Nine Premiere In Spain Pictures
Nine Premiere In Spain Photos
Check out pictures of the sexy ladies attending the Nine Premiere In Spain.
Fame Is Now A Disease Picture
Fame Is Now A Disease
On November 20, 2009, Heidi Montag underwent 10 excruciating plastic surgery procedures in a single day as part of a drastic secret makeover. The perky blonde claimed afterward that she nearly died in the hours following her operations. Explaining this alleged emergency, the Superficial songstress told reporters: "I had too much Demerol like Michael Jackson did and my breathing was five breaths per minute which is like almost dead," coyly finding a way to link herself to a far more noteworthy celeb. Although she survived, Montag also confessed that she now has difficulty accomplishing even the most rudimentary tasks: “When I first came out, it was so hard for me even to smile and it's still hard for me to chew sometimes," she said.
What would cause a naturally gorgeous 23-year-old to undergo such an extreme physical metamorphosis? The answer, of course, is simple: Fame. Like many of her overexposed peers, Montag has become addicted to being in the spotlight and was willing to do anything to extend her 15 minutes of fame, even if it meant slicing up her supple flesh and potentially dying (or at least acting like she nearly died) in the process.
What would cause a naturally gorgeous 23-year-old to undergo such an extreme physical metamorphosis? The answer, of course, is simple: Fame. Like many of her overexposed peers, Montag has become addicted to being in the spotlight and was willing to do anything to extend her 15 minutes of fame, even if it meant slicing up her supple flesh and potentially dying (or at least acting like she nearly died) in the process.
Fame is no longer a desirable thing
Sadly, she’s hardly alone. This obsessive quest for notoriety has become the most recognizable disease of what we’re calling the “post-achievement age,” and it’s quickly eating away at the fabric of America. Gone are the days when individuals became famous for writing great works of literature, curing fatal ailments or passing legislation. These days any Tom, Dick or Snooki can become an overnight sensation by agreeing to spend a summer behaving squalidly in a Jersey beach house. In fact, with hundreds of cable channels and countless glossy magazines on newsstands everywhere, it’s never been easier to become famous.Fame has never been less valuable
Therein lies the rub. Because fame has never been more accessible, it’s also never been less valuable. It's time to stop looking at fame as an award for prominent talent, or as any sort of desirable circumstance at all. Fame now is something to be pitied, feared and avoided. What was once the province of great thinkers and doers is now a detestable bauble given to nobodies in exchange for a license to shame them publicly. It is the territory of disturbed young women like Miss Montag who mutilate themselves in order to promote albums purchased only as joke gifts. Make no mistake about it, fame has become the new “F” word, and it’s every bit as filthy as the term it replaced.Love Fan Leighton Meester Picture
Love Fan Leighton Meester
The actress-turned-singer likes nothing more than falling head-over-heels for someone, even though she admits she is a "cautious" partner.
The 23-year-old beauty's recent track with Robin Thicke begins, "Is there somebody who stillbelieves in love?" which, she admits, she does.
She explained: "I love love. I f**king love love. What's weird is that, from a certain point of view, that song could be about someone who's jaded, but it could also be someone who has every hope in the world. I think that I'm a little bit of both. I'm very cautious, but I still throw my heart into it."
However, the 'Gossip Girl' star - who is dating her TV co-star Sebastian Stan - doesn't want anyone to take her song lyrics literally.
She explained to Britain's InStyle magazine: "I would never want anybody to associate my lyrics with how I am at this moment, because I draw from experiences that aren't necessarily current. I love to say I live in the moment, but I have a past."
Leighton is also not ashamed to admit she can be quite a "selfish, insensitive" lover.
She explained: "I can be selfish sometimes, that's one of my flaws. In love I am selfish, insensitive, but I think love is complicated, more complicated than I'd like it to be. But maybe I'm just complicated."
Were Miley and Selena Told to Diss New Moon?
Were Miley and Selena Told to Diss New Moon?
Miley Cyrus—and fellow Disney pixie Selena Gomez—sure do dislike themselves some Twilight, yes they do. Miley told a radio station this week: "It's a cult. I don't believe in it." And Gomez then confided in Bonnie Hunt that when it comes to the Saga flicks, "I don't watch them."Which is odd, because just this past June, she was asked about Twilight and said: "It was good. It was really good."
Hmmm.
What people are wondering here is whether Miley, and now Taylor Lautner's punkinhead of an ex, were compelled to say nasty things. Because no teenager is allowed to hate Edward Cullen. It is the Tween Code, and it must never be rent asunder. So, people assume, something sinister must be going on, and by "sinister," people suspect "Disney." Did the Mouse have a hand in this?
Well...
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)