Justin Bieber: 17 going on forever

brad wheeler

From Saturday's Globe and Mail
Published Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011 6:00AM EST

Justin Bieber went banner in 2011 both exceeding expectations and challenging his image as he started the transition from pint-sized pop star to inevitable manhood.

He continued his international tour, the one with the rightfully bigheaded title, My World. He was the subject of the blockbuster film, Never Say Never, a concert documentary in 3-D. Under the Mistletoe, a Christmas-album follow-up to 2010s My World 2.0, debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200.

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Not everything went as smooth as Biebers peach-fuzzed face. The 17-year-old whiffed on a hardball question asked by Rolling Stone magazine: On abortion in cases of rape, the boy raised by a devoutly Christian single mother replied unsurely, Um. Well, I think that's really sad, but everything happens for a reason

Then there was the matter of the California woman who accused him of impregnation, the supposed result of a 30-second sexual encounter.

And how could we forget this tabloid doozy: Vocally, his balls have dropped, said the singers manager, Scooter Braun, obliv! ious to the whole too-much-information thing.

But none of that seems to have quashed Biebers influence. Cody Simpson, for example, the pretty-boy pop singer from Australia, is in Canada this week essentially promoting himself as the new Bieber which gives him something in common with his Canadian counterpart. Bieber, you see, wants to be the new Bieber, too.

Because hes unnaturally youthful looking, Biebers teen-idol status is safe for a few more years. That paternity suit fit him as poorly as the velvet tux he wore at the American Music Awards, and was quickly withdrawn when Biebers camp started waving cotton swabs around. But his trials to come will be harder to pass than a DNA test. The question looms: How does Bieber make the long leap from boyz-2-man?

What we do for a living is all about business trajectory, says Randy Lennox, head of Universal Music Canada, whose parent company owns Island Def Jam, Biebers label home. I think his talent and his diversity is consistent with the behaviour of someone whos in this for the long term.

Thats pretty square-jawed talk. A publicist with Universal said it more simply: Justin Bieber is a first-round draft pick thats working out.

The thinking on Bieber is that hes a talented kid, but, almost as important, one with his head on straight. Hell need that and more, according to Canadas original teen idol. Right now, its all of this controlled chaos that goes with teen idols, explains Paul Anka, who successfully went through a lot of bobby-socked hoopla in the 1950s. But one day, hes going to get to an age where hes going to start finding himself. Does that destroy him, or does that keep him going?

Anka, the Ottawa-born crooner who had a hit with Diana at age 16, discussed the Bieber phenomenon while he was in Toronto last week for a series of concerts. Coincidentally, he also has a Christmas album out: the soothing, restrained Songs of December, also on Universal. Anka sees Biebers management team as extremely capable. ! Scooter Brauns got the situation in hand, says Anka. Having the right people around him, and that includes wives and family, is the key component for these artists.

So far, all Biebers moves have been the right ones. The hypertweeting to his followers has cultivated a loyal community. The swagger coaching has balanced out his more natural cherubic appearance. So have his associations with older artists (Drake and Usher) and his older girlfriend. (The pop singer Selena Gomez is two years Biebers senior; more importantly, shes probably six years older than her boyfriends average fan.) Unlike in the early days of Bieber Fever, we dont hear as much about the artists mother, who is apparently leaving the decisions to the pros.