Tag Archives: antonio

Tony Parker’s Ex-Teammate — Divorced

Filed under: Brent Barry , Erin Barry , Tony Parker , Eva Longoria , TMZ Sports , Break-ups Tony Parker ‘s former San Antonio Spurs teammate Brent Barry is officially divorced from Erin Barry … the woman who adamantly denied having a sexting relationship with TP during his marriage to Eva Longoria . TMZ has obtained documents from Bexar… Read more

Read this article:
Tony Parker’s Ex-Teammate — Divorced

NBA Star’s UFO Sighting … EXPLAINED

Filed under: Manu Ginobili , TMZ Sports San Antonio Spurs star Manu Ginobili can rest easy tonight — because TMZ has uncovered the truth behind the UFOs he spotted over L.A. earlier this month … and turns out, Red Bull is to blame!!! A rep for the company tells TMZ … a team of Red Bull… Read more

See the article here:
NBA Star’s UFO Sighting … EXPLAINED

UFO Expert — On Board with NBA Star’s Theory

Filed under: Manu Ginobili , TMZ Sports Here’s a shocker — a UFO expert is actually agreeing with San Antonio Spurs star Manu Ginobili … that the unidentified flying object the NBA star saw earlier this month was NOT an alien spacecraft. UFO aficionado Robert Kiviat — the executive… Read more

View original post here:
UFO Expert — On Board with NBA Star’s Theory

NBA Star In Possible UFO Encounter — Caught on Tape

San Antonio Spurs star Manu Ginobili wants answers — because dude spotted an unidentified flying object in L.A. earlier this month … and he’s desperately trying to figure out what the hell it was. Manu eyeballed the UFO when he was in town to play… Read more

See the rest here:
NBA Star In Possible UFO Encounter — Caught on Tape

Royal Engagement — What’s in it for Kate Middleton?

We know Prince William gets a bride, and Kate Middleton gets Princess Diana ‘s ring … but there’s some intense — and funny — debate about just about everything else, including Kate’s title. Check out TMZ on TV — click here to see your local… Read more

Read this article:
Royal Engagement — What’s in it for Kate Middleton?

Margarito’s Manager: I Wanted to Throw in the Towel

Filed under: Manny Pacquiao , TMZ Sports There was ONE person in Antonio Margarito ‘s corner this weekend who claims he wanted the fighter to bow out of the savage beatdown he was suffering at the hands of Manny Pacquiao … but Antonio refused to listen. Antonio underwent surgery in Dallas… Read more

See the article here:
Margarito’s Manager: I Wanted to Throw in the Towel

Karissa Shannon’s BF — Rolls-Royce Wannabe

Filed under: Sam Jones III , Karissa Shannon , You Might Want to Rethink Karissa Shannon ‘s sex tape partner wasn’t 100% honest when he implied that he owned a certain badass Rolls-Royce — because TMZ has learned … dude actually borrowed the car from a friend. Sam Jones III stepped out of the baller Rolls Phantom outside… Read more

Read the rest here:
Karissa Shannon’s BF — Rolls-Royce Wannabe

Paul Wall Beats Fan with a Microphone

Filed under: Paul Wall , You Might Want to Rethink Never give Paul Wall the finger — because based on this video, it doesn’t matter if dude’s in the middle of a concert … he will beat your ass with a microphone. It all went down Sunday night at the Low Low Car Show in San Antonio, Texas — Paul Wall… Read more

See the original post here:
Paul Wall Beats Fan with a Microphone

Antonio Valencia injury picture

Manchester United#39;s Ecuador midfielder Antonio Valencia receives treatment for an injury to his leg caused by a tackle from Rangers#39; Scottish defender Kirk Broadfoot (not pictured) during their UEFA Champions League Group C football match at Old Trafford in Manchester, on September 14. Manchester United winger Antonio Valencia will not play again this season after a freak injury in the 0-0 Champions League draw with Rangers left him with a fractured and dislocated ankle. Manager Sir Ale

Original post:
Antonio Valencia injury picture

Paul Conrad Dies at 86 | Pulitizer Prize-Winning Political Cartoonist Made Him One of Leading Provocateurs | Helped Push The Los Angeles Times to National Prominence

Political cartoonist Paul Conrad dies By James Rainey | 12:52 p.m. His fiercely confrontational cartoons made him one of the leading political provocateurs of the second half of the 20th century and helped push the Times to national prominence. He was 86. ' Paul Conrad dies at 86; Pulitzer Prize-winning political cartoonist helped bring The Los Angeles Times to national prominence http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-paul-conrad-20100905,0,3650589,full… . PART ONE… By James Rainey, Los Angeles Times September 4, 2010|12:52 p.m. Paul Conrad, whose fiercely confrontational editorial cartoons made him one of the leading political provocateurs of the second half of the 20th century and who helped push the Los Angeles Times to national prominence, has died. He was 86. Conrad died early Saturday of natural causes, surrounded by his family at his home in Rancho Palos Verdes, said his son David. Conrad won three Pulitzer Prizes, a feat matched by only two other cartoonists in the post- World War II era, while both thrilling and infuriating readers for more than 50 years with an unyielding liberal stance, rendered in savage black and white. Mayors, governors and presidents cringed at the prospect of being on the business end of Conrad's searing pen, while many Southern Californians made him their first stop as they sifted through The Times, the newspaper that was his principal home for nearly 30 years. While many other cartoonists angled for whimsy or the easy one-off, Conrad “specialized in hair shirts and jeremiads and harpoons to the heart,” former Times Editor Shelby Coffey III once wrote. The cartoonist, loud and often profane in person, viewed himself as a champion of the common man and relished combat with those he saw as protectors of the rich and privileged. His most prominent and enduring foils came in the person of two California politicians who rose to the presidency, Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan. The scandal-plagued Nixon named Conrad to his “enemies list” — a designation the cartoonist described as one of his greatest honors. Former Times Publisher Otis Chandler became accustomed to his breakfast being interrupted by either Reagan or wife Nancy, furious that the then-governor had been depicted, again, as dimwitted, mean-spirited or out of touch. “Conrad is … more than a legend in cartooning and an institution in American journalism,” Doug Marlette, one of many cartoonists inspired by that work, once said. “He is a force of nature; you measure Conrad on the Richter scale.” The author and essayist Pete Hamill called Conrad “a voice. And the voice is his alone: alternately savage, compassionate, brutal and ironic.” Conrad rose to prominence in a post-World War II era when many newspapers were at the height of their power and when he and other widely syndicated editorial cartoonists — including Herbert L. Block (Herblock), Bill Mauldin and Pat Oliphant—held a particular grip on the American psyche. Just before his death in 2007, the onetime editor of The Times' editorial pages, Anthony Day, worried that the skittish and contracting newspaper industry would no longer support a “genius” like Conrad. “It's easier to not make trouble,” Day said, “than to make trouble.” And Conrad loved making trouble. His righteous indignation was guided by a modest Midwestern upbringing, an abiding Catholic faith and what one chronicler called “a fanatic heart.” Many journalists like to talk of the imperative of afflicting the comfortable and comforting the afflicted. Conrad embraced the credo with abandon. “Don't ever accuse me,” he liked to say, “of being objective.” CONTINUED… added by: EthicalVegan