The Glee Season 5 premiere paid tribute to The Beatles, as numerous songs by this iconic band were covered by Kurt, Blaine and company. It also featured a proposal… two characters coupling up… Santana getting a new job and a lot more. Read our Glee preview review for a full rundown. But in two weeks, emotions are sure to run especially high as the series honors the late Cory Monteith. This star passed away on July 13 from a heroin overdose. Creator Ryan Murphy has said his character of Finn will also be killed off, though it’s unclear in what manner. It’s bound to be a tear-filled, sentimental, unique hour of television and Murphy just released the first promotional photo in anticipation of the installment. Check it out here: Glee Creator Unveils Cory Monteith Tribute Pic
Six people have been arrested for trespassing and other charges following a party at the Stephentown, N.Y., home of former NFL star Brian Holloway. The group of kids, ages 17-20, caused major damage after breaking into the house, which Holloway does not live in year-round, and throwing a rager. Hundreds of kids trashed the place over Labor Day weekend. Brian Holloway House Trashed By Miscreants The six kids who were arrested have been taken into custody and arraigned on various charges, including criminal trespass, for their actions this month. A 19-year-old was charged with felony burglary and felony criminal mischief. Three of them were charged with endangering the welfare of a child. A 17-year-old was charged with felony grand larceny. Perhaps most incredibly, only a handful of parents even bothered to call Holloway after the incident to apologize or offer help in repairing the damage. In response, Brian Holloway posted HUNDREDS of names of the party-goers on his website – to show the parents will realize how badly they need help. Police say, “We currently have over 200 names … Once we’ve established proof of their presence at the party, they will be asked to turn themselves in.” The Upstate New York town’s court system reportedly can’t even handle that kind of volume, so cops say they will be arraigned in groups of 10-12.
These kids had a “Project X” kind of night. Teenagers Trash Brian Holloway’s House In Wild Party According to The NY Daily News Former NFL offensive lineman Brian Holloway initially thought the Twitter photos showing young people partying at his family’s second home in upstate New York were a hoax. Then he saw pictures of teens standing on the dining room table he bought with his Super Bowl winnings. Holloway’s rural vacation home was trashed during a Labor Day weekend party attended by an estimated 200 to 400 teenagers. Holloway said the partiers caused at least $20,000 in damage, breaking windows and doors, punching holes in walls and spraying graffiti. He saw the whole thing unfold live on Twitter — and now he’s using the teens’ own posts to reveal their identities. Holloway, who played offensive tackle for the New England Patriots and Los Angeles Raiders in the 1980s, said his 19-year-old son, a University of Southern Florida sophomore, alerted him to the party after receiving tweets about it the night of Aug. 31. No one is safe from a slizzard teenager. Holloway was at his home in Lutz, Fla., at the time and watched as more tweets about the party were posted, many of them accompanied by photos of young people drinking throughout his home in Stephentown, on the Massachusetts border 25 miles southeast of Albany. “We were getting eyewitness reports of what was happening while it was happening. We couldn’t believe what was going down,” Holloway told The Associated Press. Yvonne Keefe, spokeswoman for the Rensselaer County Sheriff’s Office, confirmed Wednesday that a “very large investigation” into the party was underway. Police believe 200 to 400 young people were at the party, but investigators aren’t commenting on the role social media is playing in the probe, she said. No arrests have been reported. Holloway, a father of eight, said he used Twitter postings to compile 200 names of teens he said were at the party. He has been posting them on a website he created, http://www.helpmesave300.com , in an effort to get them to come forward, take responsibility for their actions and change their behavior. “Any kids where this makes sense to go to a party like this and be a part of that, this kid’s in trouble,” he said. Hit the flip for more wild party photos.