Men Who Like Showing Off Their Women’s Bodies Maybe we’re weird. Maybe we’re old-fashioned, but we don’t like to put damn-near nude pictures of our boo things on the Internet. We like to keep those things private. But these guys don’t see it that way. They enjoy showing off their ladies’ curves and cakes and revealing them to the world. While we enjoy looking, we do find it to be quite odd. But whatever floats their boats. Let’s look at the pics and see the ladies that get shown off.
Brandy is officially back!!! Last night B-Rocka performed at the Best Buy Theater in NYC and killed it! Click HERE to cop her new album “Two Eleven” today and peep the videos of her doing her thing below… Whitney Houston’s “I’m Your Baby Tonight”: “I Wanna Be Down” Yep. She definitely still got it!!! WENN
Before you post up at the theater to watch the series all over again, make sure you pack these must-haves. By Kara Warner Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart in “Breaking Dawn – Part 2” Photo: Summit
Hollywood.TV is your source for all the latest celebrity news, gossip and videos of your favorite stars! bit.ly – Click to Subscribe! Facebook.com – Become a Fan! Twitter.com – Follow Us! Oogieloves stormed Grauman’s Chinese Theater Sunday to celebrate the premiere of their movie “The Oogieloves in The Big Balloon Adventure”. The movie’s stars Jamie Pressly and Cloris Leachman along with the characters were all on hand for a Sunday Funday premiere. The children’s film is an “interactive film” and will encourage singing and dancing along in the theater by children and their parents.
Nelsan Ellis, known to many as Lafayette Reynolds on HBO’s vampire drama, True Blood, has landed a new role. Ellis has been cast as Martin Luther King Jr. in the forthcoming film, The Butler, reports Deadline.com… Continue
A few nights ago at the Best Buy Theater in New York City, Hot 97 DJ Peter Rosenberg celebrated his birthday with a night of real Hip-Hop. The raucous crowd was treated to a night of beats, rhymes, and a little bit of mayhem…. Continue
The Aurora theater where twelve people were tragically killed while watching “The Dark Knight Rises” is stepping up to pay funeral expenses for the victims. According to TMZ reports : The theater where James Holmes opened fire last week, killing 12 people, is offering to pick up funeral expenses for the victims’ families … TMZ has learned. Several funerals were held Friday in Aurora, Colorado — one of them for Rebecca Wingo … a 32-year-old mother of 2. Sources close to Rebecca’s mother tell TMZ, Cinemark — corporate owners of the Century 16 Theater — called the chapel where Rebecca’s service was held … and offered to foot the bill for her funeral. In fact, the owner of the chapel says Cinemark told him it was willing to provide financial backing to all victims’ families — by paying any funeral expenses not covered by the Crime Victims’ Compensation Fund. We’re told Rebecca’s mother turned down the offer. It’s unclear how many funeral homes and chapels in Aurora got the same call. Cinemark hasn’t returned our call for comment yet. This sounds like a good move, but we wonder if it was motivated by hopes that the families won’t sue! Can’t help but think that’s why Rebecca’s mom would turn down having her funeral paid for. Do you think the theater should step forward when it comes to paying for the injured victims’ hospital bills too?
As many times as this kid was shot , he’s lucky to be alive. An 18-year-old man who was shot in the head, leg, arm and chest told friends he felt as if he’d been “punched in the head” and his “arm … blown off” after he was hit by gunfire in an Aurora, Colo., movie theater Friday morning. Louis Duran, 18, was released from the hospital and is recovering at home, said his high school friend Jahlil Hall. Hall visited Duran this morning and said his friend knew he was “lucky to be alive.” Duran skipped the usual Thursday basketball game he plays with Hall and friends, and instead attended the midnight screening of “The Dark Night Rises” with two high school friends, Hall said. He was sitting toward the front of the theater when he was hit by a spray of bullets unleashed by alleged gunman James Holmes. “He said it felt like getting punched in the head and it was really hot,” Hall said. “Then he felt like his arm had been blown off. He ran over to the stairs and some random guy helped him out of the theater.” One friend was grazed by a bullet, while another is in the intensive care unit at University Medical of Aurora, Hall said. Once outside, Duran took off his shirt and wrapped it around his head in order to apply pressure to his wounds, Hall said. “He was on the phone with his mom and just in complete shock,” he said. Duran was transported to the Medical Center of Aurora, where he was treated and released. “There are a ton of pellets still in him,” Hall said. “He’s lucky to be alive, definitely.” We wish him a speedy recovery. Our thoughts and prayers go out to all the friends and families of the victims at this time. Source Photo courtesy Jahlil Hall
If you’re gearing up to see Ridley Scott’s sci-fi flick for the first time, make sure you’re well-versed in its extraterrestrial lingo. By Kevin P. Sullivan Michael Fassbender in “Prometheus” Photo: If you’re headed out to theaters this weekend to see Ridley Scott ‘s ” Prometheus ,” there are two likely explanations: You’ve been hounded by your friends who have already seen it with theories and a need for discussion or you’re one of those friends and need to see it again. Either way, “Prometheus” is a dense movie filled with symbolism, call-backs to the original “Alien,” and mysteries with elliptical answers, so it might be best to go into the theater with a bit of a primer for what’s about to happen. Whether you’re new to “Prometheus” or you’re very familiar with the work of Weyland Industries, here are some things to consider before heading into the theater. There are no major spoilers here, but if you want to go into “Prometheus” completely fresh, you should probably stop reading. Prometheus : The titan who molded man from clay and gave them fire, which he stole from the gods. As punishment, an eagle repeatedly ate his liver, which regenerated daily. Weyland Industries : The corporation that funds the mission in “Prometheus,” creators of the David 8 android, and antecedent to the Weyland-Yutani Corporation from the “Alien” films. Peter Weyland : Founder of Weyland Industries, played by Guy Pearce. David 8 : An android programmed to assist human life and understand human emotions. He is played by Michael Fassbender in “Prometheus.” Xenomorph : This classic creature from “Alien” bleeds a corrosive acid. It is “a survivor… unclouded by conscience, remorse, or delusions of morality.” The perfect organism. Space Jockey : An enormous, dead humanoid found at the beginning of “Alien” with his chest burst open, surrounded by xenomorph eggs. Facehugger : A developmental stage of the classic “Alien” xenomorph. This creature attaches itself to a host’s face and deposits an embryo in his or her stomach. Chestburster : The phase after facehugger. Once an embryo fully develops, it will exit its host through the abdomen. “Lawrence of Arabia” : The 1962 David Lean film starring Peter O’Toole as T.E. Lawrence. This film appears in “Prometheus” and is the origin of such quotes as “Big things have small beginnings,” “There is nothing in the desert and no man needs nothing,” and “The trick, William Potter, is not minding that it hurts.” LV223 : An Earth-like moon where scientists travel to in “Prometheus” after finding star maps on several prehistoric drawings. LV426 : An inhospitable planetoid where the crew of the Nostromo encounter the Space Jockey and the xenomorph eggs. Check out everything we’ve got on “Prometheus.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .
“Olivier spent his last 30 years as a workaholic, reproducing the same rigorous performance schedule that had characterized his rise to fame. He worked so intensely, and for so long, that many interpreted it as a means of making penance for his behavior toward Leigh. Still, there are dozens of plays, movies, roles, and dalliances this piece hasn’t even touched. I could spend another 4,500 words of your time simply describing his 1960s career, the influence of his filmic Shakespeare, or the dozens of accounts, some more substantial than others, that he was bisexual. But for all of his genius, all of his work in sustaining and rejuvenating the theater before, during, and after World War II, his passion for Leigh — and hers in return — remains his defining feature.” [ The Hairpin ]