
Miley Cyrus and Robin Thicke's jaw-dropping combined performance of "We Can't Stop" and "Blurred Lines" during the Video Music Awards was the talk of the town on Sunday night , but a lot of the chatter about the 20-year-old singer's stage antics wasn't positive, even among her fellow celebrities.
She had a helper at the VMAs: Robin Thicke. After performing her edgy hit, ‘‘We Can’t Stop,’’ she sang the first verse of Thicke’s ‘‘Blurred Lines’’ and then grinded on the R&B singer in a nude bikini. The wild child also slapped a girl’s butt onstage.
Call it the ‘‘Blurred Lines’’ music video 2.0., which aired live from the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, N.Y., for a first time.
‘‘Amazing. I thought it was awesome,’’ Selena Gomez said of Cyrus’ performance backstage. ‘‘I love Robin Thicke, too, so I like that they collabo’d.’’

Twitter said early Monday that Cyrus was mentioned 4.5 million times on the social network site, ahead of Timberlake’s 2.9 million mentions. Cyrus and Thicke’s performance led in tweets per minute peaks with 306,100.
Though they were attention grabbers and nominated for four moonmen each, Thicke and Cyrus walked away empty handed Sunday night.

As Timberlake performed a medley of his solo hits, JC Chasez, Lance Bass, Joey Fatone and Chris Kirkpatrick emerged from the bottom of the stage in suits to sing some lines from their hits ‘‘Girlfriend’’ and ‘‘Bye, Bye, Bye.’’ Gomez, Taylor Swift, Lady Gaga and possibly the entire venue were giddy as the boy band danced like they did a decade ago. Even rappers Wiz Khalifa and Juicy J admitted on the red carpet they were excited to see ‘N Sync hit the stage.
‘‘Half of the moonmen I’ve ever won, I won with those four guys right there,’’ Timberlake said of his band mates when he accepted the Michael Jackson Video Vanguard award. ‘‘So above all else, I’m going to share this — we can keep it my house — but I’m going to share this award with them.’’

Rapper A$AP Rocky also provided an awkward moment Sunday when standing next to NBA player Jason Collins, who were both announcing Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ performance. Collins, who recently said he was gay, spoke about coming out as A$AP Rocky looked uncomfortable.
‘‘The next artist is a good friend of mine and he stands up for everything he believes in as far as everybody being equal, color, homosexuality,’’ the rapper said as he pointed to Collins in another awkward moment.
But that was followed with touching performance of Macklemore & Ryan Lewis’ same-sex anthem ‘‘Same Love.’’ It featured the song’s original vocalist, Mary Lambert, as well as Jennifer Hudson. The video won best video with a social message, while their hit ‘‘Can’t Hold Us’’ won best hip-hop video and best cinematography.
‘‘I never dreamt I would be on a stage accepting an award, any of the awards, in particular for that song,’’ Macklemore said of ‘‘Same Love’’ backstage. ‘‘It’s much bigger than the music. It’s equality, so that was the most special for me tonight, but all of them were incredible.’’
Bruno Mars, who won best male video and choreography for ‘‘Treasure,’’ twirled with his two moonmen backstage, while Gomez admitted she thought Thicke’s ‘‘Blurred Lines’’ should have won best pop video instead of her seductive ‘‘Come & Get It.’’
Lady Gaga kicked off the awards show in a less dramatic fashion compared to her past performances. She did change her clothes — and hair — various times onstage while dancing and singing her new hit ‘‘Applause.’’ She finished in a thong, revealing her toned body.
Katy Perry closed the VMAs under the Brooklyn bridge in a boxing ring, singing her smash hit ‘‘Roar.’’
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