FASHION TODAY:
HOST: RIHANNA

Rihanna established herself as a star in summer 2005
with her debut smash hit, "Pon de Replay," and continued to demonstrate
her smash hit potential in subsequent years (e.g., "S.O.S.," 2006;
"Umbrella," 2007). By the time of her third album, Good Girl Gone Bad
(2007), she was a full-fledged international pop star with a regular
presence atop the charts, from Germany to Japan. Born Robyn Rihanna
Fenty on February 20, 1988, in Saint Michael, Barbados, she always
exhibited a special quality, winning beauty and talent contests as a
schoolchild. But because she lived on the fairly remote island of
Barbados in the West Indies, she never foresaw the sort of stardom that
would later befall her. That stardom came courtesy of a fateful meeting
with a man named Evan Rogers. The New Yorker was vacationing in
Barbados with his wife, a native of the island, when someone turned him
on to Rihanna. Since Rogers had spent years producing pop artists --
including superstars like NSYNC, Christina Aguilera, Jessica Simpson,
Kelly Clarkson, Laura Pausini, and Rod Stewart -- he offered her the
opportunity to record some music after he recognized her talent and
potential. Along with Rogers' production partner, Carl Sturken (the
other half of Syndicated Rhythm Productions), Rihanna recorded some
demos that sparked the interest of the Carter Administration -- that is,
newly appointed Def Jam president Shawn "Jay-Z" Carter. This led to an
audition and, in turn, an on-the-spot offer to sign with Def Jam, which
Rihanna indeed inked on the spot. Come summer 2005, Def Jam rolled out
"Pon de Replay," the lead single of Music of the Sun, which was produced
almost entirely by Rogers and Sturken and which synthesized Caribbean
rhythms and beats with urban-pop songwriting. "Pon de Replay" caught
fire almost immediately, climbing all the way to number two on The
Billboard Hot 100 and contesting the half-summer reign of Mariah Carey's
"We Belong Together" atop the chart, and this was before Music of the
Sun even had been released. The album spawned one other hit, "If It's
Lovin' That You Want," which broke the Top 40. Rihanna's follow-up
album, A Girl Like Me, was a greater success, spawning three big hits: a
chart-topper ("S.O.S.") and two Top Tens ("Unfaithful," "Break It
Off"). Rihanna's third album, Good Girl Gone Bad (2007), continued her
success and, more notably, signaled a change of direction. Whereas her
past two albums had been been imbalanced -- often weighed down by
faceless balladry and canned Caribbean-isms -- Good Girl Gone Bad was a
first-rate dance-pop album. Moreover, it was surprisingly solid, stacked
with potential singles and easily enjoyable from beginning to end.
Collaborators included Jay-Z, Ne-Yo, Timbaland, and StarGate. The lead
single, "Umbrella," shot to number one and, for the third year in a row,
was a potential "song of the summer." By this point it was clear that
Rihanna had become one of the biggest singles artists of the mid-2000s.
Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide
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