Brit Awards 2007
Brit Awards 2007 | |
---|---|
Date | 14 February 2007 |
Venue | Earls Court |
Hosted by | Russell Brand |
Most awards | Arctic Monkeys and The Killers (2) |
Most nominations | Lily Allen (4) |
Television/radio coverage | |
Network | ITV |
Brit Awards 2007 was the 27th edition of the Brit Awards, an annual pop music awards ceremony in the United Kingdom. It was organised by the British Phonographic Industry and took place on 14 February 2007 at Earls Court in London. The show, when broadcast, attracted 5.43 million viewers. The ceremony was hosted by Russell Brand, with Fearne Cotton interviewing winners backstage, and the voiceover by Tom Baker. The show was supposedly being broadcast live for the first time since 1989, on ITV1; however, it was revealed to have been on a 30-second tape delay.[1] The sound occasionally dropped out, apparently in an attempt to censor strong language ("fuck" was always censored), although swearing by Liam Gallagher, Simon Pegg, Mark Owen and host Brand was nonetheless audible on the broadcast. The pre-show was called The BRITs Red Carpet, and was hosted by Lauren Laverne, Matt Willis, Alesha Dixon and Russell Howard. The show that followed was called The BRITs Encore.
Performances
[edit]Winners and nominees
[edit]- Oasis (presented by Russell Brand)
Multiple nominations and awards
[edit]Nominations | Artist |
---|---|
4 | Lily Allen |
3 (5) |
Corinne Bailey Rae |
Gnarls Barkley | |
James Morrison | |
Muse | |
Snow Patrol | |
2 (8) |
Amy Winehouse |
Arctic Monkeys | |
Bob Dylan | |
Justin Timberlake | |
Kasabian | |
The Killers | |
Razorlight | |
Scissor Sisters |
Awards | Artist |
---|---|
2 (2) |
Arctic Monkeys |
The Killers |
Moments
[edit]Russell Brand
[edit]Some controversy was caused by the host of the 2007 ceremony, comedian Russell Brand, who made several quips relating to news stories of the time including singer Robbie Williams' entering rehabilitation for addiction to prescription drugs, the Queen's 'naughty bits' and a fatal friendly fire incident involving a British soldier killed by American armed forces in Iraq. ITV1 received over 300 complaint calls from viewers.[2] He would again instigate controversy the following year at the 2008 MTV Video Music Awards.
References
[edit]- ^ ITV Teletext news story, 16 February 2007
- ^ "Viewers complain over Brits jokes". BBC News. 15 February 2007. Retrieved 23 February 2008.