Is this best the American adult industry has to offer? Fellas, these are your top female porn stars of today. I don’t even want to mention their names because they shouldn’t be in film, period! Now don’t get me wrong, after few drinks I’d be happy to get with any one of them, but but I wouldn’t tell anyone! Anyway, here they are at some strip club or something. Who cares! I’m going to download some European films.
L.A. Reid defects, Britney fails to bring heat, ratings stay modest and final three lack sizzle, according to experts. By Gil Kaufman Tate Stevens Photo: MTV News
Carly Rose Sonenclar, Tate Stevens and Fifth Harmony relive their ‘amazing’ journey and look forward to making it in the music industry. By Chris Kim Carly Rose Sonenclar, Tate Stevens and Fifth Harmony on “The X Factor” Wednesday Photo: FOX
Singer claims she misspoke due to ’emotion and sadness’ when she claimed she was ‘FORCED’ to sing the hook on latest single. By James Montgomery Ke$ha in her video for “Die Young” Photo: RCA
With the multi-state Powerball jackpot at $500 million ahead of tonight’s drawing, more people than ever are taking a shot at the half-billion jackpot. If only you could guarantee that the Powerball winning numbers would appear on your ticket this evening. Actually, if you really analyze it, you can! Here’s the situation: In order to assure that you will win the nation’s biggest lotto jackpot, all you have to do is buy up every single combination of numbers. How many are we talking about? Fewer than you might think. If you’re new, six numbers are drawn from a tumbler filled with 59 white balls, with the final “powerball” drawn from a different tumbler of 39 red balls. Because each of the six white balls removes a number from the pool, and the order doesn’t matter, the odds are probably better than you’d imagine. You need to buy just 195,249,054 tickets, at $2 each, to guarantee a win! Spend $390,498,108 and you walk away with $500 million. Nice ROI there! When the Powerball jackpot went unclaimed Saturday, it began to make sense to do this; obviously, the cost-benefit analysis doesn’t shake out with a smaller pot. Not that there aren’t logistical headaches involved in this plan … okay, more like nightmares. Taxes are a hindrance to profitability. You wouldn’t want to try for a modest $200 million. You need a jackpot high enough to leave an after-tax profit. Second, you might need a few people to go in on it with you if you want to front that entire amount, and they’d want a cut of the winnings most likely. Sharing the pot inevitably means taking home less. A necessary evil in this case, though. Then there’s the time commitment involved. If it takes one second to print each number combination, it would still take six YEARS to print all the tickets. With only four days between Saturday and Wednesday drawings, you’re in a tough spot. This time constraint means that you’d have to expand the operation … around 565 people could get the job done. Of course, then you have to split the pot 565 ways. Also, the one person with the winning ticket then has to actually share the Powerball jackpot, if they even buy tickets with their share of the upfront costs. So … your 565 operatives had better be some trustworthy souls. You may need more like 600-700 just for support and managerial staff, come to think of it. Also, lottery machines are bound to run out of paper and ink printing those tickets and might pose an obstacle … so you’d need even more people or more time. Okay, maybe it’s better to just play the odds like everyone else. Hey, you never know.
Mitt Romney can still enjoy a nice silver lining following his loss in the 2012 presidential election, brags adviser Stuart Stevens, who feels the Republican won where it counts. Seriously, this isn’t an Onion article … these are real quotes. Stevens penned an op-ed in the Washington Post today arguing that by winning wealthier and whiter voters, Romney secured a huge moral victory over Obama. “On November 6, Mitt Romney carried the majority of every economic group except those with less than $50,000 a year in household income,” Stevens wrote. “He carried the majority of middle-class voters. While John McCain lost white voters under 30 by 10 points, Romney won those voters by seven points, a 17-point shift.” “The Republican Party has problems, but as we go forward, let’s remember that any party that captures the majority of the middle class must be doing something right.” As a result, “Republican ideals – Mitt Romney – carried the day.” The implied argument – at least how some interpreted it – that poorer votes are inferior seems to undercut the campaign’s central message over the last two years. Then again, so did Romney’s own 47 percent comment. Mitt’s top concern in 2012 was providing jobs for the jobless, he said again and again and again, with unemployed Americans highlighted in ads, speeches and photo-ops. Those individuals make under $50,000 a year almost by definition. Stevens notably never mentioned jobs and unemployment, instead focusing on how Romney championed “the moral case for free enterprise and conservative economics.” Unfortunately for Romney, poor and minority votes counted just the same as the allegedly superior votes Stevens favored, and they went for the other guy. The 2012 election results were not even all that close: a margin of 3.5 points, over four million overall votes cast and an electoral college blowout for Barack Obama. Powered by strong turnout and margins among young voters, Latinos, African Americans, and women, he won a second term despite a struggling economy. Why? Stevens had an explanation for that, too, of course. Obama was “a charismatic African American president with a billion dollars, no primary and a media that often felt morally conflicted about being critical. How easy is that to replicate?” We imagine his supporters will have a rebuttal or 20. Wonder if the Prez himself will bring this up during lunch with Romney at the White House tomorrow.
U.S. women’s soccer goalkeeper Hope Solo and former NFL tight end Jerramy Stevens were married Tuesday … one day after Stevens’ domestic violence arrest . Seattle’s KING5 reported Solo and Stevens wed Tuesday night in a small ceremony near Snohomish, Wash. Only close family and friends were in attendance. Dave Mahler, a sports-talk radio host on Seattle’s KJR, also tweeted the big news: “Confirmed: Jerramy Stevens and Hope Solo were married tonight.” “Events of yesterday morning didn’t change plans. Sounds like more facts comin.” Stevens, 33, and Solo, 31, applied for a marriage license Thursday, November 8. Stevens was arrested early Monday for fourth-degree domestic violence assault. He was not charged and was later released by a judge due to lack of evidence. Kirkland police say the case was still under investigation, and charges could be brought later if prosecutors and police find other evidence, a police said. According to the police report, Stevens said he and Solo had been arguing over whether they would live in Washington or Florida after the marriage. Solo appeared in court Tuesday but left without saying anything to reporters. Police in Kirkland responded to a disturbance at a home around 3:45 a.m. Monday involving a physical altercation between eight people during a party. Officers then determined based on information and observations that there was probable cause to arrest Stevens for investigation of fourth-degree assault. Court records show the victim was Solo, who received a cut to her elbow. Solo’s 34-year-old brother, Marcus, called 911, and that he and Solo told officers there was a party and blamed the disturbance on 2-3 unknown men at the party. Marcus Solo told police he used a stun gun on one of the men, who left the party before police arrived, according to court records. Then it gets weirder still. According to court documents, a police officer found Stevens, “who appeared to be hiding,” lying between the bed and the wall in an upstairs bedroom. Jerramy Stevens told officers he was sleeping on the floor and didn’t hear the fight. The officer saw signs of a fight, and dried blood on Stevens’ shirt. The officer noted in his affidavit for probable cause for arrest that he arrested Stevens: Based on his admission that he argued with Hope Solo The injury to her elbow Signs of a fight in the bedroom where Stevens was found Blood on Stevens’ shirt One 32-year-old woman was taken to the hospital for treatment of a hip injury, and another man suffered multiple bumps, scrapes and contusions. Stevens was selected with the No. 28 pick of the 2002 draft by the Seattle Seahawks after playing at the University of Washington. He played in the NFL for nine years. He also was arrested on reckless driving charges in 2003 in a Seattle suburb and in 2007 when he was charged with driving under the influence in Scottsdale, Ariz. In 2010, while he was playing for Tampa Bay, he was arrested the night before a game for possession of marijuana. He was released immediately – by Tampa.
U.S. women’s soccer goalkeeper Hope Solo and former NFL tight end Jerramy Stevens were married Tuesday … one day after Stevens’ domestic violence arrest . Seattle’s KING5 reported Solo and Stevens wed Tuesday night in a small ceremony near Snohomish, Wash. Only close family and friends were in attendance. Dave Mahler, a sports-talk radio host on Seattle’s KJR, also tweeted the big news: “Confirmed: Jerramy Stevens and Hope Solo were married tonight.” “Events of yesterday morning didn’t change plans. Sounds like more facts comin.” Stevens, 33, and Solo, 31, applied for a marriage license Thursday, November 8. Stevens was arrested early Monday for fourth-degree domestic violence assault. He was not charged and was later released by a judge due to lack of evidence. Kirkland police say the case was still under investigation, and charges could be brought later if prosecutors and police find other evidence, a police said. According to the police report, Stevens said he and Solo had been arguing over whether they would live in Washington or Florida after the marriage. Solo appeared in court Tuesday but left without saying anything to reporters. Police in Kirkland responded to a disturbance at a home around 3:45 a.m. Monday involving a physical altercation between eight people during a party. Officers then determined based on information and observations that there was probable cause to arrest Stevens for investigation of fourth-degree assault. Court records show the victim was Solo, who received a cut to her elbow. Solo’s 34-year-old brother, Marcus, called 911, and that he and Solo told officers there was a party and blamed the disturbance on 2-3 unknown men at the party. Marcus Solo told police he used a stun gun on one of the men, who left the party before police arrived, according to court records. Then it gets weirder still. According to court documents, a police officer found Stevens, “who appeared to be hiding,” lying between the bed and the wall in an upstairs bedroom. Jerramy Stevens told officers he was sleeping on the floor and didn’t hear the fight. The officer saw signs of a fight, and dried blood on Stevens’ shirt. The officer noted in his affidavit for probable cause for arrest that he arrested Stevens: Based on his admission that he argued with Hope Solo The injury to her elbow Signs of a fight in the bedroom where Stevens was found Blood on Stevens’ shirt One 32-year-old woman was taken to the hospital for treatment of a hip injury, and another man suffered multiple bumps, scrapes and contusions. Stevens was selected with the No. 28 pick of the 2002 draft by the Seattle Seahawks after playing at the University of Washington. He played in the NFL for nine years. He also was arrested on reckless driving charges in 2003 in a Seattle suburb and in 2007 when he was charged with driving under the influence in Scottsdale, Ariz. In 2010, while he was playing for Tampa Bay, he was arrested the night before a game for possession of marijuana. He was released immediately – by Tampa.