Anna Kournikova Off The Biggest Loser Due to Alleged Diva-Like Behavior

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby


Anna Kournikova lasted about as long on The Biggest Loser as a guy would last in bed with this beaut… nevermind.

The point is: Kournikova will not be returning for a second season of the weight loss competition.

Anna Kournikova Photograph

According to The Hollywood Reporter, the former tennis player was a “nightmare,” often clashing with contestants and never relating to their struggles.

Kournikova’s rep, of course, denies that his client was fired, while the blonde bombshell has released the following statement:

“I enjoyed my time on the Biggest Loser ranch. Although I will not be returning as a full time trainer on season 13, I will always be a part of The Biggest Loser family and my commitment to bettering lives through health and fitness will continue.”

[Photo: WENN.com]

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/anna-kournikova-off-the-biggest-loser-due-to-alleged-diva-like-b/

Jennifer Aniston Jennifer Gareis Jennifer Garner Jennifer Gimenez Jennifer Love Hewitt

Suspicion Song

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

Detective Vance harasses Bree as his suspicions grow!

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/suspicion-song/1-h-402344?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Asuspicion-song-402344

China Chow Chloë Sevigny Christina Aguilera Christina Applegate Christina DaRe

Clyfford Still: an abstract artist in cowboy country

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

Thanks to the sale of a painting for $61m, this great chronicler of the American landscape is finally getting the museum he deserves

The abstract painter Clyfford Still is a craggy enigma of American art. He painted canvases that look like ruined walls ? rough, torn and stained. The ragged surfaces of his thickly layered patches of colour, like giant pieces of ripped paper, make me think every time of street walls covered with mouldering old posters for forgotten films and political rallies.

Still, who died in 1980, was one of the abstract expressionists who transformed not just the look but the international reputation of American art in the 1950s. Up to then, US artists tended to defer to their heroes in Paris. But when Jackson Pollock was featured on the cover of Life magazine with his free-spirited swirls, American modern art became the gold standard.

The kind of fame that hounded Pollock’s life and death never quite came to Still. Perhaps he will get his glory now: the Clyfford Still Museum opens in Denver, Colorado, on 16 November. Interest in his work is lively, judging from the impressive price ? $61.7m ? that has just been paid for one of his paintings, one of four from his widow’s estate put on sale to benefit the new museum.

It makes sense for a Still museum to be located in Colorado, even though it was not his native state, because his paintings powerfully recall the vast landscapes of the American west. Flying over Denver recently, I found myself transfixed by the carved and sculpted landscapes, the bald deserts and red river canyons, the mountains hewn by ancient dust storms.

Early US artists painted the west as a fantasy land of wagon trains and cowboys, creating the visual myths that later fed the imaginations of film-makers. Frederic Remington’s Scout, showing an Indian on horseback, is a good example. Still has little in common with such artists. He is an abstract artist. Yet it is his art, with its great gorges and canyons and ridges of colour, that most powerfully evokes the grandeur of the American landscape.

Still is a truly mysterious and fascinating artist. He turns inward. If his paintings recall both the poster-scarred walls of a great city and the empty vastness of a parched landscape, their spreading flows of blackness also suggest those Rorschach blots used in psychological testing. What depths of anguish do they intimate?

Still is an American great. Congratulations to Denver for securing his legacy.


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/artanddesign/jonathanjonesblog/2011/nov/14/clyfford-still-american-abstract-art

Angelina Jolie Anna Faris Anna Friel Anna Kournikova Anna Paquin

Celebrity Birthdays of the Week: Nov. 14-20

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

From Owen Wilson to Rachel McAdams, see what the stars born between Nov. 14-20 can tell you about the sign of Scorpio.

Source: http://www.ivillage.com/celebrity-birthdays-november-14-20/1-b-401223?dst=iv%3AiVillage%3Acelebrity-birthdays-november-14-20-401223

Ali Campoverdi Ali Larter Alice Dodd Alicia Keys Alicia Witt

Gloria Cain, Wife of Herman Cain, Defends Candidate From Sexual Harassment Claims

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby


Herman Cain’s wife, Gloria Cain, says the claims of sexual harassment against the GOP presidential candidate simply don’t ring true because that’s not who he is.

The Georgina businessman “totally respects women,” according to his wife, who adds, “he would have to have a split personality to do the things that were said.”

In an interview to be aired Monday during Greta Van Susteren’s Fox News show On the Record, Gloria Cain said she can’t believe the claims against her spouse:

Cain is accused of harassing women – Karen Kraushaar, Sharon Bialek and two others – when he was head of the National Restaurant Association in the 1990s.

Gloria Cain said of those allegations:

“To hear such graphic allegations and know that would have been something that was totally disrespectful of her as a woman, I know that’s not the person he is.”

Cain’s wife of 43 years is often described as “gentle” and “the nicest woman you’ll ever meet.” The two were married in 1968, and have two adult children.

Herman Cain, who has risen to the top of some national polls in the race for the Republican nomination, has denied wrongdoing in the last couple of weeks.

His unfocused responses to the claims, along with joking about Anita Hill, have made it tough for him to move forward with his White House bid, however.

Will the allegations against Cain derail his campaign?

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2011/11/gloria-cain-wife-of-herman-cain-defends-candidate-from-sexual-ha/

Ana Hickmann Ana Ivanovi Ana Paula Lemes Ananda Lewis Angela Marcello

Secret Beyond the Door

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

(Fritz Lang, 1947, Exposure, PG)

Fritz Lang, whose German expressionist movies helped create film noir, saw his disciple Alfred Hitchcock surge ahead of him in Hollywood. With this psychoanalytical thriller incorporating elements of Rebecca, Suspicion and Spellbound, he sought to establish he was Hitch’s equal. It proved a critical and commercial disaster but is now widely seen as a key example of Lang’s “fantastical realism”. A sublime, delirious melodrama, it stars Joan Bennett as a sleepwalking heiress who meets a charming architect (Michael Redgrave) in Mexico, and marries in haste. He turns out to have a bizarre family past and a weird present that includes re-creating in the basement of his New England mansion the rooms where famous murders occurred. Redgrave was cast because of his schizophrenic ventriloquist in Dead of Night. The outstanding photography is by Stanley Cortez, who shot The Magnificent Ambersons and The Night of the Hunter. The noir score is the work of Miklós Rózsa, who won Oscars for Spellbound and Ben-Hur. The surreal credit titles were executed at the Disney Studio.


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/13/secret-beyond-lang-classic-dvd

Desiree Dymond Diane Kruger Dido Diora Baird Dita Von Teese

Christina Ricci: ‘I don’t think anything I said was really dark’

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

Christina Ricci was the little gothic girl who shot to fame aged nine and liked to shock. Now the veteran star of new TV series Pan Am, she tells how she’s left her dark days behind

The image of Christina Ricci, as an actor of arresting darkness, hasn’t had much of an airing lately ? for the past few years her output has been confined mainly to voiceovers and guest appearances in TV shows. As a result, perhaps, the 31-year-old has not aged in the public eye; she appears suddenly in a restaurant in Brooklyn, still child-sized, eyes not quite to scale, with that expressionless gaze behind which, one imagines, seditious thoughts circulate. Over the course of lunch, she will by turns be giggly, friendly, enthusiastic, monosyllabic and studiously anodyne. It is like watching someone page through the ringtones of human behaviour. “I’m an actress,” she says, “we constantly let things out. I can live with that.” If there’s a Ricci persona, it is in transition.

She is in New York temporarily to film Pan Am, the perky drama set in the heyday of the iconic air hostess. (The Pan Am uniform was among the most popular costumes in the US this Halloween.) It takes advantage of the Mad Men craze, although in the writing is more like Gossip Girl ? bubblegum bright, with strong performances from her co-stars, little-known actors Karine Vanasse and Margot Robbie. Ricci, the only well-known name in the cast, is the “interesting” one, as evinced in the first 10 minutes by her name-dropping Hegel. Later this month, she and the rest of the production will find out if the show has been picked up for a longer run. In the meantime, life carries on in the apartment the studio rents for them in Brooklyn.

Her old attitude, says Ricci, was one characterised by a “defensive sarcasm”. There were rumours that some of the more obnoxious things she said in public put studios off using her for a while, but she doesn’t think it hurt her. In interviews at least, it has been replaced by a more conventional approach to publicity, so now Ricci says things like, “I’m so excited to go to work! I guess I’m a workaholic! I love it, it’s like my drug!” and, “My career’s gotten me this far, there have been ups and downs but things always happen!” etcetera, although there is still something brittle about her. It’s partly her voice, which has an awkward pitch to it, and partly her sudden jumps in register. She grins and says brightly she hopes Pan Am will get a longer season, but if not she will return to her house and her single life in LA.

It must be strange for Ricci to be among the oldest of the cast members, having for a long time been the youngest on set. She made her first film, Mermaids, when she was nine years old, after a year or so of TV work and having been discovered in a school play in New Jersey. A series of roles followed ? Wednesday Addams in The Addams Family, Wendy in The Ice Storm, Dede in The Opposite Of Sex ? all of which played on Ricci’s reputation as alternative and quirky, a female Johnny Depp. Since outgrowing teenage angst films, there has been less scope for her in mainstream movies, although she was very good in the Oscar-winning film Monster, in which she played Selby, girlfriend of Charlize Theron’s murderous Aileen Wuornos. In any case, she finds herself at 31 a veteran in a cast full of twentysomethings. “At first I was like, oh God, it’s so weird, because for years I was the youngest, although apparently I don’t act my age at all. No one can tell I’m any older. I just remember it happening gradually ? so the PAs would get younger, and then suddenly the department heads were younger than me, that was weird. But now I’m used to it. I’ve come to terms with it. I’m an adult and I have to deal with that fact.”

She is still in touch with Winona Ryder, her co-star on Mermaids. “I know her and like her; I have affection for her. She’s an icon.” She’s a cautionary tale, isn’t she? Ricci gives me the first of several unblinking death stares. “Not at all.”

The nearest she came to going off the deep end was in her early 20s, when she got her hands on the money she had made as a teenage star. “I don’t come from money,” she says. Ricci is the youngest of four and it was partly to entertain her siblings that she went into showbusiness in the first place. After appearing in the school play, one of the other parents in the audience suggested to Ricci’s mother that the seven-year-old Ricci might be suitable for TV work. She was perfect in that she was small for her age, so could play younger than she was, but with the reading ability of an older child. “My brothers and sisters bullied my mother into letting me make the decision. And they were so into it ? they thought it would be hilarious, to see me on TV. And I was like, sure, I’ll do anything to make you guys laugh.” After nine months of auditions, she got her first commercial. Three months after that, she was cast in Mermaids.

It never felt like work, Ricci says. It turned out she had a disposition exactly suited to hanging out on set with people much older than her, taking instruction. “I’ve always loved this. I always knew that I was kind of bored; the regular life of a child didn’t fit me. I wanted to work. I wanted to be utilised. I was always a really great set kid; I always wanted to be a member of the group. I wanted to do my best.”

It’s an odd thing to say: “I wanted to be utilised.” Wasn’t she intimidated by the adults around her?

“No. I would just think, this is a great opportunity for me to watch and learn.”

The thing you wonder about former child stars is what it was like for them to choose, or to have chosen for them, a career before they were capable of making such a choice. “Right,” snaps Ricci, dispensing the second death stare, “but I hadn’t chosen a career. It was always something that me and my family had said I would keep doing until I didn’t think it was fun any more. And then when I was about 14 I was like, no, I think I want to carry on doing this for the rest of my life.”

That was the age at which she decided to send herself to therapy. (Why? “Me and my sister have always been very curious and read a lot about women’s issues.”) Ricci’s father is a psychiatrist who promoted primal scream therapy, treating patients in the family basement in New Jersey, so that screams would issue up into the kitchen, where they went largely ignored by the rest of the family. It’s almost too good a detail, given Ricci’s early gothic performances. In the past, she has described her father as a difficult, unbending man, sensitive to the point of paranoia, with whom she confirms she is no longer in touch. Her parents are divorced. She will not speak publicly about her father now. It is her mother and her elder sister whom she credits with saving her from spiralling out of control in that brief period when she first got access to her earnings. “I thought it was hysterical when I finally came into money. I thought it was hilarious that I had money, which is, I suppose, not the kind of attitude you should have. I couldn’t really take it seriously. So I made all the mistakes that people make. I had a ridiculous car. I bought way too many clothes.”

What was the car?

“For a while I had a Porsche, it was really nice. It was leased. But you go through all that, growing pains, and then you move on.”

Her siblings would visit her on set, particularly her sister, the next one up in age, a teacher. She is the only role model Ricci has, she says, “because she deals with her life with a lot of grace. She always knows the right thing to do.” Her mother was also very grounded, she says and “taught me a lot of great tricks and attitudes that protected me. I have a sense of my friends and family. I keep myself fairly closed off from what’s going on in the business. It doesn’t interest me.”

She won’t read her own reviews (“There’s no point. It’s already done. You’re always going to hold on to the bad thing and forget the good thing”), which in the case of films like Black Snake Moan and Prozac Nation is just as well. She can watch her own performances with a critical eye without causing herself too much pain ? “I can be, ‘Oh, maybe I shouldn’t make that face again’ but I’m pretty good at being objective about it” ? although she has battled in the past to keep her weight down and remain healthy at the same time; at 5ft 1in, she is tiny and frail-looking.

The weirdest thing about early fame, she says, is the recognition. Not from the public ? she tries not to pay too much attention to whether she is, or isn’t, recognised on the street, or to read it as a barometer of how her career is going ? but the fact of having had, since a very young age, to give an account of herself. A large part of Ricci’s early reputation came from what she would say during interviews; self-consciously shocking statements such as, “I’m not afraid to die” and, “It’s such a natural thing to have sex with [your parents].” Although she says now, “I don’t think anything I said was really dark. I wasn’t running around like Marilyn Manson.”

For the first time in the interview, she becomes properly animated: “When I was younger, a lot of the strange things I said were based on the fact that I was so aware of how weird it was. People were asking me questions and I was like: I’m 17! I have nothing of value to add. I haven’t lived a life yet; I can’t tell you how I feel about this or that. Don’t ask me my opinions on thing. I mean, they would ask me about women’s issues, and the industry. I had no idea. I didn’t know what to tell them, so I would say something obnoxious. Or try to be funny. It turned into an awkward mess.”

We get up to leave. Ricci has the afternoon off from filming and intends to do laundry. She looks suddenly very small in the street, in her neat vintage coat, pale hands by her sides. “It’s not dark,” she said of the new series. “It’s not serious. It’s light and fun.” She says a polite thank you and, straight-backed and anxious, disappears down the street .

? Pan Am starts at 9pm on BBC2 on Wednesday 16 November.

Main photograph Styling: Brad Goreski. Hair: Creighton Bowman at Exclusive Artists Management. Make-Up: Kim Bower at Exclusive Artists Management. Manicurist: Aggie Zaro for Chanel. Dress by Alberta Ferretti. Stockings by American Apparel. Shoes by Marc Jacobs


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/11/christina-ricci-pan-am

Heidi Montag Hilarie Burton Hilary Duff Hilary Swank Isla Fisher

Trespass ? review

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

Taking place over a single evening, Trespass is an indifferent home invasion thriller in which a desperate, neurotic diamond broker (Nicolas Cage), his wife (Nicole Kidman) and angry teenage daughter are held to ransom by a desperate band of crooks. The plot is overly complex and the tension frequently abated by the introduction of unnecessary flashbacks.


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/13/trespass-review-cage-kidman-schumacher

Carmen Electra Carol Grow Carrie Underwood Cat Power Catherine Bell

Beauty in the horror of Snowtown

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

Despite the relentless nastiness in Justin Kurzel’s serial-killer drama Snowtown, there’s beauty on show too. John Patterson is intrigued

Snowtown, the story of the 1990s Australian mass murderer John Justin Bunting, is the kind of movie that arrives from the festival circuit trailing sulphurous vapours, tales of bitterly divided audiences, and intimations that its makers may have crossed a line. Such movies come with a guarantee that watching them will be a jolting and unpleasant experience ? like Gaspar Noé’s Irréversible, to choose a notorious example. You take your seat, breathe deeply, avert your eyes when the going gets really heavy, and sometimes ? amid the squalor and the splatter ? you spot a truly gifted film-maker at work.

Australia seems blessed with some spectacularly unpleasant serial murderers, from drifter-killers Ivan Milat and Bradley John Murdoch (both of whom haunt the 2005 horror Wolf Creek) to Katherine Knight, an illiterate abattoir worker who, in 2001, skinned, beheaded, cooked and partially ate her boyfriend. Busiest of all was Bunting, who, with his associate Robert Joe Wagner, browbeat others into helping them torture and murder 10 men and a woman, including relatives and friends, between 1992 and 1999.

Justin Kurzel and screenwriter Shaun Grant adopt the perspective of the vulnerable and traumatised James Vlassakis (Lucas Pittaway), the teenage son of the woman Bunting cohabited with, who was gradually groomed for murder by Bunting until he became an active participant in four of the atrocities. The movie unfolds in a grim estate where police are absent or indifferent and predatory behaviour is everywhere ? at one point Vlassakis is casually raped at home by his half-brother. Into this abusive, deadening milieu comes the cherubic and affable Bunting, played with enormous poise and charisma by Daniel Henshall. A father-son dynamic evolves, but Bunting then draws Vlassakis and others into his vigilante actions against supposed local paedophiles, his behaviour becoming more and more extreme. There is animal cruelty here, be warned. It’s a raw and unsettling movie to watch, or rather, to endure. The one prolonged torture-murder ? in a cramped bathroom ? is the big walk-out moment, and I rather resented having to sit through it.

All this being said, the film rings so true emotionally ? James’s mental and moral drift towards murder feels utterly logical and explicable ? that you have to admire the cast, their director and script. The film’s lyric and painterly qualities are at times extraordinary; the camera finds poetry in garbage cans and whirligig washing-lines, an ice-cream van tinkling across an exquisitely composed frame. Such beauty does not jar against the pervasive ugliness elsewhere, but it does partially redeem it.

It’s a serious, honest movie, but that doesn’t mean I have to like it. I can’t wait to see what Kurzel makes next, however, now that he’s got Snowtown out of his system ? and into mine, dammit.


guardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Source: http://www.guardian.co.uk/film/2011/nov/12/beauty-in-the-horror-of-snowtown

Heidi Klum Heidi Montag Hilarie Burton Hilary Duff Hilary Swank

Britney Spears Concert Special: 3 Can’t-Miss Moments

Filed Under (Funny Baby Photos) by funnybaby

Get a sneak peek of the Femme Fatale special before it airs Saturday on Epix.
By Jocelyn Vena


Britney Spears
Photo: MTV News & Docs

Light your vanilla candles and snuggle under the covers: The Britney Spears concert special drops this weekend!

Filmed at the Toronto stop of her Femme Fatale Tour, the special — which airs Saturday on Epix at 8 p.m. ET/PT — puts every fan in the front row. Look out for cameos from Nicki Minaj and Sabi, killer dancing, beautifully designed costumes, elaborate stage setups and a set list that even the biggest Britney critic couldn’t help but shake their groove thing to.

In a sea of can’t-miss moments, there are definitely several standouts. Lucky for you, we’ve rounded them up!

Britney Singing “Don’t Let Me Be the Last to Know”
It’s rare these days to see Britney Spears show her soft side, but she takes a break from the nonstop, fist-pumping music during the spectacle that is the Femme Fatale Tour and kicks it old-school, showing us she still has the heart and soul to bust out a power ballad.

The Short Films
These glossy, dark and incredibly fashionable cinematic clips follow the Femme Fatale herself as she gets into risky situations, being pursued by dangerous men with even more dangerous intentions. Of course, Spears isn’t all that innocent herself, giving the boys a run for their money in the bad department. They don’t call her the Femme Fatale for nothing.

The Lap Dance
Over the course of her tour, Britney has chosen one lucky guy for a very special dance, and the lucky guy at the Toronto tour stop can watch his dance on loop forever. Brit made that gentleman, named Alex, very happy when he was picked from a sea of devotees to get a private lap dance from Britney and her sexy backup dancers during “Leather and Lace.”

The special hits DVD and Blu-ray on November 21. Backstreet Boy Howie D will join Spears on the Femme Fatale Tour before it wraps up December 10 in Puerto Rico.

What tour moments are you hoping are in the special? Let us know in the comments!

Related Artists

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1674256/britney-spears-femme-fatale-tour-special-epix-hd.jhtml

Jessica Simpson Zooey Deschanel Aaliyah Abbie Cornish Adriana Lima