It's a party in the USA, and daddy's not invited. Looks like that Nashville-native/rising pop star/aspiring film actress Miley Cyrus is biting the hand that fed her, as revealed in a recent interview with Parade magazine.
"It scares me," Miley told Parade about country music, the genre which made her dad Billy Ray Cyrus famous and gave her the platform to trigger her own career.
"It feels contrived on so many levels. Unless you're wearing a cowboy hat and cowboy boots and singing and whining about your girlfriend or boyfriend leaving you it's not going to sell. I think that's why my dad finally got out of it. You have to wear those cowboy boots and be sweet as pie. It makes me nervous, the politcs of it all."
Miley's not the only one who's spooked by the music scene — her post-pubescent pole-dancing antics have us scared to death, too.
She seemed to have no qualms over sporting cowboy kicks during the video for "Party in the USA". Moreover, Miley recently recorded three versions — including a country interpretation — of a song entitled "Nothing to Lose," with former Poison frontman Bret Michaels.
Of her godmother, Country Music Hall of Famer Dolly Parton, Miley reports in the interview, "She is the nicest person in the world. She's so easy to talk to. She's awesome. I love her. She always tells me just to do what I love and if I'm not having fun it's not working.
"I don't know how old she is at this point but every time she is on stage she is smiling from ear to ear."
Is Miley still in the dark about the beauties of reconstructive surgery? Her feelings towards her country roots may come off as disingenuous, but perhaps such ambivalence is part of growing up. Like many a pop star before her, Cyrus is now in the midst exploring Buddhism. She identifies with the belief system's focus on "hope and love."
Meanwhile, Miley is attempting to sever her power-pop past and break into movies beyond the "Hannah Montana" set. Her latest film, "The Last Song," opens March 31.