Jacqueline Laurita and Teresa Giudice may be in a feud, but that hasn't kept Real Housewives of New Jersey newbies Siggy Flicker and Dolores Catania from forming a bond.
The new cast members gushed about the show's upcoming season, saying that there's no bad blood between the two – even though they both find themselves on opposite ends of the Laurita-Giudice war.
"I don't go by other people's opinion, I go by my own opinion," Flicker, who is friends with Laurita, says of getting to know Giudice. "I met Teresa during the show. Love her. Love her. But Jacqueline brought me...
The new cast members gushed about the show's upcoming season, saying that there's no bad blood between the two – even though they both find themselves on opposite ends of the Laurita-Giudice war.
"I don't go by other people's opinion, I go by my own opinion," Flicker, who is friends with Laurita, says of getting to know Giudice. "I met Teresa during the show. Love her. Love her. But Jacqueline brought me...
- 7/7/2016
- by Char Adams, @CiCiAdams_
- People.com - TV Watch
Rhonj Newbies Siggy Flicker and Dolores Catania Dish on Teresa Giudice and Jacqueline Laurita's Feud
Jacqueline Laurita and Teresa Giudice may be in a feud, but that hasn't kept Real Housewives of New Jersey newbies Siggy Flicker and Dolores Catania from forming a bond. The new cast members gushed about the show's upcoming season, saying that there's no bad blood between the two - even though they both find themselves on opposite ends of the Laurita-Giudice war. "I don't go by other people's opinion, I go by my own opinion," Flicker, who is friends with Laurita, says of getting to know Giudice. "I met Teresa during the show. Love her. Love her. But Jacqueline brought...
- 7/7/2016
- by Char Adams, @CiCiAdams_
- PEOPLE.com
The irony in Twi-hardism is that the people we admire most aren't remotely like us. If Robert Pattinson, Taylor Lautner, Kellan Lutz and Jackson Rathbone didn't star in "The Twilight Saga," would they even know we exist? No. Guys with abs like that are too busy in the gym or with their rock bands to spend think about movies based on romantic Ya novels. Real Twi-hards sport abs like mine.
That is no slight against them. Heck, it's a large part of the reason we adore them. Their glamorous lives as "the popular kids" help us escape the mundane parts of our lives: school, work cubicles, taxes, diets, etc.
The fandom around Anna Kendrick, on the other hand, is different. Only the hardcore truly appreciate her. Despite her obvious talent and natural humor, Kendrick too often flies under the radar. While she may be up on stage at at a "Twilight" convention,...
That is no slight against them. Heck, it's a large part of the reason we adore them. Their glamorous lives as "the popular kids" help us escape the mundane parts of our lives: school, work cubicles, taxes, diets, etc.
The fandom around Anna Kendrick, on the other hand, is different. Only the hardcore truly appreciate her. Despite her obvious talent and natural humor, Kendrick too often flies under the radar. While she may be up on stage at at a "Twilight" convention,...
- 5/15/2012
- by Ryan McKee
- NextMovie
It was a rock and roll reception for Paul McCartney and Nancy Shevell after their Sunday wedding, with a party afterward that included a special song the groom delivered for his bride. "There was a lovely song that our kid did, and they had a lovely dance together," Paul's brother, Mike McCartney, told reporters. "That was a nice little highlight of the evening." The sibling - who served as Paul's best man - spoke outside the house in St. John's Wood where the reception took place, with such guests who include fellow Beatle Ringo Starr, Rolling Stone Ronnie Wood, the bride's second cousin Barbara Walters,...
- 10/10/2011
- by Monique Jessen and Liz Corcoran
- PEOPLE.com
Come one! Come all! Spend a few seconds in front of the new (and improved) "American Idol" panel and regardless of your singing abilities, you will get a Golden Ticket to Hollywood!
Are you an over-caffeinated 17-year old Seacrest stalker, more than willing to hit on any and all of the judges before shakily warbling a song with the lyrics, "I'm down on my knees"? Perfect! "Idol" wants you in Hollywood, Courtney Penry! (And please bring your deranged chicken impression.)
Do you have a sister named Brooks you only recently found out about (Oprah did it better...) and a big J. Lo booty (J. Lo does it better) but a nasal singing voice on par with any theater geek in a small town? (J. Lo does that better, too.) Step right up, Corey Levoy! Hell, we'll even let Sister Brooks sit in as a judge!
Are you an improv comedy...
Are you an over-caffeinated 17-year old Seacrest stalker, more than willing to hit on any and all of the judges before shakily warbling a song with the lyrics, "I'm down on my knees"? Perfect! "Idol" wants you in Hollywood, Courtney Penry! (And please bring your deranged chicken impression.)
Do you have a sister named Brooks you only recently found out about (Oprah did it better...) and a big J. Lo booty (J. Lo does it better) but a nasal singing voice on par with any theater geek in a small town? (J. Lo does that better, too.) Step right up, Corey Levoy! Hell, we'll even let Sister Brooks sit in as a judge!
Are you an improv comedy...
- 2/3/2011
- by Jim Cantiello
- MTV Newsroom
Photograph by Glenn Kasin
Soul Brother: Livestrong president and CEO Doug Ulman has a strong bond with Armstrong: Both are cancer survivors. | Photograph by Peter Yang
The world's most famous cancer survivor has been his foundation's biggest asset, even as it grew into an innovative force in health care. Now his legal troubles may make him a risk.
Photograph by Peter Yang
On a Sunday night in late July, a trio of bouncers stand outside a chic club near the Champs-Élysées, in Paris, checking guests for a special bracelet with a black plastic charm of a No. 28 cycling jersey. Inside, a red and white logo-festooned racing bike is on display like a sculpture. The absence of a rider is appropriate: This is the post-race celebration for Lance Armstrong's last Tour de France.
He's just finished a humbling 23rd in a race he's won seven times. But the mood at...
Soul Brother: Livestrong president and CEO Doug Ulman has a strong bond with Armstrong: Both are cancer survivors. | Photograph by Peter Yang
The world's most famous cancer survivor has been his foundation's biggest asset, even as it grew into an innovative force in health care. Now his legal troubles may make him a risk.
Photograph by Peter Yang
On a Sunday night in late July, a trio of bouncers stand outside a chic club near the Champs-Élysées, in Paris, checking guests for a special bracelet with a black plastic charm of a No. 28 cycling jersey. Inside, a red and white logo-festooned racing bike is on display like a sculpture. The absence of a rider is appropriate: This is the post-race celebration for Lance Armstrong's last Tour de France.
He's just finished a humbling 23rd in a race he's won seven times. But the mood at...
- 10/18/2010
- by Chuck Salter
- Fast Company
Don't look now but the yuppies are in for it in a spree of forthcoming 80s and 90s-style revenge thrillers – a cautionary Hollywood reminder to us all after the recession
From the moment Glenn Close brewed up rabbit stew for Michael Douglas in Fatal Attraction, the yuppie thriller became a staple of late 80s/early 90s cinema. The "fill-in-the-blank from hell" subgenre gave us various incarnations of a monotonous formula, whether it was a flatmate (Single White Female), a lodger (Pacific Heights), a nanny (The Hand That Rocks the Cradle) or an intern (The Temp). Take one perfect couple, with a perfect life (or is it...?) and add an apparently charming outsider. Before long, tyres have been slashed, cops proved useless, a creepy shrine revealed in someone's basement and once passive, middle-class types have got in touch with their primal vigilantes in a fabulously melodramatic finale.
Born out of a backlash to the smug,...
From the moment Glenn Close brewed up rabbit stew for Michael Douglas in Fatal Attraction, the yuppie thriller became a staple of late 80s/early 90s cinema. The "fill-in-the-blank from hell" subgenre gave us various incarnations of a monotonous formula, whether it was a flatmate (Single White Female), a lodger (Pacific Heights), a nanny (The Hand That Rocks the Cradle) or an intern (The Temp). Take one perfect couple, with a perfect life (or is it...?) and add an apparently charming outsider. Before long, tyres have been slashed, cops proved useless, a creepy shrine revealed in someone's basement and once passive, middle-class types have got in touch with their primal vigilantes in a fabulously melodramatic finale.
Born out of a backlash to the smug,...
- 3/25/2010
- The Guardian - Film News
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