of Carey's career. However, last year she formed a business partnership with Elizabeth Arden and launched a fragrance line, M by Mariah Carey.

"Just working in the industry at this point, the game has changed so much. In the beginning I would be like, 'why do people need to do all these other extra things and commercials and this and that, they make music," she recalls.

"Honestly, [the fragrance deal] did peak my interest... I realized that you can be as creative as you want to in these ventures... I am going to be doing a lingerie line, probably a shoe line... It would be cool to do these things because it's just utilizing another side of my creativity."

With no signs of slowing down, one can't but help ask the svelte singer when will she settle down and start a family.

"Whenever it's in God's plan for me, that's when it's going to happen," says Carey, who has been divorced from music executive Tommy Mottola for 10 years. "It's not something that I want to push or rush. To bring a child into the world, to me, is the greatest responsibility ever, for a lifetime. It would be lovely if I'm going to do that, to have the father be on the same page as me and understand me as a human being and not just me as an entertainer. Be on the same page as me spiritually too so that the child is not confused. That's my thing."

Source: Jet | MariahDailyJournal

Thursday, 10-Apr-2008, 6:56AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
Mariah is featured in a slew of magazines this month. Below are scans from:

USA - People, Star, Life & Style, OK!, Us, and Metro-Boston



Italy - Vanity Fair


Turkey - Billboard and Blue Jean

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Jonny | Ila & Dan | Can

Sunday, 30-Mar-2008, 6:04PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Billboard Magazine: "Mariah Carey, Great Expectations"
Mariah Carey's Single-Packed New Disc Could Put Her In Elite Company

Albert Einstein created E=MC2 as the formula to express his law of conservation of energy. Mariah Carey, needless to say, has a different interpretation.

On a recent Monday morning, she flew the red-eye from New York to Los Angeles, stopped by Ryan Seacrest's morning radio show to chat, recorded a background vocal track for the song "I Stay in Love" for her upcoming album, then went through hair and makeup and recorded a video for Wal-Mart's "Soundcheck" series, which will be used as bonus footage online and played in stores.

By the time all of this was done, it was just past noon. Her afternoon consisted of another radio interview on rhythmic KPWR (Power 106) Los Angeles, and then a return to the studio at night to work on mastering the album.

For Carey, "E=MC2"-due April 15 via Island Def Jam-is the representation of her formula for success, and it's one that requires an extreme expenditure of energy.

"It becomes nothing other than living for the marketing of the record," Carey's manager Benny Medina says.

After the comeback success of 2005's "The Emancipation of Mimi," 38-year-old Carey is in overdrive to make "E=MC2" another hit. A multitude of promotional plans-from mobile initiatives (see story, page 30) to copious TV appearances-are designed to appeal to fans of the classic balladeer Carey and her current hip-hop incarnation.

Sitting in a mixing room at Henson Recording Studios in Hollywood, Carey does seem a touch weary. But this is Mariah Carey, so you're immediately distracted by the blingy-to-the-max gold, platinum and diamond bracelets that extend almost to the elbows on each of her arms. Armed with a small Evian atomizer and soothing throat spray, Carey's a bit hoarse. But her excitement about the new album still bubbles through.

"There is some heavy stuff on some of the songs," she says. "I was trying to be as honest as I could-it's almost like it wasn't a choice for me. And then there are the songs that are still honest, but they're fun."

One of these fun songs is the first single, "Touch My Body," which has made its way up to No. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100-and that's without any digital sales of the song, which didn't start until March 25. (On the Hot 100 Airplay chart, it resides at No. 4 for the week that ended March 25.) It's a coy love song, made immeasurably appealing by a video featuring Carey as the bombshell fantasy of a geeky IT guy.

"Mariah loves to collaborate with writers and producers, and we had success with Tricky [Stewart] and The-Dream," Island Def Jam Music Group chairman Antonio "L.A." Reid says. "She went into the studio with them, we closed the door, and when we opened it up they had several ideas, one of which become 'Touch My Body.'"

While "Mimi" sold 5.8 million copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan, making it the top-selling album of 2005, and spawned the Hot 100 No. 1s "We Belong Together" and "Don't Forget About Us," Reid denies that this success puts added pressure on "E=MC2."

"We can't compete with the work we've already done," he says. "That represented that time period, and this represents this time period. We can't make records for how things were yesterday."

To its credit, like "Mimi," the new album is much more than a catchy leadoff single. The 14 tracks range from lung-busting ballads like "Bye Bye" and "I Wish You Well" to club-thumpers like "Migrate" and "Side Effects."

If "E=MC2" scores big, Carey could find herself in elite chart company. She's currently tied at No. 2 with Elvis Presley for the most Hot 100 No. 1s, with 17. The Beatles hold the crown with 20.

"I think it would be phenomenal," Reid says of the prospect of Carey besting the Beatles' record. "But the real goal is to create music the whole world can sing. And if we break records and set some milestones while doing that, that would be beautiful."

On "E=MC2," Carey teams again with "We Belong Together" and "Don't Forget About Us" producer Jermaine Dupri on the reggae-tinged "Cruise Control," which features Damian Marley; the ballad "Love Story"; and back-to-back love-gone-wrong odes "Last Kiss" and "Thanx 4 Nothin'."

"What I usually do is go to Atlanta to work with Jermaine, we write the song, then I take it and leave and do my vocals," Carey says. "Then we work on the mix together afterwards-that's how I work with everybody."

Carey started recording the album last summer in several houses she rented in Florida, as well as her favorite vacation spot in Capri. "There's something kind of important to me about going there when I'm working on an album," she says. "There's something about the Mediterranean that's amazing for my voice."

And Carey again called on her friends for an assist in front of the mic on "E=MC2," with Young Jeezy taking a turn on "Side Effects" and the omnipresent T-Pain featured on "Migrate." (He also backed Carey during her recent performance on "Saturday Night Live," when she debuted the song.)

Two versions of the "E=MC2" CD will be sold, a basic with a listed price point of $13.98 and a deluxe edition with a foldout poster and an iPod skin overlay for $21.95.

"There's all this research that shows people want more," Island president Steve Bartels says. "They're looking for more value and more things that come with it. With big artists, we know there is going to be initial demand for the music, but we want to provide consumers a choice."

For Carey, those consumers are across the map; she is the rare artist whose appeal spans the younger MTV crowd and the older VH1 demographic alike. "The beautiful thing about Mariah is her fan base," Island Def Jam senior VP of marketing Caron Veazey says. "She has fans from 12 to 70 years old. Some artists, as they grow, they don't garner new fans. She does."

For "E=MC2," Carey's strategy is to lure new fans with several big-ticket promotional appearances. She will be heavily involved with Fox's "American Idol" this year, appearing on the show's charity effort, "Idol Gives Back," and acting as a mentor/guest judge the week "E=MC2" comes out. "She loves working with developing artists, and she has such a body of work to pull from," Veazey says. "It was a perfect fit."

In addition, she recently filmed behind-the-scenes footage for MTV's "52/52," which will play during the release week for "E=MC2" as promotional spots on the channel-totaling 11 hours of exposure-as well as archived online and for wireless devices. Carey also performed at the premiere party for MTV's docu-soap "The Hills" at the end of March, with footage streamed the day after the event on mtv.com.

On April 16, BET will air an exclusive Carey performance, taped in early March, that showcases "E=MC2." In addition, Carey will make the traditional circuit of "The Oprah Winfrey Show," as well as morning and late-night talk shows in the weeks surrounding street date, according to label executives.

Internationally, Carey will visit Japan, Europe and the United Kingdom for promotional stops; in January, Reid held a listening party in London for press and label execs where tracks including "Migrate," "I'm That Chick," "Bye Bye" "O.O.C." and "Touch My Body" were played.

"They went nuts," Bartels recalls. "All our international divisions have now submitted these incredible plans-they want Mariah in their country. Some artists are great in certain territories-but she transcends the globe."

But despite all the work of the Carey brain trust to make the album a hit with the public, the most important aspect of "E=MC2" for the singer was that each song conveyed something private.

"I do feel like it's my responsibility," Carey says. "I was given a gift. I know that music comes from God. It got me through things before I was known to the world, before I was on the Billboard charts. Music healed me. Music helped me. It was important for me to express where I was coming from."


MARIAH CAREY Q&A
She May Be Ready For A Nap After Nonstop Promo, But Mariah Carey Is Poised To Soar All Over Again

With the successs of "The Emancipation of Mimi" and this new album, it seems that you've found a comfortable home at Island Def Jam.
I love the fact that [Antonio "L.A." Reid] and I have the relationship that we do. He was talking to me today, and he was like, "Yeah, I'm a frustrated producer! I want to be a producer!" I'm like I think you're not a frustrated producer--I think you're quite the accomplished producer, but you happen to be excellent at doing lots of things." It's just such a plus for me to be able to work with somebody who understands music, who can sing something to me and I can sing it back to him. We can go back and forth with concepts rather than just a corporate person who doesn't relate to me on the same wavelength, like an artist.

"E=MC2" crosses a lot of genres. There are a few ballads, but there's definitely some hip-hop and even some gospel-tinged songs and a bit of a reggae beat.
I'm really a festive person, and that's what came across with the "Mimi" album. I hate it when people are like (uses a dramatic voice): "She's taking a new direction with hip-hop." I'm like, "Will you please freakin' research?" I've been doing this for a long time -- working with (writer-producer) Dave Hall on "Dreamlover," using the "Ain't No Half-Steppin"' loop.

I think that it was Q-Tip -- he said this to me in '97 --that I was really the catalyst for so many of these artists who are now trying to infuse (songs with hip-hop). It was just digging in the crates with Dave Hall and coming up with, "Hey, let's use this loop!" And from then on, I did it anytime I could. The next was "Fantasy," which was a groundbreaking moment for me, the ability to be able to work with Puffy (Sean Combs).

Right now everything is kind of merged together because pop is such a nebulous format, in my opinion. You'll hear a hip-hop record next to sort of a rock-sounding pop beat, or a country song. Aretha Franklin can still have a hit -- look at "A Rose Is Still a Rose" -- it's just her talent is shining through. She can work with anybody at any time in her life. Same thing with Patti LaBelle and Luther (Vandross), God rest his soul, before he passed away. The true talent will always come through.

And after the success of "We Belong Together," "Don't Forget About Us" -- co-produced by Bryan-Michael Cox -- and "Shake It Off" on "Mimi," you've teamed up with Jermaine Dupri again for several songs on "E=MC2."
JD is the best. I love him, I really do. We have such similar influences. It's funny because a lot of our favorite records from growing up are really the same. Back in the day we did the (R&B) remix of "Always Be My Baby." The original version was a hard track, if you listen to the bass -- but it was very poppy on top. I knew JD could do it, even though he hadn't really worked with somebody like me before. I knew he was just incredibly talented. He's really just honed his skill as a producer in so many ways. I'm a fan and a friend.

Do you ever think about surpassing the Beatles with their 20 No. 1s?
I do, because people bring it up. (laughs) But it's not like I sit around thinking about that type of stuff while I'm creating something. I did write this record in terms of wanting it to be a lot of songs that could potentially be singles, because people like that.

You write or co-write almost all your songs -- what's your process? What inspires you to write?
For each album, I try to have a book that I write the whole thing in. It started -- this was a long time ago. I don't have birthdays, I only have anniversaries. (laughs) But actually, this was the last birthday party I had ... I think it was my 21st birthday, even though I'm only 12. We had it in advance. (laughs) Cyndi Lauper came to the party, and I've always been a big fan of hers since I was growing up. She gave me this book, and I wound up writing the whole "Music Box" album in this book, which I still have.

Jay-Z said something to me that was really interesting, and I don't even know if he really remembers this. He's known me for a long time, and he's like, "You need to use some of your phrases in your music." I have my own little slang that I make up and say stupid stuff just for laughs. (On) the song "O.O.C." -- that's a Swizz Beatz track -- it means, "Out of control." So me and my friends will say that to each other, like, "OK, you're a little O.O.C. right now, tone it on down." Da Brat, who's a really good, close friend of mine since we worked on "Always Be My Baby" -- we wrote the lyrics together, and it was so fun. By saying (sings), "I get so O.O.C./So out of control, baby," we could explain it.

When somebody was helping me type up the lyrics, and they wrote "Out of Control" in parenthesis (by the song title), I was like, "Get rid of that. It's 'O.O.C.'! Let them figure it out! It's not that tough! I say it in the next line!"

The "Touch My Body" video is hilarious.
Thank you. That was a (director) Brett Ratner-and-me collabo. (laughs) I love Brett because he is like me. If I'm eternally 12 -- because he's a little bit more naughty than I am -- he's eternally 15. He has a great sense of humor, obviously, and he knows that I have a sense of humor and he feels that people don't recognize that about me. And I'll do stuff that I'm totally joking and they're like (uses mean girl voice), "Why is she doing that? Why is she doing the treadmill with her high heels on?" I'm like, "It's a freakin' joke! It's 'Cribs'! Hello! It's a freakin' joke!"

Have you thought about touring for this album?
It's come up, and I'm probably going to do it, but I don't know exactly how we're going to do it or when. I'm thinking probably September. But I think it's important to tour with this album, because there are so many songs that I really want to sing live, that I really enjoy. Fun songs, like "I'm That Chick" or "O.O.C.," and then the ballads, of course. I really want to do "I Wish You Well" and "I Stay in Love" and "Bye Bye."

And now that you're in promotional mode, does it ever get daunting?
I'm totally ready for a nap. I'd love a nap ... It's a little tiring to have this kind of schedule. As long as I'm straight up in promo mode, it's cool, but I'm still doing little things on the record -- we're mastering ... (But) I'm collaborative about it. I like to hear what other people have to say. I wouldn't feel like an artist if I didn't. I wouldn't feel like I was truly the architect of the record. And why do it, then?

Source: Billboard | Text & Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 30-Mar-2008, 6:03PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Billboard Magazine: "Big Stars - Small Screens"
Mariah Carey embraced her inner tech-geek for laughs in the "Touch My Body" video with "30 Rock" actor Jack McBrayer. But her label, Island Def Jam, is dead serious about using today's mobile technology for promotion and profit.

IDJ hopes Carey's new album, "E=MC2"-due April 15-will propel its two newest mobile initiatives into the forefront of mainstream consciousness, and at the same time create a hit out of the follow-up to her comeback smash, "The Emancipation of Mimi."

The first mobile effort is a subscription service called IDJ Mobile, which for $10 per month gives access to not only the entire content catalog of partner Flycell-which includes other Universal Music Group stars-but also exclusive ringtones, ringback tones and other content from IDJ acts. The service went live in February featuring content from Kanye West, and will eventually include material from the entire IDJ roster.

The other component is a Web site specifically designed for mobile phones called, appropriately enough, idjmobile.com. There, fans can access additional ringtones, news and artist information, tour dates and, by this summer, mobile social networking and other community features.

Both efforts are notable for their exclusion of the one partner traditionally deemed essential to a successful mobile initiative-the wireless operator. They are indicative of a music industry trying to take more control of its mobile destiny. No longer content to simply license ringtones available only from mobile operators directly, this "off-deck" strategy is reaching a crescendo this year as ringtone sales via the carrier deck are flattening.

IDJ is relying on the strength of fans' devotion to their artists to help drive this strategy. The WAP-or mobile Internet-site debuted with Janet Jackson as the featured artist after her "Discipline" album dropped. But the new Carey album is the label's first big release to take advantage of the subscription service and WAP site simultaneously-serving not only to promote the album, but to raise the profile of the services as well.

"For us this is an attempt to capture a bigger part of the off-deck world with exclusive content you can't get anywhere else for the true fan," IDJ senior VP of new media and commerce Christian Jorg says. "There are things we wouldn't necessarily sell on-deck and sell millions of, but that we know will be interesting to a fan."

The primary motivation to do so is, of course, money. Ringtones have proved a lucrative revenue stream to record labels in the last several years, but the profit margins have always been rather thin. IDJ won't reveal what percent of the $10 monthly subscription fee it gets through its partnership with Flycell, but hints that it's greater than the sale of a single ringtone, and that cut reoccurs monthly.

"It's a different opportunity for us," Jorg says. "We are building our own business and there is a bigger financial opportunity for us than with just licensing content. We're participating in the subscription revenue with a larger share."

The WAP site also has direct revenue upsides. First, IDJ gets a greater share of each ringtone sold by virtue of not having to split the margin with the wireless operator, though it must pay its technology partners that help deliver the content. The site is also displaying mobile banner ads.

While today the market for mobile advertising is negligible, particularly for a smaller mobile site like IDJ, mobile advertising is expected to command $11 billion in global revenue by 2011, according to the Gartner Group, and record labels want a cut of that pie.

Another benefit of working with off-deck partners is the extra promotional opportunities they provide. Partners like Flycell, as well as Thumbplay, Jamster and 9Squared (now Zed America), provide free advertising support in return for an exclusive remix of a given track.

"You can never have enough commercial time," says IDJ VP of digital and mobile sales Russell Fink, who is driving the digital marketing campaign behind the new Carey album. "I will take a free TV spot promoting not only my artist but the availability of selling ringtones and the availability of the album coming out any day... We give them exclusive content and in turn they help market it in various multimedia fashions."

Yet wireless operators are still considered valuable assets even as labels develop their own direct-to-fan strategies. The standard ringtone for "Touch My Body" was made broadly available to all wireless operators, with exclusive remixes provided in return for beneficial deck placement and marketing support. The song's video, which has become a hit on YouTube and other outlets, was given to Verizon Wireless as a one-week exclusive for the V Cast video service.

IDJ also has a unique cross-platform relationship with "American Idol" and AT&T Mobility where Carey will not only appear on the show, but her ringtones will be listed for sale next to the ringtones of the "Idol" performances from that evening's episode.

But in offering its own mobile services, IDJ can create far richer experiences around a specific artist that fans can access for a much longer period of time. Carrier content strategies tend to target the widest audience possible and focus on refreshing content on a regular basis. A label-run mobile Web site, while certainly focused on promoting the newest release, can maintain niche communities of fans around a specific artist indefinitely.

Take IDJ's WAP site. According to Jorg, the site will add mobile social networking capabilities by this summer that will let fans of a common artist interact, trade messages and even provide for user-generated content. But the key to its success, he says, is for the mobile social network to be fully integrated with existing online social networking groups as well.

"We need community on the Web and on the WAP site," Jorg says. "The ability for people to take pictures at concerts and upload them on the profile page so their friends can see it sitting at home and comment on it... I want that sort of seamless integration."
Source: Billboard | Text & Scan: MariahDailyJournal

Saturday, 22-Mar-2008, 4:44PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in Parade: "I Didn't Know I Could Be Happy"
Privacy-or the lack thereof-being what it is for Mariah Carey, we are conducting an interview in the backseat of her car.

As you might imagine, this is not just any automobile. This is a $400,000 Maybach Touring Sedan-long and sleek, with deeply tinted windows mirrored on the outside. Passersby who gawk see only themselves. When you live in a fishbowl, it's nice to be able to turn the tables now and then.

Aspiring pop divas, take note: It's lonely at the top, but not lonely enough.

It's a quarter after 12 on a cold night in New York City, and Carey-one of the best-selling recording artists of all time-is about to go into a studio to put the finishing touches on her latest album, E=MC². We're the only ones in the car, both Carey's chauffeur and her boyfriend, record producer Mark Sudack, having obligingly vanished.

"Not to give a woe-is-me moment," the 38-year-old singer/songwriter says, "but it's not as easy as everybody thinks to have this kind of life. Even sitting here talking to you, I feel like there should be a bit of intimacy, and when there is always somebody else around, it's tough."

There's a brief silence. It's so cozy and quiet that I feel an overwhelming temptation to pop the big question.

"Are you a diva?" I ask.

Carey rolls her eyes. "They throw that word around like it's a friggin' Frisbee!" she says.

Then, fortunately, she smiles.

"I grew up hearing it, because my mother is an opera singer," Carey tells me. "The actual definition is 'a talented female singer.' Definition two is 'a difficult woman who is successful,' I believe. So I take it as a compliment."

Mariah Carey is a complicated mixture, at once powerful and vulnerable, grown-up and girlish. "I'm eternally 12," she says. But nothing about her-aside from the jeweled butterfly ring she wears on each hand-looks 12. She's tall and voluptuous, a fact that her outfit (a tight blouse with a deep-scooped neckline, tight black pants and platform heels) does not disguise. She speaks with an unvarnished Long Island accent, shows her emotions easily and seems touchingly-and oddly-eager to please. "My self-esteem has never been topping the charts," she admits.

At the same time, Carey is a woman of parts: a dedicated philanthropist (The Fresh Air Fund and the Make-A-Wish Foundation are two of her favorite causes), an actress and, of course, a monumentally successful and wealthy recording artist. From the time of her discovery as an 18-year-old with a phenomenal eight-octave singing range, she has sold more than 160 million records worldwide and charted 17 No. 1 singles-tied with Elvis Presley and three fewer than the Beatles. She could catch or surpass both with this album. Carey's success is built on the strength of that amazing voice and on the sweet sexiness of her songs, which also contain hints of a difficult personal past.

As a biracial child growing up poor (her father, an Afro-Venezuelan aeronautical engineer, and her mother, an Irish-Catholic, Juilliard-trained opera singer, divorced when Mariah was 3), she felt "like an outcast." After Sony Music Entertainment head Tommy Mottola discovered her, signed her with Columbia Records and then married her, she spent the '90s turning out one platinum album after another-and feeling like a prisoner in an overprotective marriage.

"That part of my life always remains with me, because it was so intense," Carey admits. "But part of that is my fault, for allowing that relationship to kind of linger-or, dare I say, fester-for so long. I grew up with such dysfunction that I assumed I didn't have a right to a happy personal life."

Carey divorced Mottola, left Columbia Records, signed the biggest record deal in history ($80 million) with Virgin-and then, in 2001, suffered a physical and emotional breakdown. "My life was in such a shambles because I had allowed it to become a shambles," she says. Virgin dumped her, but then Carey signed with Island/Def Jam Records. In 2005, she made one of the most remarkable comebacks in recording history with her multiplatinum album The Emancipation of Mimi.

"You know what?" she says. "I guess I am a diva in many ways!" She laughs. "When it comes to certain things, yes, I can be difficult and a little bit rigid about what I want. Am I demanding? I don't think I'm demanding enough. I think if I were more demanding, I would have felt that I had some sort of power, as opposed to feeling like a pawn, which is something I had to grow out of.

"You've got to go through some stuff," she continues. "Somehow people have to know there's something that's not perfect about you. I had to learn to grow up a little bit. I feel like I connect to people through song because it's filling a void in me. I need to make music. If I didn't have this, I don't know where I would be."

"How do you know that the people around you would still be there if you weren't so successful?" I ask.

She sighs. "It's extra-difficult," she says. "You don't know who is here for the glamour, for the gossip factor. You really just want to know that somebody loves you for you. That's a difficult thing when, you know..." She hesitates. "Sometimes you just do really feel like an ATM machine with a wig on it."

Carey looks at me for a moment, then breaks into a raucous laugh.

"Forgive me," I say, "but you seem happy."

"I am," Carey says. "I'm really happy."

"Can you say more about your boyfriend?" I ask, referring to the pleasant young man who I now see is waiting patiently on the sidewalk.

She laughs again. "Well, I've been on this mission to refuse to discuss it as long as I can," she says.

The final song on her new album, "Bye-Bye," is a sweetly sad farewell to important people in all our lives-in Carey's case, the father from whom she was estranged for much of her childhood, the stern man who never encouraged her singing. Yet before Alfred Carey died in 2003, Mariah reconciled with him.

"He was a very strict man, and I think it was such a long shot in his mind that anybody could actually become a success in this business," she says. "He explained that to me before he passed away. We discussed a lot of stuff. Anything and everything I needed to say to him, and vice versa. So I am very grateful for that time that I had.

"I never knew that he kept a scrapbook of my stuff," Carey tells me. "I never knew all the things that he saved-cards from when I was a little girl. And he did say to me before he passed away, 'You were always...'" She has to stop for a second.

"Dramatic moment," she says, regaining her composure. "He said, 'You were always a star in my eyes.' Which was very meaningful, because to a lot of people you're really not worth anything unless you're raking in the dough and having No. 1 hits."

Mariah Carey is clearly all that and a lot more.

Source: Parade | Scans: MariahDailyJournal

Wednesday, 19-Mar-2008, 3:39AM EDT | Posted by Liron
Allure Interview: Waiting To Exhale
Her vocal range and songwriting talent made her a star. Her troubled love life, weight issues, and public breakdown made her a tabloid target. But Mariah Carey is still here - and she's not finished yet.
By Brooke Hauser

In the house of Mariah Carey, dreams really do come true. The fantasy begins as soon as you step into her TriBeCa triplex and a housekeeper brings a bottle of Fiji water and a small linen napkin with the word "Poetic" embroidered on it in silver thread.

After refreshing yourself in the sitting room, where Marilyn Monroe's white piano lives, you are escorted up the stairs - past the Creamsicle-colored walls and glass scones - to the rooftop lounge, where your hostess makes her grand entrance a flurry of pink, trailing puffs of perfume and a hyper Jack Russell terrier named J.J.

Looking back, you don't know how or when the Mariahfication occurred. Most likely, it was before she sprayed you with her signature scent (M by Mariah Carey, which contains top notes of toasted marshmallow) and after the shots of butterscotch schnapps mixed with Baileys, chased with red wine. But over the next few hours, you will find that you are no longer quite yourself.

By the end of the night, you will somehow end up wearing your hostess' fluffy pink bathrobe, gazing at the Empire State Building from the roof deck, and feeling like a diva. That is, until you see your reflection and realize your mistake: Only Mariah Carey can get away with being Mariah Carey.

Imagine if Aladdin, Tinkerbell, and Liberace threw a slumber party in Barbie's Dream House. That's what it feels like to be inside Carey's penthouse, only with an open bar. "Do you want anything to drink?" Carey asks from the hallway, once I am settled in her Moroccan Lounge, a pillow-strewn lair inspired by her trip to Marrakech. "I'll tell you if we have anything extra festive!"

Moments later, teetering on the pink pom-pommed heels that she calls "my little house shoes," the singer returns from the bar carrying two ornate glasses filled with the butterscotch schnapps and calls for backup - requesting some red wine as well as the company of her choreographer and close friend, Rachel.

"Let's show our cheer!" Carey suggests once Rachel arrives with the wine. In perfect synchronicity, they raise their goblets with outstretched pinkies - "One, two, three, pose!" - and vogue like practiced pinup girls.

Carey has good reason to celebrate. After eight months of work, she is almost finished recording her new album, E=MC², a mix of breezy ballads, club anthems, and sexy R&B tracks with such fearlessly inviting titles as "Touch My Body," her first single off the record. It's likely that her latest CD, due in stores this month, will bring Carey within a hair's breadth of smashing the world record for the most number-one songs, ever. Currently, she is tied with Elvis Presley for second place, after the Beatles, with 17 chart-topping hits already to her credit.

Among her other distinctions: At 38, Carey is the best-selling female artist of all time. She is said to have hit one of the highest notes ever produced by a human, while singing "Emotions" at the 1991 Video Music Awards. She has shared a stage with Pavarotti and Sean "Diddy" Combs. And it's possible that she boasts the largest Hello Kitty collection on earth.

It's hard to reconcile the phenomenon that is Mariah, the seriously talented singer-songwriter with the reported seven-octave range, with her alter ego, Mimi, the bouncy bombshell who, on this day, is busting out of a skimpy pink T-shirt that says "Pussycat Lounge."

It's a dichotomy, I understand," Carey purrs, sounding sleepy and warm. "I understand that people think I am a ditzy moron."

She smiles and shrugs. She has enough on her mind, thanks to her forthcoming album. The hallmarks of a singer who is determined to be the best are everywhere, from the home recording studio where she's been pulling rowdy late-night sessions with her frequent collaborator and good friend Jermaine Dupri to the well-used bottle of Mouth Korte Oral Moisturizer that she has left behind on a table in the Moroccan Lounge.

To keep her vocal cords sufficiently lubricated, Carey sometimes sleeps in her steam room, complete with a water bed, dressed in terry cloth. And because the late Luther Vandross once told her that humidity is good for her voice, she has been trying to record only in places with moist climates, such as the Caribbean island of Anguilla.

While she is a singer first, Carey has earned a reputation as one of the hardest-working women in the show business, promoting her records, fragrances, and films. In addition to her latest CD, she recently launched her second perfume, M by Mariah Gold. She'll play an aspiring singer in the drama Tennessee, from the producer of Monster's Ball. Carey is also attached to a film adaptation of the gritty novel Push.

Only in recent years has the star forced herself to slow down. The lesson came at an expensive and embarrassing price when she experienced a very public meltdown following the untimely release of Glitter, the box-office dud loosely based on her life story, right after September 11, 2001.

"It's not that difficult to become exhausted," Carey says in her own defense. Checking her reflection in one of the Moroccan Lounge's many mirrors, she corrals a few stubborn frizzies into place with the rest of her relaxed blonde waves. "I mean, I have three personal assistants just to keep up with my schedule."

On this night, Carey has just returned from vacationing in Aspen, where she indulged in sleigh-rides, hot-tub parties, and ice-cream sundae sessions in the company of her closest friends. It's all part of her plan to make room in her life for more downtime and less drama.

"You get one vacation a year, and if that's going to be filled with weird moments, or not being happy, we don't want that!" Carey says, raising her wine glass for another toast. "We want festive moments of ting, ting, ting - yay!"

Carey was born to be a singer, but she wanted to be a star. She found her voice at four and, around the same time, drew a revealing self-portrait that now hangs in her apartment - there is a hall of fame where she displays her countless awards and photos of herself with her idols, including Barbra Streisand, Patti LaBelle, and Aretha Franklin.

To judge by the early portrait, Carey always had a sense of self and a penchant for glamour. The drawing depicts a sticklike figure with thick eyelashes and a pronounced beauty mark next to a floating pack of cigarettes. It's labeled in a childish scrawl: "Me I am Mariah."

Over the years, Carey has become a bit more existential about her identity. "I've always had a really low self-esteem, and I still do," she says. "What's weird about that is being onstage, and the love that you get, and the adoration that you feel from your real fans. It's hard for a partner to compete - just imagine."

Carey has been romantically linked with Yankees slugger Derek Jeter, Latin crooner Luis Miguel, rapper Eminem, and music executive Mark Sudack, to whom she was rumored to be engaged in 2005. She says she would like to marry someday, but it won't be until she finds "someone who I would know, 'OK, they're going to take care of me emotionally, they're going to understand who I am...' That's a big deal for me: feeling like somebody else can't fully understand me because they're not in show business. It shouldn't matter, but it does, because the energy it takes to be 'on' is a lot."

But despite her share of boyfriends, Carey claims to be "a freakin' prude" who has never had a one-night stand. ("I'm Mary Poppins: I'm what the buttoned-up girls are supposed to be," she says with a laugh.) Even as a teenager, she was wary of being sidetracked by sex when her first commitment was to her career and to herself, an ever-evolving work in progress.

In the eleventh grade, Carey enrolled in beauty school because, as she puts it, "I wanted to be the pretty girl, so I thought, Let me get my act together and figure out what to do with my hair." Although her career as a beautician got intercepted, she is the one friends call when they need a facial. She even has her own lancet for popping pimples.

Not to mention a fully equipped beauty salon. It's one place where Carey can exercise total image control, after years of listening to industry types and image shapers scrutinize her appearance. Especially in the beginning of her career, she received advice that just inflamed her insecurities. Among other critiques, a product manager told Carey that she should only let the right side of her face be photographed. More recently, she has put up with the media's endless speculation about her fluctuating weight.

"I don't know why everyone thinks I lost 30 pounds," says Carey, who is noticeably slimmer these days after bringing back a personal trainer she liked from St. Barts. "This trainer as actually helped me reshape my arms. That's where I gained most of my weight: upper body. That's just one thing you have to lose weight for. With this whole steroid crap, that's crazy. I'm almost on the verge where I'd be too muscular if I was going to do a thing like that."

Carey's obsession with her image isn't purely cosmetic. The singer has been examining her ancestral roots to understand who Mariah is. On a tour of one of her "serious rooms," a quiet den where she has created a family tree of photographs, she pauses before a snapshot of a lean preteen girl with tawny skin and untamed hair, wearing a marigold bikini. "See," she says, "this was before I developed a complete complex about the way I looked."

As a biracial child growing up on Long Island, Carey struggled to fit in with other kids her age (she is the youngest daughter of a part-Venezuelan, part Africa-American father and a white Irish-American mother; they divorced when she was three.) "People still get confused about my ethnicity," she says, twirling one of her long blonde locks. "OK, so my hair is blown out today - does that mean I look more white or more black? I don't know. I feel like a lot of people think, Oh, she had this easy fairy tale-princess life," Carey continues, fidgeting with her diamond-studded butterfly ring. "Not to quote Swingers, but 'we all have stories.' I got a freakin' miniseries in me."

The story of Carey's rise from beauty-school dropout to the best-selling female artist of all time is certainly the stuff of melodrama and, at times, tragicomedy. But, despite some painful memories, she is surprisingly unguarded and funny when discussing certain episodes to her past that never made it into Glitter.

For instance, there was her legendary and unhappy four-year marriage to Tommy Mottola, the Sony record executive 20 years her senior, who signed Carey when she was 18 after receiving her demo tape at a party and wed her in a star-studded ceremony a few years later.

The years she spent at "Sing Sing," her nickname for the $10 million Bedford, New York, mansion where she felt so imprisoned, now seem like a lifetime ago. But the act of leaving the man who jump-started her career marked her indelibly. "I had to make a decision: either lose myself completely or learn to stand up for myself," Carey says. "You have to be very courageous to do that."

Reclaiming her sense of self is a powerful, recurring theme for the star, who has survived her share of bad splits in her professional and personal life. After parting ways with Mottola and Sony, she signed with Virgin Records, only to have her contract bought out after Glitter and its sound track tanked. Also, she was hospitalized for exhaustion amid swirling rumors that she had tried to commit suicide.

"I spent seven hours one time reading all the press just to see what they were saying," Carey says, rolling her eyes at the memory. "We were going to Puerto Rico, and they'd be like, 'She's in the hospital in England,' Literally, we'd be sitting there on a catamaran."

Carey feels like her situation was not as bad as the world made it out to be. "I guess people can just say what they want," she continues, "and until you have a humongous success, they don't believe you can be happy."

The singer's previous album, The Emancipation of Mimi has sold 10 million copies worldwide and earned her three Grammy Awards. Just don't call it a comeback, she says, with a wry little laugh: "Yeah, I've been here for years."

Her closest friends call her Tinkerbell, but Carey actually has more in common with Peter Pan: She doesn't ever want to grow up. She loves rainbows and butterflies, riding the Tower of Terror at Disney World, swimming with dolphins. Even though she's approaching 40, Carey likes to think of herself as "eternally 12." So, she lives in Neverland, where lost boys and girls come to play. Tonight's partying winds into the Mermaid Room, an aquatic-themed hangout where Lindsay Lohan and Sean Lennon had a jam session. "He was playing my Hello Kitty guitar," she recalls.

Next, the star makes a detour to her beauty salon, where she reapplies her lip liner and some M perfume. "This smells different on everybody," she says, before dabbing a drop behind my ear. Carey leads me to her palatial walk-in wardrobe, which should have choral music piped into it. Racks of sparkly, flowy, colorful clothes give way to rows of shoes, an estimated 1,000 pairs in all: Manolo Blahniks, Jimmy Choos, and Diors, in every possible shade.

Carey picks up a hair of thigh-high suede boots in Christmas red. "From Louis Vuitton - so you know they're not a joke; they're not a game," she says, just to make her point stiletto-sharp."I've come a looooong way."

Yes, it took a nomadic childhood and being trapped in a golden cage called Sing Sing to teach Carey the value of having a room of one's own. Now she has so many that she doesn't actually know the count. (She even has an Elf Room, which is decorated with snowflakes year-round.) It seems nothing makes her happier these days than just having room to breathe.

"Do you want to go out on the roof?" she asks, handing me her fluffy pink bathrobe. "I don't want you to freeze."

"This is a Jacuzzi; it's really festive," she says, clip-clopping across the deck in the dark. "And this is my little area where I lounge looking out. See, there's the Empire State Building, and that's the Chrysler Building."

Balancing a precipitously high heel on the edge of the hot tub, she pulls you up for a better view of the endless cityscape glittering in the darkness. "It's like its own little oasis, right?" Carey asks.

In fact, she calls it "Mimi's Oasis." And when she's tired of being Mariah Carey, she comes up here to gather her thoughts, uninterrupted, just another star in the sky.

Mariahland
Who? Mariah Carey. What? The April cover of Allure, shot by Michael Thompson. When? January 14. Where Lux Studio in New York City, a ten-minute Maybach ride from Carey's TriBeCa triplex. Why? The five-time Grammy Award winner's newest album E=MC², is out this month. Making an Entrance: The singer walked into the studio with her four-month-old Jack Russell terrier J.J. under her arm. (Her assistant and bodyguard carried her bags.) "No, no -- don't get up! you're all eating," she told the Allure crew, who had just sat down for lunch. (Her assistant had called earlier to let everyone know that she'd be a little late for the 11 A.M. shoot.) In the Pink: The singer changed from her street clothes - a down Moncler jacket and skinny jeans - into a pink dressing gown she had brought with her, then settled in for her hair and makeup. "I wanted to give her dramatically raised brows," said makeup artist Brigitte Reiss-Andersen. "She made us laugh because she could make the exact face we were going for." For the Record: Carey put a copy of her new album - with tracks produced by will.i.am of the Black Eyed Peas and Jermaine Dupri - on the studio's sound system. She asked the studio manager to replay the song "Side Effects" as she sang along. Afterparty: Thompson took his last photograph at 10:30 P.M, but the night was just getting started for Carey. She sipped Pinot Grigio from a champagne glass, changed into her jeans and ankle boots, and discussed her plans to go to a friend's birthday party. Just before midnight, the singer slipped out the door to her waiting car.

Cover Look
Mariah's look can be re-created with the following: ColorStay 12 Hour Eye Shadow in Berry Bloom, ColorStay Liquid Liner in Blackset Black, Powder Blush in Everything's Rosy, Renewist Lipcolor in Naturally Revealing, and ColorStay Lipliner in Sheer Spice by Revlon. Photographed by Michael Thompson. Hair: Ken O'Rourke. Makeup: Brigitte Reiss-Andersen. Manicure: Elissa Ferri. Fashion editor: Paul Cavaco. Details, see Credits page.

Hair How-to
Hairstylist Ken O'Rourke applied styling mousse to Carey's hair, then blew it out to create volume. He wound rollers all over her head for about 15 minutes, and brushed through the curls. "To finish, I parted the hair diagonally, which added '60s flavor."

Eyes
Revlon ColorStay 12 Hour Eye Shadow in Berry Bloom and ColorStay Liquid Liner in Blackset Black.

Cheeks
Revlon Powder Blush in Everything's Rosy.

Lips
Revlon Renewist Lipcolor in Naturally Revealing and ColorStay Lipliner in Sheer Spice.

Makeup Lesson
"Mariah doesn't go out in sweats," said Reiss-Andersen. "I did glamorous makeup to match her style."
1. The makeup artist applied a little foundation, then used a pink-peach blush along the cheekbones.
2. She rimmed Carey's eyes with black liner and blended translucent powder and amethyst shadow across the lid.
3. To keep the look soft, Reiss-Andersen used pink-beige lip liner and lipstick.


Source: Allure | Scans & Text: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 16-Mar-2008, 4:14PM EDT | Posted by Liron
Sunday Telegraph Interview: Wake Up And Smell The Perfume
There's a chaise-lounge in the kitchen; the dog travels in a chauffeur-driven Mercedes. Today, even Mariah Carey admits she's "slightly over the top." With a new album on the way, the pop diva with more number ones than Madonna talks to Sylvia Patterson about men, marriage, and the joy of being forever 12.

Five-foot nine inches of athlete-fit Mariah Carey lunges towards me with a glass bottle. Pffft! comes the spray onto the wrist as she takes my hand, pulls me along a studio floor and pirouettes the pair of us through a cloud of fragrance called "M". Naturally, it's her own. "M" is a light, floral/incense affair with a toasted marshmallow "top-note" personally requested by Carey because it reminds her of being young. Just about the most successful female recording artist the world has known, aged 37, believes she's 'eternally 12'.

"So how are you?" she coos in her husky New York timbre. "I see your new haircut [fondles the bottom of my hair], it's cute..." And on we go, across the floor -- Pfft! -- pirouetting through the marshmallow clouds in Mariah Carey's infinitely preposterous parallel version of reality.

When we think of Carey, the words "hands on" don't spring to mind. What does spring to mind is an image of her being carried overhead on a silken sedan chair by four bare-chested Egyptian princelings, fanning herself with a plume of exotic fern. We've met twice before and each time she's been less the Demanding Diva of showbiz legend, and more a Looney Tune high-camp drag queen, endlessly caricatured by a gleeful press with the kind of urban myth, which says Carey "doesn't do stairs." But, as she confirmed, "I prefer stairs. I've had experiences being stuck in elevators so I prefer the stairs, even in shoes like this [5in Alexander McQueens]. And now it's gonna be, Mariah says, "'build me some stairs, dah-ling!' Joan Crawford style! The diva stuff, to me, I'm laughing at it."

She is certainly, as she puts it, "slightly over the top." In 2005, we spent three hours alone inside her rented Los Angeles mansion, a colossal homestead with a vast, Old Colonial living area where 20ft palms swayed over a grand piano. We sat in two switched-on-the-state-of-the-art massage chairs, her buoyant bosoms (all her own) sashaying from side to side as the chair pummelled across her back. She told me about Jack, her Jack Russell dog, and how he is disqualified, for being "too big" from flying first class in his very own seat between her homes in LA and New York. Jack, therefore, travels the 3,000 miles in Carey's chauffeur-driven Mercedes, making Jack (as far as we know), the only dog in the world with a chauffeur-driven Mercedes. One day, she twinkled, Jack will surely have "his own private jet..."

Two and a half years later and this is a different, as Carey would say, "moment." We're in New York, in a photo-studio complex in west Manhattan where a group of us are perched in a row in an L-shaped office having a "listening session" for Carey's new album, the spectacularly titled "E=MC²" (Emancipation equals Mariah Carey to the second power), a vibrant R&B club-pop record lyrically obsessed with love, heart-break, and sex.

At the album's close, a Carey official issues instructions for our forthcoming interviews. "So, we're here to talk about the music," he says, crushingly. "Mariah is a big celebrity and we understand personal questions will come up. But if there's anything too personal the interview will be wrapped up. And these interviews are being recorded."

Suddenly, the lyric sheets we were handed earlier, which we've used for our album-listening notes, are being brusquely confiscated because they must not "leave the building." Cue a number of journalists, mid-handover, furiously scribbling over any less than rapturous remarks.

In 2005, no one expected Carey's 10th studio album, the cool R&B comeback collection "The Emancipation of Mimi" to be the biggest-selling album of the year worldwide (10 million copies sold), taking her career total to well over 160 million. In pure success terms, her status is undeniable: 17 American Number 1 singles, six more than Madonna, one less than Elvis. Last year, Forbes magazine estimated her worth to be around $225 million.

In 2001, she was supposedly finished, buried under the rubble of the trifling, contrived "Glitter" album (and "Glitter" movie); its global failure caused a highly publicised, exhaustion-related "breakdown." As her supernova waned, the critics inevitably cheered. Carey had been the undisputed titan of the drearily billowing ballad since her debut in 1990, a yodelling cartoon calamity whose gift voice is like a dolphin's. To her fans, though, Carey has single-handedly redefined what it means to be a female singer. She's now the single greatest influence on the Pop Idol/American Idol generation bar none. Today, she cites her 2001 meltdown as her "breakthrough," leaving her "creatively-free" to all but abandon the showboat balladeering for knowingly sultry, stylised R&B. Her latest single, Touch My Body -- with a sexual fantasy concept video part Beyonce part Benny Hill -- sends herself up as a coquettish, breathy saucestrel.

"Did you say saucestrel?" she blinks. "Is that a bad word? It's like saucy? Oh, leave it to the Brits to make a demented moment. Well we're not taking ourselves that seriously. It's not [po-faced] 'touch my body, I'm so amaaaazing.' In the video we have a unicorn, so let's face it, we're taking, as you guys say, the piss."

It's half past midnight and we're sitting in the dark, in a vast, white 13th-floor photo studio with the lights switched off. In the corner, Carey sits on a chaise-lounge, casual in jeans and a sleeveless vest, legs to one side, beneath the enourmous windows where tea-lights on windowsills and the thrusting skyscrapers of moonlit Manhattan provide low-key, high-glam illumination. She's been working since midday (photos/interviews) despite working 'til eight this morning (album mastering) and therefore is amiably woozy, sipping white wine and prone to dreamy, melancholic reflections. She rummages, suddenly, at the back of her skinny-fit jeans.

"What's this in my pants?" she wonders, snapping off a stray string. "This would be my jean trousers tag!" -- hands over tag -- "To prove to you that it is a size 27..."

And so I find myself pocketing Carey's new jeans tag: "Miss Sixty, Size 27 (UK size six) Radio Trousers 30in L, $239." Her much-admired new physique has come from "had work with Patricia," her personal trainer after she'd gotten, she insists, "too bulky. Now I'm down to my 11th-grade size and it feels good yet it doesn't feel good because I can't eat what I want." She reverted to her famed Morsel Diet, replacing some meals with bowls of low-carb nibbles, "so they're been some olive/almond moments."

In the past two years she's simultaneously worked harder at everything else: a global tour, the new album, launched her "M" beauty product range, and appeared in two new films, the road-trip drama Tennessee playing a waitress/aspiring singer and playing herself in the Adam Sandler comedy You Don't Mess With the Zohan. Queries to what drives her these days elicit a scarily earnest and bewildering response -- something about "not letting the bad times overpower what the goodness is." Her campy tomfoolery is perhaps compromised tonight by the evident sleep-deprivation -- or perhaps the official foot-long record label microphone pointing directly at her head.

"It's been tough for me to embrace who I am as a human being," she eventually decides. "Just from feeling like an outsider a lot of the times. So, to not be redundant, I just decided to let me be me. And that's a big place, you know?"

Carey describes her life as a "friggin' mini-series." She was a mixed-race kid whose mother was disowned by her family for marrying a black man. Their all-white, hate-fuelled Long Island neighbors poisoned the family dog and set fire to their car. Alison, Carey's older sister by 10 years, who had a baby at aged 15, became heavily involved in drugs, turned to prostitution, contracted HIV (and still lives in York -- Mariah is "legally" forbidden to talk about her).

Her parents divorced when Carey was three, and she was raised in "a shack" by her mother, Patricia, an Irish-American opera singer. The family moved 13 times and Carey developed a profound fear of poverty, the insecure mind-set of an "outcast freak" and the blazing conviction that her always-astonishing voice could save her life. Aged 18, as a waitress, beauty school dropout and fledgling singer/songwriter with a demo-tape, she met Tommy Mottola at a party. Mottola was the chairman of Sony Music Entertainment, and 20 years her senior. After a four-year courtship, they were married in 1993, with Robert De Niro among the guests.

"He was in it," smiles Carey. "There were a lotta people there."
Barbra Streisand, I believe.

"Yes, she was," she nods, "and I've seen her since and it's all been good. Y'know... I was really young. When I got in that relationship, I was very very young. And inexperienced."

They lived a life of absurd extravagance in a 12-bedroom mansion with a ballroom, firing range, two swimming pools and a helicopter pad while Carey made albums for Sony. "That company," she says, "made a billion dollars from the raggedy girl he met at that party." Tommy was a deeply controlling husband who left Carey feeling confined to the house (where she obsessively over-decorated). He aggressively dictated every aspect of her career, from the soul-less music to her sexless clothes to her holographic public persona taught as she was "to say as little as possible, don't be as yourself." Her new album contains a song specifically detailing her escape from Mottola, called Side Effects: "You were scared that I'd become much more/Than you could handle" she lilts. "Shining like a chandelier/That decorated every room inside this private Hell that we built."

Since her divorce in 1998, she's kept a stringent of privacy over her relationships, but reportedly dated Latino singer Luis Miguel, music executive Mark Sudack, acerbic rapper Eminem and baseball player Derek Jeter. In 2005, however, when questioned about Eminem, she gave an uncharacteristically full response. "Please!" she roared. "I never had any type of sexual relationship with that man. I can count the number of people I've had sex with on less than the fingers on one hand."

You've never had many boyfriends and you've never been promiscuous, I say. Why is that?

"You're right, and I'm still not. Because... maybe if I had been a promiscuous person, I'd feel even less able to be um, forgiving of myself. Because...there were examples of ways I didn't wanna be that I saw when I was growing up. And that made me feel really vulnerable. And I still do. And I hate that I still do. But I do."

She's talking about her big sister, the person she also credits with her lifelong aversion to drugs. "I just saw too much of it as a child." She also finds it almost impossible to trust men, not least because of our rapacious kiss-and-tell showbiz culture, mobile phones, and cameras everywhere. (This is a lyrical theme of Touch My Body -- post anything private on YouTube, she sings, "and I will hunt you down.") "We live in a world of extremely high technology," she nods, "it is so difficult and so hard for me to trust people." In 2005, she said she wasn't sure she'd ever been in love. Is this still the case?

"But have you?" she replies. "Have you been totally in love? See, I can answer that I've been infatuated. With me it's like, well do I love this person? They say they love me, why can't I accept that? I can't accept it because I've had a difficult time feeling worthy of being loved. [directly into tape-recorder] I can't accept it because I've had a difficult time feeling worthy of being loved."

Do you still feel that?

"No, I feel like I'm worthy of being loved but because I felt like I wasn't worthy of being loved for so many years I've put myself in situations that were maybe not the best situations for me," she says, obliquely. "And I need to find a way to fully grow out of that. 'Cos you know what? There are so many I don't wanna emulate. It shouldn't take people to be freakin' 60 years old 'til they feel like 'I finally found the person I'm supposed to be with'."

"Most people get caught up, they have their babies, they raise their kids, and they're not with those people any more because they never really had anything in common to begin with but the kids. And that's what I was always scared of. You know, it's been tough for me to say: 'OK, I'm allowed to be happy.' To be working at this pace. To be successful. And also believe that I'm in love and this person isn't just in it for the moment. Whoever it is [in the future], I hope that the person is genuine. No matter what, it's always about a genuine person."

This month, Carey will be 38. She lives in the TriBeCa area of New York, in a three-tiered apartment co-designed by herself and Mario Buatta, the billionaire's favorite and so-called "Prince of Chintz." The apartment's visual (indeed emotional) themes are mermaids, butterflies, and Marilyn Monroe, her "humungous Marilyn bathroom" featuring pale limestone walls, a gold ceiling, pink and beige satin drapes, recessed lighting and two steps up to the bath. Her dark-green marble kitchen, meanwhile, hosts its own chaise-lounge. "Because I like to recline when I eat," she smiles. "If you can lay down, why would you sit up?" The last time she used a subway was perhaps 1992 and as for the bus... "I hate the bus!" she cackles. "I've already been on the bus, I don't need to go back on the bus." With her unimaginable wealth comes negligible guilt: she feels only "grateful" for "God's majesty and his gift of creativity." There's evidence in her apartment of her claim to be "eternally 12" (or possibly a great deal younger); pink "Hello Kitty" guitar, pink CD player, "Hello Kitty" slippers, the "Bambi" pajamas she sleeps in.

How would she feel about being 40? Even though it's a good couple of years away...

"And a good couple of years away it's gonna stay!" she mock-wails, "because I'm eternally 12."

But you're not 12, Mariah. At almost-38, isn't it time to want to be a grown up? "No," she says. "Because when I was a kid I said to myself, 'I'm never gonna forget what it feels like to be this age.' I try to stay in touch with the me that has never left me. The inner child that is me."

The funny thing is, when you were actually 12, you were, as you said, a "hideous mess." You were emotionally berserk, had barely a stitch to wear, accidentally shaved your eyebrows off and dyed your hair orange. "Yeah. I had orange hair."

So let's go for straightforward cod-psychology here: a huge part of her life is all about trying to replace the real Mariah at 12 with a fantasy Mariah at 12, forever.

"Well I think you are very close to something that's pretty accurate," she says. "But you know, I wouldn't say it's anything that consciously done. "Eternally 12" was a phrase that just happened from always going on roller-coasters and hanging out with friends at Disney World and really feeling like, y'know...free."

It seems she's very simply part of the greatest tradition in showbiz history: filling the enormous hole in your soul with the love of the enourmous crowd.

"I think it is kind of tradition," she says. "Another female, she's not a singer, she's a very famous actress, and I'll protect her privacy, but she said to me: 'You know, Mariah, I think we just have to go through things a little bit more than other people do. Because we've been given this thing, this gift.' And I think she's right. But I think when you're given a musical gift, it's almost on another level because people feel music deeper than most things they feel. And that's my testimony as a human being who's gotten through some of the worst times. A song like Side Effects goes out to somebody who needs to feel cleansed of an abusive relationship. They're gonna hear it and hopefully be healed. I remember singing songs at the top of my lungs, growing up, because I needed to. Y'know? It's healing."

And with this momentous soliloquy of scorching luvvie-ness, Carey's man twitches and announces our time is up.

I hope Jack, by now, has flown, alone, in a private jet.

"Of course he has!" she hollers. "Jack lives on a private jet..."

She leans back on the chaise-lounge, onto a black pillow. "Dah-ling," says the incorrigible Ms. Carey, with a final waft of toasted marshmallow, "you know how I like to lie down..."

Source: Scans: Kerry | Text: Maggie

Sunday, 24-Feb-2008, 2:20PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah Scans
U.S.A.
Scans from the March 3rd issues of Us (Hot Pics, Lights, Camera, Stars!, page 28), OK! (Poll of the Week, page 18; News Pics, page 27; and Pricey Hairdos, page 32), In Touch (UpClose, page 10), People (Second Look, page 92); and from the March 2008 Blender (The Adventures of Mimi full-page Best Buy ad, page 85).



International
From UK's Sunday, February 24th News of The World supplement, Fabolous and March 2008 issue of Glamour; India's February 16th edition of Mumbai Mirror; and Bulgaria's February 27th High Club magazine.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Kerry - MariahCareyCollection | Julio | Jayesh | Nicolas

Friday, 08-Feb-2008, 6:27PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Magazine Scans
U.S.A.
From the February 18th issues of Life & Style (Body News, pages 66&67), In Touch (Puppy Love, page 16), and OK! (Mimi Mia!, page 30).


U.K.
Scans from this week's issues of First, Closer, Look, New, and National Enquirer magazines.

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Kerry - MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 02-Feb-2008, 9:22PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Magazine Covers from 1991
Our On The Cover section has been updated to include 3 more magazine cover issues from 1991. Thanks to Kerry from MariahCareyCollection for sharing her scans with us!

Mariah Carey
TV and Movie Screen - February 1991

With a voice "as smooth as whipped cream," Mariah Carey sweeps you away with her soulful virtuosity and up-to-the minute lyrics.

Mariah is no stranger to the world of music. Her mother, Patricia Carey, was a singer with the New York City Opera and a vocal coach, and became Mariah's first and most important teacher. Mariah began taking singing lessons from her mom at the tender age of four, and within a couple of years, the young Mariah was hanging out with her mother's musical associates.

Mariah's exposure to the music world at such a young age has had a lot to do with her musical - and emotional maturity. "When I was six," she explains, "my mother used to carry me with her around all of her musician friends. Sometimes they would ask 'Why are you bringing this six year old along?' and mother would say 'Well, she's six going on 35.' So I've always been like a grown up." READ MORE »

Uh, Oh! What Mariah Carey's Sayin' About Debbie Gibson!
Teen Machine - May 1991

Mariah Carey has made it big - fast! At the time of this writing, her self-titled album is Number Three on Billboard's pop-album chart and has already gone double-platinum.

Naturally, when a star shoots up as quick as Mariah has, people start talking, gossiping, looking for dirt. Lately, when Mariah was talking about how it was for her coming up, she said "I'd be sitting there watching some video - Debbie Gibson or something - and I'd be fuming furiously like, 'Why do I have to sit here and waitress while these people are doing videos?' I was sooo pissed." Now, some people seem to think that this comment was meant as some sort of direct insult against Debbie. After all, why when Mariah was just starting out should she not have been jealous of Debbie's success? They're both 20-year-old singers from Long Island, and who knows? These girls could go way back. Maybe they went to preschool together or something. If so, they're keeping it quiet. However, Debbit Gibson told TM recently that the tape of her personal stereo was Mariah's record, and that Deb really enjoyed listening to it. READ MORE »

Mariah Carey
Super Fly - October 1991

Just when a lack of good old-fashioned talent seems to be creeping up on the music industry--enter Mariah Carey. Mariah is a breath of fresh air in an otherwise stale atmosphere. So why has it taken so long for this 5-foot 9-inch volcano to erupt? Well, like I say: all good things take time.

Mariah always knew that she would become a successful performer and it was just a matter of time. "I worked hard for a long time. I know I had to stay with it. If you don't believe in yourself, you never get anywhere," Mariah states firmly.

She began her career when she was a mere tot. She used to mimic her mom, who was an opera singer and a voice teacher. At 4 years old, Mariah's formal voice training began. She would also join in on "impromptu jam sessions" with her mom and her mom's friends. READ MORE »
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 26-Jan-2008, 6:47PM EST | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions: Jet 1991 & New York 1991
Our On The Cover section has been updated to include 2 more magazine cover issues from 1991. Thanks to Kerry from MariahCareyCollection for sharing her scans with us!

Mariah Carey Tells Why She Looks White But Sings Black
Jet - March 1991 Issue

Like former Rick James sidekick Teena Marie and the popular members of New Kids On The Block, songstress Mariah Carey finds herself on the receiving end of routine remarks insisting she's another White singer trying to sound Black.

But this frivolous accusation is w-a-a-a-a-y over the fence in the ballpark of reality for the 20-year-old rising New York starlet whose fair complexion and fine sandy-colored mane clearly result from the genetic fusion of a Black, Venezuelan father - Washington, D.C. aeronautical engineer Alfred Roy Carey - and Irish mother - N.Y. voice coach Patricia Carey.

Saying she's a combination of all three nationalities during the March Ebony interview in Manhattan, Ms. Carey asserted: "I can't help the way I look, because it's me. I don't try to look a certain way or sing a certain way..."

In fact, her soulful voice and mesmerizing musical style, much like that of pop star Whitney Houston, may very well have ensued from earfuls of traditional spirituals she absorbed during sporadic childhood visits to her Black paternal grandmother's Baptist church. Even today, "I get up and go to bed listening to gospel music," she told Ebony, naming Edwin Hawkins, Shirley Caesar and the Clark Sisters as some of her favorite religious artists. READ MORE »


Pop Meteor Mariah Carey Reaches Back to Aretha for Emotions
New York (Fall Preview) - September 1991 Issue

Mariah Carey is remembering the highlights of a trip she made to Los Angeles early last year. "I met Michael Jackson," she says. "He didn't know who I was, though."

Jackson would have had to spend the rest of 1990 sealed in a hyperbaric chamber to stay ignorant of Carey. Her debut album, Mariah Carey, full of catchy pop hooks and octave-busting crescendos, spent 22 weeks at Billboard's No. 1 spot. The first single, "Vision of Love," was everywhere at once, from boom boxes on the beach to in-flight airline sound systems. Two Grammy Awards capped the breathtaking rise of a twenty-year-old from Long Island who had been sweeping hair off the floor of a beauty salon barely two years earlier.

Now, with Mariah Carey having sold 7 million copies worldwide, the singer sits behind a mixing board at Right Track Recording on West 48th Street, finishing her new album, Emotions. "I still don't think of myself as a big deal," she says. "There's so many pop fads, I can't start thinking of myself as a big deal." In some ways, Carey seems to have remained downright girlish, doodling on a legal pad with a grease pencil as she talks, drawing tiny red hearts all over the page. READ MORE »
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Friday, 25-Jan-2008, 3:16PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in This Week's Magazines
Below are scans from the February 4th issues of

• In Touch, Up Close, page 22
• Us, Hot Pics, page 23
• People, Star Tracks, page 11; and
• OK!, Shopping: Dress For Element, page 63.

Source: MariahDailyJournal

Friday, 25-Jan-2008, 3:14PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Vanity Fair 1996 Article: "Tommy Boy"
Tommy Mottola, Mariah's ex-husband and former head of Sony Music Entertainment was the subject of the December 1996 Vanity Fair article entitled "Tommy Boy." The unflattering piece shreds Tommy Mottola Jr. for his brutal business practices, and reveals he has Mob ties. Also, according to the article, the story of how Mariah got signed is not how she or others tell it. Apparently, Tommy was aware of Mariah and was told to make her an offer even before the Brenda K. Starr/party/demo tape scenario. Below are excerpts from the article. [ Click here to read the full article ]

His middle is bulging the confines of his pressed linen safari jacket, and his slicked-back black coif is thinning, too. He's sensitive about both, friends say, as a middle-aged man with an idolized young wife is apt to be. Which may help explain why Mariah's under wraps.

"She won't be talking," Tommy announces, the smile evaporating. "It's not good for her, it's not good for me, it's not good for the company."

[...]
Aware of the probe, Tommy quickly began assembling a coterie of executives loyal to himself. Trading in the purple leathers for custom-tailored Armanis, he also stepped up the talent search, a quest that led him one memorable 1988 night to a party hosted by CBS blues artist Brenda K. Starr. As the guests mingled, someone slipped him a demo tape which he popped into the cassette deck in the limo. He knew at once he could make the kid a star. By the time he raced back to the party, however, the mystery vocalist had vanished. But fairy tales have happy endings, and within a week Tommy found the Cinderella with the five-octave pipes. She turned out to be 18-year-old Mariah Carey.

So, at least, goes the press-release version. The truth is more mundane. At the time of Tommy's "discovery," Warner's chief Mo Ostin had already offered Mariah a $300,000 advance. Notified of competing blandishments, Yetnikoff authorized Tommy to immediately up the ante to 50 grand.

Another item which the official rendition omits is that when Mariah showed up in Tommy's office she was accompanied by the man who was her producer and steady amour. He was not destined to endure in either capacity. "The boyfriend," recalls an old Tommy pal, "was out of there in nothing flat."

[...]
A closer-to-home worry - closer even than Yetnikoff, who still vows vengeance on the ex-friend he calls "Scumola" - is Mariah. With tastes that run to Rollerblading and riding the "really cool" Tower of Terror, Mariah, friends say, is a very young 26-year-old. They also portray her as increasingly antsy about her husband's wardening ("Always being up my ass," a former staff member quotes Mariah as saying), which includes the employment of two bodyguards, whose duties extend to accompanying her to the bathroom door, and the placing on Sony's payroll of a constant shepherdess, the wife of Epic president Dave Glew.

For all of Tommy's precautions, though, there have been slips: a Concorde flight during which Mariah poured out her problems to Diana Ross; an unwelcome friendship with an old high-school boyfriend ("Tear his eyes out," an aide recalls Tommy saying after he saw his wife being ogled, but Tommy says, "No, I never said anything like that"); and, the most public incident, a noisy quarrel in a Beverly Hills hotel lobby after this year's Grammy Awards.
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 19-Jan-2008, 2:47PM EST | Posted by Liron
Magazine Scans
USA
-In Touch - Is It True?, page 70 (January 28 issue)
-OK! - The Countdown: Hot Dogs, page 40 (January 28 issue)



Serbia
- Hello, page 38 (January 11 issue)
- Gloria, page 111 (January 17 issue)
- Blic Puls, page 30 (January 17 issue)


Source: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 07-Jan-2008, 4:34AM EST | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover: Mariah Carey Tear-Out Photo Book 1996
Our magazines section, On The Cover, has been updated to include the Mariah Carey Tear-Out Photo Book, published in the UK in 1996. It contains 20 pictures of Mariah with accompanying 19 text pages. Thanks to Kerry from MariahCareyCollection for sharing her scans with us!

'The rush of being new and hot can fade - it will fade - but the music will always be there.'

Not exactly the response you'd expect from a girl still just out of her teens holding a pair of Grammy awards and with a seven million-selling debut album to her credit. But then Mariah is no ordinary girl. And several years later her music is as memorable as it ever was.

Back in 1988, though, the youthful New Yorker with the winning smile had been working as a waitress in a bar where sports events and pop videos were projected onto a giant screen on the wall to entertain the (mostly male) customers. The only dream that sustained this star-in-waiting was the thought that one day she might go back and watch her own video up on the screen. Sadly, she was a less than able waitress. 'The boss felt sorry for me,' she explains, 'because I was so pathetic they thought no-one else would hire me.' Catering's loss was clearly music's gain...

But if anyone can be born with musical genes, then it just had to be Mariah. Her mother, Patricia Hickey, had come from a musical line of Irish immigrants: though she'd never known her father, who died before she was born, he'd been a professional musician who'd emigrated from County Cork to the States. She followed in his footsteps, becoming a mezzo-soprano with the New York City Opera and later a vocal coach.

Mariah took her first bow in Long Island in March 1970, the youngest of three children. Father Alfred was a Venezuelan aeronautical engineer. Her parents divorced when she was just three - and while she stayed in touch with her father for some time afterwards communication between them was far from straightforward. Mariah already had her role model and, even at this tender age, was certain she wanted to be like Mom.

Her unusual name had musical connotations, too: the Oscar-nominated musical Paint Your Wagon by Lerner and Loewe featured the song 'They Call The Wind Mariah'. And fate decreed that another song from that show, 'I Was Born Under A Wandrin' Star' by Lee Marvin was at Number 1 (if only in Britain) on the very day she was born. READ MORE »




Source: Scans: Kerry | Text: MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 31-Dec-2007, 3:01PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Q Magazine February 2008: Cash For Questions
She is, of course, the diva's diva and, for the purposes of this exercise, you are her "little lambs". Until, that is, she comes to the enquiries about nose ops and how her ex-husband smells.

It's 10:30pm when Q finally gets the nod to enter Mariah Carey's bedroom. Suite 4600 of the Mandarin Oriental Hotel in New York is a $3000-a-night den of scented candles, hardwood furniture and floor-to-ceiling views of Manhattan. It's been a long evening - Carey has just sung her 1993 single Hero at an awards ceremony across town. But even with this daunting itinerary she is full of michievous vigor.

"Has one flown all the way from London to see me?" she enquires in a comedy accent of passable, Joan Collins-esque loucheness, before leaping onto the bed in her black form-hugging dress and heels. "Please don't make me get up. I'll answer everything if you let me lie down."

"Comedy Carey" is a new proposition. She was discovered by ex-Sony boss Tommy Mottola - whom she married in 1993 and divorced five years later - and her five-octave voice has helped herself 160 million albums and singles, and secured a reputation as the diva's diva en route.

Despite her return to the homegirl roots with 2005's career-reviving The Emancipation of Mimi, there are suspicions the diva still lurks within. Today, members of her entourage engage in a discussion over what side of her face can be photographed and whether she will "walk" if Tommy Mottola or her age (37) are mentioned.

In the event, she doesn't seem bothered by any of these as she rolls over on the bed and grabs a pillow for comfort. But if annoyed by a question, she will address the letter writer by name, as though she fully expects Q to fly back to Britain and hunt the impertinent reader down for an explanation.

"So," she enquired with a twinkle. "What have the little lambs been writing in about, then?"

We know about the big ballads. We know about "street" Mariah. But do you have a secret stash of rock albums that you love?
Mike Jennings, Battle

I can only think of No Doubt's Don't Speak as the closest thing to a rock record that I enjoyed belting out in the car or somewhere. I might pretend to play along with my [Fender] Hellow Kitty guitar if the mood takes me. Did I try to get Led Zeppelin reunion tickets? Well, I would have loved to. That would be something. But, no. When I'm in album mode I'm listening to hip hop beats. I don't have room for Stairway To Heaven.

You used to work in a hair salon. Could you still give me a short back and sides?
George Duffy, Ashby de la Zouch

Nice work, Goerge, but I only worked there for one day. I did go to beauty school in 11th grade but I dropped out. That gives you some idea of the standard of hair care you'd be getting. But a short back and sides is a military-style razor cut, right? I could give it a try, but I don't think I'd be bringing much to the table. Or your social life.

You wrote poetry as a kid. Was it any good? Give us a quick burst.
Matt Shriver, Basingstoke

I'm definitely not giving you a quick burst, Matt, but I will say that I suffered for my art as a poet. I had a little writing pad that i wrote my verses in and my teacher in third grade accused me of copying the poems from somewhere else. He was a horrible man. What was his name? I'm not outing him because he'll come after me and sue me and he ain't getting a dime of my money. Teachers are supposed to be an inspiration. This guy lowered my self-esteem from zero to below.

You live in a big apartment in New York. How much is your electricity bill?
Alicia, via email

I have no idea. That is terrible. I'm not there that much. I think it would be pretty normal. It's not like I'm running a fountain or funfair rides there. I try not to waste electricity and water. [Film director] Penny Marshall told me about these new light bulbs that last for 10 years and use a fraction of the energy. I ordered some. Ask me next year, Alicia, and I'll have that bill cut in half. [Q mentions the urban myth that the everlasting light bulb has been invested, but the secret is locked in a vault because it would ruin the light-bulb industry] I heard that once, too. I'm ready to use whatever influence I may have to get that light-bulb recipe out onto the open market. Aren't they a pain in the butt to change?

On The Emancipation of Mimi you were using all kinds of funky street slang, such as, "Them chickens is ash, I'm lotion". Can you give me some new street talk so I can be a step ahead?
Laetitia Knowles, via email

That line is about girls in a nightclub rivalry situation. Two girls want the guy and in an arrogant moment one is saying she has the better skin. It's not something I've said in real life. But I don't know if I have any current street talk for you, Laetitia. Don't you have your own cockney slang? [Adopts bad cockney accent] Awright, mate! Blimey!

Do you stay in touch with Ant and Dec?
Kirsten James, Truro

They are funny guys. I really like that youthful sense of humour. The wedding? [In December 2001 Carey was maid of honor at the spoof nuptials of Dec and Cat Deeley on Saturday morning kids' TV show SM:TV, alongside Frank Skinner, Denise Van Outen and Hear Say. The "marriage" lasted less than a minute] I was there for the whole marriage. You should have worked at it, guys!

Is it true that you had an operation on your nose to allow you to sing so high?
Emma Skinner, via email

No. It is completely untrue, Emma. I think you need to take care what internet pages you read. I must say I have never heard that one before. One of the reasons for my range is I have nodules on my vocal chords, and my mother says I've had them since I was a kid. That's why I have the high register as well as the breathy register and the belting register. I can do this [emits a sort of "Breeeeee" sound] and I can be husky. The only thing that really affects my voice is sleep. Sometimes if I'm exhausted I can hit the really high notes. Am I a moody cow without enough sleep? Is that an English thing? Calling someone a cow? Why are you down on your cows? They're pretty useful and easy-going animals from what I can see.

You've just launched a new perfume. If you were going to create a Tommy Mottola scent, what ingredients would you use?
Dara Yazdani, Hove

Dara, you come from a place called Hove? Does Jay-Z know about this? [Carey's Def Jam label boss Jay-Z is nicknamed J-Hova or Hove] We should make him the mayor of your town. Anyway, what kind of question is that? Dara, you're not being kind. I think it's fair to say that I am not going to be creating a fragrance for him at this point in my life. He has his own life, his own stuff. Hey, we love everybody and wish them all well.

The tabloids have called you a bit of a diva, though I'm sure they've suggested things. But what's the most diva-ish thing you've ever done?
Jason Bradbury, Mansfield

[With a cut-glass English accent] Jason, darling, what on earth makes you think that I am a diva? I am baffled, shocked and appalled. I've never done one diva-ish thing in my entire life, though I happen to be lying on a bed in high heels from the gentleman from Q magazine. The actual definition of a diva is a woman who sings well. The secondary definition is a woman who is difficult to deal with. I hope I am the first. I don't think I am the second. But these days everyone is a diva. "Oh, she's the diva of chocolate chip cookies. He's a real diva of garbage collection." If I'm a diva it's because I get the joke. I don't believe I am truly nasty and act in a bad way.

When was the last time you spoke to your Glitter co-star Max Beesley?
Paul Waggoner, Manchester

Random question! What are you driving at, young man? It was at an event with Naomi Campbell. Max came over to the after-party and it was all very nice. Why? Did you hear something different?

Is it true that you employ a technical person to work your TV, DVD and Blackberry
John Morato, Spain

No, John, and I'll have you know I was using SkyTel pager, which is like a Blackberry, before anyone else. Before a big show I have to do "vocal rest" where I'm not allowed to speak for maybe two days. It's soooo boring having to write notes, so I was texting before most people. That blilliant scientist guy [Stephen Hawking] - I need his voice machine for when I'm on vocal rest. I'd like a machine where I can just think and it comes out in a robot voice. Can you hook me up with that? But no, I don't employ someone to work my gadgets for me. Having said that, if you're a guy and you're in my house, then believe me, you're going to be on your knees fixing something or working out the plugs. That's your job.

What's the weirdest rumour you've heard about yourself?
J George, Ealing

One of the ones from Q! The one you just read about my nose, that's freaky. When I had $5 to live on I was still hitting the high notes. Think, people! How did I do that before this fantasy nose op? The truth is I'm quite boring. I'm just as likely to be sitting in front of the TV with a bag of chips, watching my favourite show that I TIVO'd [America's version of SkyPlus], as the next person.

If you were a complete unknown, do you think you could win X-Factor?
Jason Bradbury, Mansfield

You can win that show? How? To me it's all about escaping from aliens or something... [After several minutes confusion, she realises she's confused it with X-Files]. Oh, X-Factor. Well, I'd hope to give it a good shot. I mean, I am pretty flattered sometimes when young singers say they want to sing like me. That's nice. I think I'd do OK. Simon Cowell is a judge over there? Well, I'd be a battle, but I'd hope I could just edge it by being sweet to the other judges.

Have you ever been mobbed in a limo and thought, "I wish I could just get out of here, get on the subway and be regular"?
Clive Langley, Peterborough

You know, I honestly do think about this sometimes. Would I rather none of this had happened and I was just plain old Mariah? The answer has to be no. And that's because... I am not very good with directions. I could get one train, no problem. But if I had to change trains, then, God, you wouln't see me for weeks. I actually think that being in the public eye does start to erode your sense of direction. Mostly I get taken to the studio or the venue or wherever. I respond well to doors being opened. But if you left me to find my own way home on the subway, I'd curl up in a ball and call for help. The subway presents me with too many options.

You've said, "I don't even know what dating is." Isn't that a little sad?
Steve Reffine, Milan

Yes, Steve, it sucks. I guess it's sad. But I'm not the only one. My friend Melissa outside [Carey's friend is in the next room] says the same. "What is a date supposed to be like in the 21st century?" It's a bit old-fashioned, a bit formal. I mean, I don't need to know if the guy can afford to buy dinner, do I? With me it just moves from hanging out to boyfriend without too much formality. I like the sound of speed-dating, though. I like the idea of 14 mini-relationships each lasting three minutes and then you go home alone.

What's the worst piece of advice anybody's ever given you?
Iain Hayes, Burton upon Trent

"Hey, listen, I've got a good idea how you should do this." That's it. There are many examples they all begin with that line. In my job there are a lot of people who think they know best. Some do and some don't. I've really learned to listen to my own instinct, then if it goes wrong I am responsible. It took me a while to figure it out, but I'm a grown woman. I'm in charge.

Source: Q | Scans: Kerry - MariahCareyCollection | Text: MariahDailyJournal

Saturday, 15-Dec-2007, 4:49PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Scans: International Magazines
Our On The Cover section has been updated with new scans from 16 international magazines. Check them out by clicking on each issue cover below!


Germany
Bravo
Dec 1994

Germany
Bravo
Oct 1994

Germany
Bravo
Jan 1996

France
Jet Set
1997

Japan
FM Fan
Sep 1997

Australia
Cosmopolitan
Feb 1998

Indonesia
Cosmopolitan
Feb 1998

Japan
FM Fan
Dec 1999

Japan
FM Fan
Nov 1999

Spain
RollingStone
Sep 2001

Australia
Cleo
Sep 2001

New Zealand
Cleo
Sep 2001

Japan
FM Fan
Aug 2001

Indonesia
CosmoGirl
Aug 2001

Singapore
Women's Wkly
Sep 2005

Holland
CosmoGirl
Mar 2006
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry - MariahCareyCollection

Thursday, 13-Dec-2007, 11:59AM EST | Posted by Lynn
Mariah in InStyle Spain
The December 2007 issue of the Spanish InStyle magazine is loaded with Mariah - from a full page ad of her fragrance to an exclusive interview.

• Full page "M" ad, page 47

• "M by Mariah Carey," page 162
The creator You can say that she is the female artist with the most #1 singles in the United States. Her perfume Each note is a reflection of her personal life, like the incense she found in Morocco, the Tiaré flower that she discovered for the first time while visiting Hawaii...An album of childhood memories for an oriental fragrance with a floral touch. 45€"

• Exclusive: Mariah Carey Interview, page 173
We traveled to New York to interview the pop diva who just presented her first fragrance, M by Mariah Carey. Additionally, she revealed some beauty secrets to us.

What were your sources of inspiration for creating your first fragrance?
Above all, memories from my childhood and distinct moments from my life. For example, there are notes that remind me of the flavor of marshmallows or the Tiaré flower, the base of the perfume, which makes me think of some of my trips to Hawaii or Capri, places where I love to escape to.

Again, the butterfly as a symbol of identity...
As all of my fans know, I love butterflies, because they represent metamorphosis and freedom. What I like most about the perfume is the small cap; it's very sexy and glamorous.

And after the perfume, have you thought about creating your own clothing line?
I'm thinking about doing anything that inspires me creatively. If it weren't for that reason, it wouldn't be worth the trouble!

Who do you look to for advice when it comes to beauty?
I studied in a beauty school, so I already know a lot about makeup... Additionally, as an artist, I work with the best professionals, so I am always learning something about the latest products and beauty treatments.

The best way to relax...
Throughout the years, I've learned that I can't work during certain times. So, the best thing I can do is go on vacation. I love tropical places and swimming in the sea. When I'm there, it feels like the best and private escape.

In your suitcase you always carry...
Sunscreen, it's indispensable, sunglasses and a huge hat. In addition, I always bring lipgloss, oil remover, and waterproof mascara.

• Gloria Estefan, page 194
In an interview with Gloria Estefan, the Cuban singer talks about everything from idols to fetishes.

A Fetish
"The old cassette tape that Mariah Carey recorded in her house so that Tommy Mottola, from Sony, would pay attention to her and that my husband would produce her. I love her voice!"


Source: InStyle Spain | Scans/Translation: Jeremy

Sunday, 09-Dec-2007, 1:51AM EST | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover: Mariah on Hit Krant
Our On The Cover section has been updated to now include 5 editions of the Dutch magazine, Hit Krant. Click on an issue cover below to view scans.


Aug 1992

Jul 1994

Feb 1999

Mar 1999

Oct 1999
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Kerry - MariahCareyCollection

Sunday, 02-Dec-2007, 1:00PM EST | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Latest Addition: Mariah on Ebony 1994
Mariah Carey
Ebony - April 1994


Singer talks about storybook marriage, interracial heritage and sudden fame

Despite the cool weather, pop star Mariah Carey is in a convivial, outdoorsy mood. At her country retreat in the heart of rural Upstate New York dairy farming, the darling diva, who turned 24 in March, demonstrates her driving skills, first on a utility vehicle and then in a Jeep, with her frisky Jack Russell terrier (Jack) ever at her side. Later, inside the farmhouse near the fireplace, she cuddles with Tompkins, one of her two Persian cats, and offers hot chocolate and buttered popcorn to visitors.

"I've always had pets--dogs and cats--my whole life," she says, as she romps with Jack in one of the two main rooms of the colonial-style house. The two-story dwelling sits on a hill overlooking acres of pasture, woodlands, a large pond, a guest lodge and a barn where four horses are kept during the summer. The decor is chic Adirondack with saddles resting on bannisters and arms of chairs. On tables, mantles and shelves are framed photographs of Mariah--at the beach, astride her palomino Misty, with her husband, Sony Music president Tommy Mottola...READ MORE »

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Sunday, 25-Nov-2007, 2:49PM EST | Posted by Lynn
"On The Cover" Latest Additions
Our On The Cover section has been updated to now include 7 magazines from 2001. Click on an issue cover below to read its respective article and view photos.


Ent. Weekly
Aug 2001

People
Aug 2001

Us Weekly
Aug 2001

Cosmopolitan
Sep 2001

HX
Sep 2001

InStyle
Sep 2001

Us Weekly
Nov 2001
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Kerry - MariahCareyCollection

Saturday, 24-Nov-2007, 12:52PM EST | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover: Mariah on Shout
Mariah graces the cover of the latest issue of the UK magazine, Shout. Click on each of the thumbnails below to view large images of the cover and the accompanying cover story.


Note: Scan #4: Mariah's upcoming album will be released in early 2008 and remains untitled at this time.
Source: Kerry - MariahCareyCollection | MariahDailyJournal

Monday, 12-Nov-2007, 4:50PM EST | Posted by Lynn
Marie Claire: The Diva Formula

Britney Spears, Celine Dion, Mariah Carey and Jennifer Lopez are pitted against each other in an article entitled "The Diva Formula. They've all got new albums, but who's the diva-est of them all?" on Culture: Music section, page 110, of the December 2007 issue of Marie Claire. See scan on right.
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Sunday, 14-Oct-2007, 2:55PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Additions
Our magazines section, On The Cover has been updated to now include scans from 2003 magazines: Black Elegance, Pride and Weekend. Many thanks to Kerry from MariahCareyCollection for sharing her scans with us!

Mariah Carey, Happy At Last
Black Elegance - February 2003

Mariah Carey is smiling a lot these days and not just for the cameras. The dark days seem to be behind her and like the title of her new song says, she's been "Through The Rain" and she's come through stronger and finally, happy. "I had to go deep inside myself to get through this period," she explains. "When a person's life is torn apart, you have to search to understand what's happened, and to understand yourself. I learned that it's all fine and dandy to be on TV and have a lot of money, but you have to eat and sleep and take care of the human being inside." READ MORE »

Mariah The Misunderstood
Pride (UK) - March 2003

The pressures of fame are not things the lady herself whines about, but two years ago, when I met her in New York for an earlier interview, Mariah was looking after most of her business affairs herself, doing promotion for an album and a film at the same time and taking a break from filming to get down from Staten Island to do more promotions. "It was way too many things at once, but everything in life is a learning experience. I have been imposing this work ethic on myself since I was a little kid because of the way I grew up, because of the way I felt about being an outsider, because of the way I felt about my multiracial heritage and not really feeling as if I fit in any one specific place." READ MORE »

Cry Me A Diva
Weekend (Daily Mail UK) - October 2003

When Mariah Carey was a little girl, she desperately wanted her life to be different, so each night she knelt beside the bed and prayed for God to make her famous. Her prayers were answered and the face of the world's most successful female singer and songwriter is everywhere, from magazine covers to videos, albums, T-shirts and TV shows. There are times, though, that Mariah hasn't been comfortable with that face. In fact, she's been pretty much uncomfortable with everything about herself. READ MORE »
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Sunday, 07-Oct-2007, 8:01PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Rolling Stone 1990 Article: "Pop's New Vision"
Here's an article from the 1990 issue of Rolling Stone that has a shot from the unreleased "Vision of Love" music video!

Pop's New Vision
"Mariah!" yells the director of photography. "Chin down and eyes open!"

It's the twenty-fifth take for a three-and-a-half-minute music video, but Mariah Carey still can't quite conquer the urge to just throw back her head and belt out the song, "Vision Of Love". With the kind of voice Carey's got, that's not hard to understand. "Mariah", says Tommy Mottola, president CBS Records, "is one of the greatest singers ever." [...]

Now, on a Saturday afternoon in May, on a soundstage in Long Island City, Carey stands on a 40-square-foot platform looking both young-girl gangly and young-chanteuse sexy in a tight black off-the-shoulder Norma Kamali dress. The director, a veteran of George Michael's butt-shaking "Faith" video, studies a monitor. Carey's caramel-colored face, half covered by her brown curly hair, breaks into a smile that leaps off the screen. She looks like she could break some hearts, but that will have to wait: "Vision Of Love" is coming up on the sound system again. Earlier, Carey explained that she'd written the song about realizing her dreams as a singer, not about any kind of romance. "Right now, music is my boyfriend." Was how she put it. Too bad. READ MORE »
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scan: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection | Joao

Sunday, 07-Oct-2007, 6:47PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Latest Addition: Mariah on FHM
Super Star!
FHM (UK) - April 1999


Snakes alive! She's bigger than you thought - Sexier than you dreamed. FHM meets Mariah Carey in Miami

Americans have an obsession with statistics. "Lite" beer has 25 per cent less calories than its full-fat cousin; New York is the most densely populated city in the USA; two in every hundred Yanks are Jewish. They can spout on forever about boring ratios, incredible examples of standard deviation, and any good ol' boy with even half a brain could finger a pie chart depicting national obesity trends onto the bonnet of a dusty Chevy pick-up.

But of all their facts and figures, there's one that is truly amazing: Mariah Carey is the most successful female performer of the decade, selling more than a hundred million records. One hundred million is a number with eight noughts in it. That totals almost two records for every single person in the United Kingdom.

While undoubtedly a fairly colossal star in the UK - her last signing session at a London record store drew over 10,000 giddy fans - it's in Mariah's homeland where the brown-eyed beauty has notched up a status that is almost godlike. Thirteen of her singles have been American number ones - and were helpfully released before Christmas on the imaginatively titled No. 1's album, which includes the UK hits Without You, I'll Be There and One Sweet Day. Mariah doesn't mind those people who have dismissed these songs as lachrymose balladeering - "People can't like everything, right?" - claiming that for her part she often prefers some of the more beefy cuts which have peppered her albums...READ MORE »



Two other FHM covers from 2005 have also been added:
» World Exclusive: Mariah Carey (US, May 2005)
» Play It Again! (UK, June 2005)
Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection & Magda | Joao

Thursday, 04-Oct-2007, 2:44AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Glamour Interview: "Come on in! It's Mariah's house"
The marble! The gold! The decor tricks you can steal! On the eve of her huge new album, surprisingly grounded superstar Carey opened her home and her heart to writer Carole Radziwill.

I have to confess: I had never met a diva before Mariah Carey. I wasn't even sure what one was, so I looked it up. First definition: a woman of outstanding and rare singing talent. Second definition: someone who is difficult to deal with. I'd met plenty of second-definition divas but never an actual one, so, naturally, I had outfit angst. What do you wear to meet a woman who sings in octaves most of us barely know exist? A ball gown? No, too dressy, plus mine has a burn on the sleeve. Jeans? No, too disrespectful. Red lipstick? No, too much. I settled on white pants, an AC/DC concert T-shirt and Chanel lip gloss. Meanwhile, Mariah answered the door herself, low-key, in a ponytail and pink hoodie. So this, I thought, is a diva?

And after spending two hours chatting with her at Tommy Hilfiger's beach house in East Hampton, New York, which Mariah had rented to work on her latest album (still unnamed as of press time), I realized the diva thing is only something we see on TV. In reality, this megastar was once a shy kid who was self-conscious about her multiracial identity, which marked her as different in the cookie-cutter suburbs of Long Island, New York, where she grew up. After what felt like a lifetime of hard knocks-her parents divorced when she was three years old and her mother moved the family from one place to another, sometimes barely making ends meet-she had her first best-selling album and her first seven-figure paycheck by 20, and a wedding train longer than Princess Di's at 23. (She married Tommy Mottola, then chairman of her record label's parent company, Sony Music, in 1993.) That may sound like a fairy tale, but Carey's the first to scoff at those who say it was--she paid her own way to the ball!

Her marriage ended in divorce in 1998. Then, in 2001, Mariah checked herself into a hospital for exhaustion, creating a tabloid frenzy. But two months later she was onstage again, serenading the nation at the 9/11 "America: A Tribute to Heroes" telethon. Now, at 37, she's sold 160 million albums worldwide, earned five Grammys and is tied for number-one hits in the United States with none other than Elvis Presley. Oh, and she launched her own M by Mariah Carey fragrance in September and is preparing for her new album tour. Privately, the star with a set of pipes and a sense of humor (she dubbed her home with ex Mottola "Sing Sing") has created her own paradise in New York's Tribeca neighborhood, where she moved in 2001. It's a triplex penthouse apartment decorated in shades of gold and pink, with framed family snapshots covering practically every surface. At the photo shoot, Mariah gave me a complete home tour and opened up about everything from her obsession with lounge chairs to her dysfunctional childhood and her current love life.

Thank God, I told her, for that childhood. Had she grown up like every other girl on Long Island, she probably wouldn't have had the ambition to make it so big.

GLAMOUR: I watched you on YouTube last night, singing "America the Beautiful" at the NBA finals in 1990-one of your earliest TV appearances [at age 20].
MARIAH CAREY: I was a little malnourished, wasn't I?

GLAMOUR: Yes, you looked like you weighed 80 pounds. And most of that was hair.
MC: [Laughs.] Well, I did my own hair then. No one even knew who I was! I was such a little girl.
GLAMOUR: How old were you when you got your first big paycheck?
MC: I was about 20. I went from having $5 to getting a publishing advance of $1 million.

GLAMOUR: Tell me about your so-called Cinderella story.
MC: [Laughs.] When Tommy [Mottola] signed me, I had two other record deals pending. I had already put in the hard work and I had my life planned but nobody likes to talk about that. I guess fairy tales make better stories.
GLAMOUR: Yes, they do. What advice would you give that little girl now? Or someone like Lindsay Lohan or Britney Spears who always seems to be messing up?
MC: I wouldn't want to speak to those people specifically, but I would say you need to be very centered, and spiritually know where you're at, all the time. Don't read the tabloids. Don't be obsessed with what people are writing or saying. Live your life for you. My lifestyle has changed since making it. It's not a financial struggle, but I'm still struggling in a lot of ways.

GLAMOUR: In what way?
MC: Early on in my career, because I had achieved material success and realized my dreams, I thought it was OK that I was unhappy in my personal life. It took me a long time to acknowledge that my feelings mattered. Now the struggle is to keep creating music I love. Even if that wasn't my job, it would be something that I would do, either write songs or poetry.
GLAMOUR: You've been writing since you were a kid.
MC: I started writing poetry when I was six. I had this teacher who didn't believe the poems I'd bring in were mine because they were dark and sad. But I wrote about what I experienced in my childhood. I felt really bizarre as a kid. Mostly because I come from an interracial family [Carey's mother is Irish and her father was African American and Venezuelan], and because we didn't have a lot of money and we moved around a lot. Living in the suburbs is a place that's all about fitting in. I remember after one particularly bad incident, one of my mother's friends said in front of me, "If this kid makes it, it will be a miracle." I'll never forget that moment. I think my ambition grew even more from there. So I guess I showed them that miracles are possible.

GLAMOUR: When you were a kid you wanted to be a genie. I laughed when I read that because I wanted to be a genie too. But you actually are a genie.
MC: [Laughs.] And today I have my genie ponytail hair. Wouldn't it be really hot if I could just blink and change my outfit right now? How amazing would that be!
GLAMOUR: [Laughs.] Seriously, in the abstract, a genie is someone who can will something to happen against all odds. You did that, sort of.
MC: Well, it's not just because of magic. I worked hard to make it happen. And I prayed and believed. I have a lot of faith in God.

GLAMOUR: When I read in The New Yorker that you hit one of the highest notes produced by a human voice that's ever been recorded [a G-sharp, three and a half octaves above middle C], I got a chill and it almost made me believe in magic. Your voice does have an otherworldly quality to it.
MC: Honestly, as a kid, and still today, I truly believe God is hearing my prayers. People either laugh or they understand it.
GLAMOUR: The first definition of diva is: a woman of rare and outstanding talent, pertaining to singing. So you're a diva and a genie!
MC: What's the second definition?

GLAMOUR: Someone who's very difficult to deal with.
MC: [Laughs.]
GLAMOUR: I would also call you a modern feminist, in that you challenge the universal definition of femininity.
MC: Meaning we can't all be size 0?

GLAMOUR: That, and you're a businesswoman who's not afraid to be sexy. I think there's a serious woman under all that hair and those outfit changes.
MC: I am serious. But I also have a self-deprecating sense of humor.
GLAMOUR: Yes, and it got you in trouble on MTV some years ago.
MC: That was blown so out of proportion. It was a skit where I pretended to strip but I was wearing three layers of clothes underneath this oversize T-shirt. It was meant to be funny! And now I realize I can't do that on TV.

GLAMOUR: Only boys get to do really stupid things on TV in the name of comedy.
MC: After that happened, and after the endless speculation about "Mariah's breakdown" I decided I was going to do whatever I needed to do to get myself to a place where I'm happy internally. I can't worry about what the world is saying about me.
GLAMOUR: I heard that your closet is about 3,000 square feet, which is bigger than my apartment. I just need to know how many times have you walked into that closet, looked around and said, "Dammit, I have nothing to wear?"
MC: [Laughs.] Every time I go in there. If I get photographed in something, I can't wear it again.

GLAMOUR: So how much of the closet consists of wearable clothes?
MC: Probably like one shelf.

GLAMOUR: OK, let's say you wake up in the morning and think, I want to wear that cute Chloe dress. Do you know where it is?
MC: [Laughs.] No, I don't. I'm always like, where are the bras? I have an entire separate lingerie closet.
GLAMOUR: You should do a lingerie line.
MC: I would love to. When it comes to lingerie, I know what I'm doing.

GLAMOUR: What about just everyday, what do you wear?
MC: Like seeing you today? I put on jeans because I figured we'd be inside, but whenever I'm outside I want to be in the hot tub. I am a water person. I would jump in the hot tub in the middle of our interview if it weren't so freakin' cold out! [Laughs.] But usually when I'm just hanging around, I wear boxers and a tank.
GLAMOUR: So you like lounge-y things. I noticed you have chaise lounges in every room of your apartment. There's even one in the kitchen!
MC: [Laughs.] If I'm "on" I have to sit up straight. The whole day you're concerned about every little movement, so it's very much a lounging moment when I'm home! I have a lounge chair in my bathroom.

GLAMOUR: [Laughs.] I saw that. That's where I'd be all the time. Lounging in the bathroom.
MC: I sleep there sometimes. If we have a late night, I'll run the bath and then never get in it.
GLAMOUR: Also, why all the huge flat-screen TVs? What are you watching?
MC: I love that show Brotherhood. I was obsessed with The Sopranos; I also like Curb Your Enthusiasm and old shows, like Good Times, shows that remind me of when I was growing up.

GLAMOUR: There's a screen in front of your hot tub.
MC: I know! But I watch stuff I'm working on. Instead of sitting in a boring regular room, I'd rather be on the roof in the hot tub writing my notes.
GLAMOUR: Answer quickly: How many bathrooms in your apartment?
MC: [Laughs.] I don't know! Do you want me to really try and think about it?

GLAMOUR: [Laughs.] No, no. There are so many I figured you wouldn't know. There's also a Marilyn Monroe bathroom. Do you identify with her?
MC: When I was little, I watched Gentlemen Prefer Blondes on TV. She's in the pink outfit, and I was like, "Wow!" and was transfixed. She was a great comedian; a lot of people don't realize that the dumb blond thing was an act. Marilyn had difficult hair as well. [Laughs.]
GLAMOUR: She maintained a childlike quality even as a woman. So do you.
MC: It's something that I can't help. That's why I'm always saying I'm eternally 12.

GLAMOUR: I'm curious about that. Since your own childhood was a mess, what was Mariah like at 12?
MC: Mariah at 12 was a wreck. I accidentally dyed my hair orange. I shaved my eyebrows. Wore blue eyeliner. Disgusting!
GLAMOUR: So you went through the whole ugly stage like all of us.
MC: I guess so. I think back now and I was just trying to be glamorous.

GLAMOUR: You seem like you're in a really good place in your life--do the songs on your new album reflect that?
MC: What's clear on this album is that nobody is holding me back from writing. It's real-life experiences, and there's a lot of humor in it.
GLAMOUR: On your last album you were "emancipated." Was that also autobiographical?
MC: Kind of. But I have an album called Butterfly that is much more autobiographical. There is a song called "Close My Eyes," which I wrote over a period of four years, and it says a lot about my childhood.

GLAMOUR: You express love brilliantly in your songs. Have you ever been in love?
MC: I think I've certainly romanticized relationships to believe it's love. A lot of people tell me they used one of my songs on their wedding day, so I must know something about it! [Laughs.] But I don't know if it's for me.
GLAMOUR: Why?
MC: I'm scared of being too vulnerable. That I know for certain. Someone has to understand my struggle and my journey; to know who I am in my soul, not who I am on TV and after a long day.

GLAMOUR: Do you believe there is such a thing as sustainable love?
MC: With a human being I don't know, but definitely with a pet. [Laughs.] I don't think I've ever experienced a relationship of the caliber I write about in my love songs. There are songs I've written about certain people that it's obvious I felt, "Wow, this is the real thing, this person definitely has to be for me." And it didn't turn out that way. The Butterfly album is full of them.
GLAMOUR: Are you seeing someone special now?
MC: I don't go out much. I'm also not promiscuous. If I went out with everyone the press said I did, I'd never have time to write or sing.

GLAMOUR: Do you like dating?
MC: I don't even know what dating is.
GLAMOUR: I've heard it's when you go to dinner with a guy, he pays, and then there's pressure at the end to kiss him.
MC: [Laughs.] Right. Oh, I never really had that sort of date.

GLAMOUR: Do you think you will ever get married again?
MC: I would if I felt the other person loved the real me, or if I wanted to have children.
GLAMOUR: It's easy to lose yourself in someone, sometimes.
MC: I wouldn't mind losing myself a little with someone, but not right now. My life is too consuming.


Source: Glamour | Scans & Text: MariahDailyJournal

Tuesday, 02-Oct-2007, 12:02PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
VIBE's The Ultimate 90: Mariah Carey
From the November 2007 issue of VIBE magazine, page 102.

THE ULTIMATE 90: MARIAH CAREY (V MIXTAPE)

Anticipating the follow-up to her larger-than-life The Emancipation of Mimi (Island, 2005), we've compiled the most essential moments of Mariah Carey's unforgettable 17-year career. Because, unlike your current girlfriend, Ms. Mariah doesn't have -- and has never had -- an expiration date. by Julianne Shepherd

BUSTA RHYMES FEAT. MARIAH CAREY AND THE FLIPMODE SQUAD - "I Know What You Want" from It Ain't Safe No More (J, 2002)
Flanking Busta's come-hither raps, Mimi masters love's mystery on this slithery post-Glitter comeback.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. DEM FRANCHIZE BOYZ - "Say Something (So So Def Remix)" (Island/Def Jam, 2006)
Pharrell co-produced the original, but M.C. plus J.D. is a magic equation: Jermaine Dupri bests the Neptunes with a breezy club synth that gilds Mariah's brave come-on, resung for the new beat.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. PUFF DADDY, MASE, AND THE LOX - "Honey (Bad Boy Remix)" (Columbia, 1997)
The Treacherous Three's 1980 "The Body Rock" gets the Puff treatment on this banner Bad Boy extravaganza, proving she's hip hop through and through.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. JADAKISS - "Miss You" from the The Remixes (Sony, 2003)
She makes such an impact when she sings of nostalgia. The Jay-to-the-muah cosign crowned her a de facto D-Block debutante.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. CAM'RON AND JUELZ SANTANA - "Your Girl (Dipset Remix)" (mixtape, 2006)
Cam turns an otherwise decent roller-rink track into a meeting of don't-love-ya swag and lady-lover passion. The pathos!

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. JAY-Z AND FREEWAY - "You Got Me" from Charmbracelet (Island, 2002)
Just Blaze's epic beats demand greatness, and Mariah's one of a few who can live up. Her delivery on this crush-ode withers the gritty Roc stars, reducing Free to Winnie the Pooh references -- and Jay to opening his wallet.

MARIAH CAREY - "Emotions" from Emotions (Columbia, 1991)
She hit a G No. 7 -- one of the highest notes on the piano -- on this Sheila Hutchinson-worthy discotheque classic.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. BOYZ II MEN - "One Sweet Day" from Daydream (Columbia, 1995)
An impassioned eulogy recorded around the time of the passing of David Cole of Clivilles & Cole, Mimi's friend and former producer.

MARIAH CAREY - "I'll Be There" from MTV Unplugged (Columbia, 1992)
In this live cover, Mariah matches the passion of a Jackson. Shout out to background lifer Trey Lorenz.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. BONE THUGS-N-HARMONY - "Breakdown (Mo' Thugs Remix)" from Butterfly (Columbia, 1997)
With staccato arrangements and slices of heaven on her tongue, Mariah transcends genre on her first collabo with Bone Thugs.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. BABYFACE - "Never Forget You" from Music Box (Columbia, 1993)
Her piercing vocals amplify Babyface's signature indelible melodies.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. OL' DIRTY BASTARD - "Fantasy Remix"
(Columbia, 1995)
By cribbing from Tom Tom Club's chirpy 1981 "Genius of Love," Mariah ensures dance-floor longevity, while the late O.D.B. shouts out a random assortment of cities and continents (Sacramento?).

MARIAH CAREY - "Vision of Love" from Mariah Carey (Columbia, 1990)
Her first single -- and who can forget the first time they heard that highest register, that emotional quiver, those forceful pipes? What soul!

MARIAH CAREY - "Petals" from Rainbow (Columbia, 1999)
Sung as if through tears, this low, sorrowful ballad captures the turmoil of years gone by.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. DRU HILL - "The Beautiful Ones" from Butterfly (Columbia, 1997)
Trading verses and moans, this quintet aches with a tension that could make Prince blush.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. JERMAINE DUPRI AND LIL' BOW WOW - "All I Want For Christmas Is You (So So Def Remix)" from Greatest Hits (Sony, 2001)
ATL bounce, gospel back-up, glossy arrangement -- you can almost smell the chestnuts.

MARIAH CAREY - "Shake It Off" from The Emancipation of Mimi (Island, 2005)
This is the original "Irreplaceable" and the only anthem for any girl who's had to dump a fool.

MARIAH CAREY - "I Don't Wanna Cry" from Mariah Carey (Columbia, 1990)
In one of her first break-up ballads, she strikes a perfect balance between vocal ability and emotional rawness.

MARIAH CAREY - "I Feel It"
(unreleased, 2005)
An Emancipation outtake 'net-leaked in '07. The '70s soul production inspires Mimi to channel Michael, Smokey, and Marvin.

MARIAH CAREY FEAT. USHER - "How Much" from Rainbow (Columbia, 1999)
Subtle and breathy, the R&B superstars sweat with real, on-mic chemistry.

Mariah is also mentioned on page 38, November Playlist - the soundtrack to this month's issue:

4 MARIAH CAREY SONGS ONLY HER MOST INSANE FANS ENJOY:
"Without You" (Columbia)
"Open Arms" (Columbia)
"Irresistible" feat. Westside Connection (Island)
"Loverboy" (Virgin)
Source: MariahDailyJournal

Saturday, 29-Sep-2007, 3:02PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Mariah In This Week's Magazines
• From OK!, Oct. 8th issue, Mariah: How I Got Thin!, cover story, pages 54 - 57.

Hard work, a "bleak" diet and tons of willpower have helped Mariah Carey lose 25 pounds

Mariah Carey has lost nearly 30 pounds in the last seven months by eating a plain diet of soup and fish, following a strict workout plan and - and most importantly - by not stressing about how her body looks.

The singer, who has always embraced her famous curves, showed off her sensational new figure at the VH1 Save the Music Foundation 10th Anniversary Gala (where she received an award) in New York City on Sept. 20. Dressed in a stunning purple gown that showed off her trim, new figure, Mariah revealed that her secret to shedding the pounds is a "bleak diet." Mariah, who stands at 5 feet 9 inches and weighs an estimated 135 pounds, said she doesn't want to be skinny but she isn't satisfied with her body and will continue to work on slimming down. "I still feel like I have a ways to go, but it is what it is," said Mariah. "I don't feel like you have to be a size zero. It does feel good when you get into a nice size three and you're like, 'It feels big in here.' We should all embrace who we are physically." READ MORE »


• From Life & Style, Oct. 8th issue, Best Dressed of the Week, page 3.

Sexiest Gown

"I'm not supposed to be a stick-figure girl. That's just not me." Mariah told Life & Style at the VH1 Save the Music gala on Sept. 20. Judging from this body-hugging number she co-created with designer Nile, we agree!
• From In Touch, Oct. 8th issue, Hot Pic, page 22

Caution: Killer Curves Ahead

Violet vixen Mariah Carey lit up the red carpet as she was honored at VH1's Save the Music Foundation's 10th Anniversary Gala at New York's Lincoln Center on September 20.
• Mariah is also featured in In Touch magazine's Cover Story on Angelina Jolie on page 39 (scan 1), and on Stars On The Move, page 90 (scan 2); and in the Sept. 27th issue of the Bulgarian magazine High Club, page 6 (scan 3).

Source: MariahDailyJournal | Nicolas

Sunday, 09-Sep-2007, 10:16PM EDT | Posted by Lynn
On The Cover Latest Additions
Below are the latest additions to our magazines section, On The Cover.

The Über Babe
Cream (UK) - Spring 2001
Mariah Carey has certainly discovered that all that glitters is not gold. Despite a hugely successful career - eight studio LP recordings and 120 million album sales worldwide - the 31 year old superstar recently discovered she was reaching a professional and personal crossroad. Over the past three years she has left the cocoon of her marriage to Sony record chief Tommy Mottola, subsequently leaving the label that made her a megastar. She has signed with a new record company, EMI/Virgin, in a multi-million dollar deal, has been indulging her new passion by studying acting and is about to star in a film she herself conceived called Glitter, then will star alongside Mira Sorvino in the comedy of sorts, Wise Girls. Carey's new album, also called Glitter is the soundtrack to her first film and has already had critics ooh-ing and aah-ing over that first single and video... READ MORE »

Glittering Wisegirl
Pride (UK) - August 2001
Forget Mariah's long, elegant limbs, the honey-blond hair or the Louis Vuitton bag that would keep me in clothes until the next eclipse. Today the centre of attention are Mariah's long and obviously fake nails. "Are you looking at my Rachel nails? They are so bad." I agree. Tacky is not a Mariah Carey quality, so the nails seem like alien beings attached to her tanned hands. Even the signing of autographs for two pint-sized fans in the discreet corner of the SoHo Italian restaurant looks decidedly awkward. My manicure catches Mariah's eyes and I end up giving my freshly painted digits a twirl. "See, those are good. That's the length of my real nails. But freakin' Rachel, she's got nails like this and she tawks like this. Whadaya dooin'?"... READ MORE »

Mariah Carey - Súbete A Mi Carro
Maxim (Spain) - October 2001



Simplemente Mariah
Vogue (Spain) - March 2000


Source: MariahDailyJournal | Scans: Kerry from MariahCareyCollection

Tuesday, 28-Aug-2007, 1:44AM EDT | Posted by Lynn
Interview Magazine: "Mariah"
Through all of her ups and downs, she's been called a variety of things: an ingenue, a diva; a has-been; a comeback queen. But now is the time for a different, much more human story emerge. Here, she opens up her home - and her heart - like never before, baring her soul about the high notes, the low notes, and tightropes of being Mariah Carey.

INGRID SISCHY: So here's the challenge. Your dramatic story - the journey from a young girl at beauty school who had big dreams to a major pop star married to a mega power in the music industry to the dissolution of all that and a whole new start - isn't exactly unknown. But you're at yet another junction in your mythic life and my hunch is that the story of Mariah is even more interesting and telling than we know so far. And that's why I'm sitting here at your house in New York City at midnight on a Sunday evening in the middle of the summer, view of the Chrysler Building and all, with my tape recorder ready to take it all in. I know you're in the think of work on a new album, expected out later this year. Since you're deep in the process of writing I thought it might be a good time to examine your life with you. Let's start at the beginning.
MARIAH CAREY:
There are a lot of beginnings, though no one has told it in a way that reflects that. They always say, "She came out with her first single when she was 20, or she got her record deal when she was 18, or she was a backup singer for Brenda K. Starr, or she met Tommy Mottola [the former CEO and chairman of Sony Music and Carey's ex-husband] at a party and gave him a demo tape - which is actually inaccurate because Brenda gave him the tape.

IS: The story goes that he left the party, listened to your tape, and then went back to the party to find you.
MC: He did go back to the party but I was gone. When I met Tommy, I didn't know who he was - he was just looking at me going, "Brenda, who's your friend?" I was wearing a little Avirex cheerleader jacket, flat shoes - and everybody who knows me knows I would never wear flat shoes now, but I had no choice then because I had no money. [laughs] My brother [Morgan] did buy me a pair of sneakers but they were white high-tops, which weren't really looking right with the little black dress and the jacket.

IS: That's really the second chapter of your story, though.
MC: The very beginning begins with my grandparents, if you really want to start from there. Then I should take you on the tour and show you the pictures, because then you'll understand a little better. The reason people need to see the pictures is because they have such a difficult time understanding who I am in terms of my ethnicity. I think that's because in society everything is motivated by what our eyes tell us.

IS: I'd love to do the tour soon. But let's just sit here a while longer to get comfortable.
MC: The tape recorder you're using now reminds me of my father, because he had his tape recorder from like 30 years ago, too. He wouldn't let it go even though through his work he had access to all that [high tech] stuff. I'm so technically challenged it's ridiculous, and it's really bad and negligent on my part because I should be able to do these things, but I like to do things that I'm good at. Who wants to spend 20 hours figuring out how to use a new gadget, when you could have written a whole page at that point?

But I am on my BlackBerry a lot. Honestly, it takes up too much of my freakin' time.

IS: Do you have time to look around at other things? Like art?
MC: I own so little art, and I know that the reason is because I need to be in love with something to have it around me. The thing is, I know the art I'm going to love is going to be like a gazillion dollars - that's just the way it's been my whole life. Who the hell nominated me to be the princess and the pea? [Sischy laughs] I don't know why it is that everything I like has to be the most expensive limestone hat was somebody's antique floor in France. For some reason, I always gravitate toward that.

IS: The million-dollar question: What do you think would have happened if you had never met Tommy Mottola?
MC: I already had a deal with Warner Bros. that was pending. It was through Ben Marguiles, who I had written most of my first album with - lots of it when I was in high school. I used to come in and work at his studio, which was [at the back of a loft space that was covered in wood chips] and I wrote "Vision of Love" there, songs that became number one hits that I don't listen to anymore. "Someday" was a number one hit - I wrote it and recorded it there. And a song that [I was offered a] publishing deal for called "All In Your Mind" - it was on my first album [1990's Mariah Carey]. [Someone at another company] was like, "We'll give you 5,000 for this!"

IS: But you knew enough not to do it.
MC: Yes, but to me, five dollars was huge because I'd be like, Okay, I can buy a Snapple for a dollar, or I can go on the subway, or I can have an H&H bagel. I was on such a tight budget.

IS: You were a waitress, weren't you?
MC: I couldn't really work as a waitress because of the age thing and serving alcohol, but they would have pity on me and allow me to do it at the sports bar I used to work at. But, really, what I did was sell T-shirts. They were like, okay, we'll let her wear tight jeans and a shirt that says the name of the sports bar and sit there and