Tag Archives: consequences

When Tax Day Strikes Celebs: Method Man, Willie Nelson And Other Evaders

Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry and Ron Isley have also suffered the consequences of unpaid taxes. By Kyle Anderson Method Man Photo: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic April 15 is a feared day for many, as it marks the deadline for filing your annual income taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. (If this is news to you, feel free to finish reading this later while you scramble to find your W2.) Paying taxes as a rock star can be difficult, as you usually have dozens of different income streams, spend most of your time on the road and can’t often keep track of your own payroll (or, you know, what month it is). Sometimes it helps to move to a tax-free foreign country, like David Bowie (who moved to Switzerland), the Rolling Stones (France) and Cat Stevens (Brazil). Though it seems like you could avoid the burden forever, the IRS tends to catch up with everybody. When that happens, they’re either prosecuted (like Method Man, who was arrested and charged with tax evasion based on the $33,000 he owed to Uncle Sam) or else you have to come up with a pretty inventive way to come up with the cash. Take country-music icon Willie Nelson, who through either ignorance or unwillingness never bothered to pay his taxes over his hugely successful career. When the IRS caught up with him in 1997, they handed him a bill for $16.7 million. Unable to pay the government, Nelson quickly released the double album The IRS Tapes: Who’ll Buy My Memories? and sold off most of his possessions. He managed to pay it off after settling for an undisclosed amount, and luckily many of the items auctioned off were purchased by friends of his, so he was able to recover most everything. Nelson was perhaps taking a cue from Jerry Lee Lewis, who in 1984 was face-to-face with a prison term for the $560,000 he owed in unpaid taxes. In order to avoid hard time, Lewis did what any desperate rock star would do: He set up a phone number that allowed callers to hear the Killer tell stories from his childhood for the price of $2.75 per minute. It was lucrative enough to get him out of a jam. While Lewis managed to avoid doing time, rock legend Chuck Berry wasn’t so lucky. In 1979, the government decided that the man who invented rock and roll owed them $200,000 in unpaid taxes. It was the third time the government had told him to pay up, so Berry pleaded guilty to tax evasion, spent four months in jail and put forth 1,000 hours of community service. That was a walk in the park compared to Ron Isley, who thought that declaring bankruptcy would allow him to sidestep doing time. Not so, as the founder of the Isley Brothers spent 37 months behind bars in a federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, for tax evasion. Even then, he might have gotten off easy, as the maximum sentence he could have faced was 26 years. How do celebs always get themselves in a bind with the taxman? Did we miss any rock-star tax stories? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Method Man

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When Tax Day Strikes Celebs: Method Man, Willie Nelson And Other Evaders

When Taxes Strike Celebs: Method Man, Willie Nelson And Other Victims

Jerry Lee Lewis, Chuck Berry and Ron Isley have also suffered the consequences of unpaid taxes. By Kyle Anderson Method Man Photo: Jeff Kravitz/FilmMagic April 15 is a feared day for many, as it marks the deadline for filing your annual income taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. (If this is news to you, feel free to finish reading this later while you scramble to find your W2.) Paying taxes as a rock star can be difficult, as you usually have dozens of different income streams, spend most of your time on the road and can’t often keep track of your own payroll (or, you know, what month it is). Sometimes it helps to move to a tax-free foreign country, like David Bowie (who moved to Switzerland), the Rolling Stones (France) and Cat Stevens (Brazil). Though it seems like you could avoid the burden forever, the IRS tends to catch up with everybody. When that happens, they’re either prosecuted (like Method Man, who was arrested and charged with tax evasion based on the $33,000 he owed to Uncle Sam) or else you have to come up with a pretty inventive way to come up with the cash. Take country-music icon Willie Nelson, who through either ignorance or unwillingness never bothered to pay his taxes over his hugely successful career. When the IRS caught up with him in 1997, they handed him a bill for $16.7 million. Unable to pay the government, Nelson quickly released the double album The IRS Tapes: Who’ll Buy My Memories? and sold off most of his possessions. He managed to pay it off after settling for an undisclosed amount, and luckily many of the items auctioned off were purchased by friends of his, so he was able to recover most everything. Nelson was perhaps taking a cue from Jerry Lee Lewis, who in 1984 was face-to-face with a prison term for the $560,000 he owed in unpaid taxes. In order to avoid hard time, Lewis did what any desperate rock star would do: He set up a phone number that allowed callers to hear the Killer tell stories from his childhood for the price of $2.75 per minute. It was lucrative enough to get him out of a jam. While Lewis managed to avoid doing time, rock legend Chuck Berry wasn’t so lucky. In 1979, the government decided that the man who invented rock and roll owed them $200,000 in unpaid taxes. It was the third time the government had told him to pay up, so Berry pleaded guilty to tax evasion, spent four months in jail and put forth 1,000 hours of community service. That was a walk in the park compared to Ron Isley, who thought that declaring bankruptcy would allow him to sidestep doing time. Not so, as the founder of the Isley Brothers spent 37 months behind bars in a federal prison in Terre Haute, Indiana, for tax evasion. Even then, he might have gotten off easy, as the maximum sentence he could have faced was 26 years. How do celebs always get themselves in a bind with the taxman? Did we miss any rock-star tax stories? Let us know in the comments below!

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When Taxes Strike Celebs: Method Man, Willie Nelson And Other Victims

Spanking Kids Leads to Aggression

Disciplining young children is one key role of the parents. Some people would have disagreed with that and some doesn’t have any problems with it. In any ways, punishing them through spanking or any forms of corporal punishment is a thicker and more serious issue. There are different organizations in America that supports violence against children. The American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) does not encourage parents to spank their children as a reason for disciplining them. This may result to a long-term effectiveness as behavior-changing tactics. Thus, the AAP campaigns strategies such as time-outs when children misbehave, which helps them reflect on what mistakes they have committed. It helps them develop their behavior in a good way by weighing the consequences that they will receive. However, as many parents would think best, few responses bring about the immediate interruption of a full-blown tantrum like a swift slap on the back. Some Universities provide strongest evidence against spanking: of all 2,000 youngsters in the study, those who were slapped more frequently at age 3 are more likely to be aggressive by age 5. This research works on the downfall of corporal punishment. Spanking children can be a good way of disciplining them but it is better if we educate them in a nice way. Spanking Kids Leads to Aggression is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Conservative journalist David Frum admits that the GOP screwed up concerning the health care bill

I know you are feeling good about today, but I encourage you to read this and allow yourself to feel even better! Conservatives and Republicans today suffered their most crushing legislative defeat since the 1960s. It’s hard to exaggerate the magnitude of the disaster. Conservatives may cheer themselves that they’ll compensate for today’s expected vote with a big win in the November 2010 elections. But: (1) It’s a good bet that conservatives are over-optimistic about November – by then the economy will have improved and the immediate goodies in the healthcare bill will be reaching key voting blocs. (2) So what? Legislative majorities come and go. This healthcare bill is forever. A win in November is very poor compensation for this debacle now. So far, I think a lot of conservatives will agree with me. Now comes the hard lesson: A huge part of the blame for today’s disaster attaches to conservatives and Republicans ourselves. At the beginning of this process we made a strategic decision: unlike, say, Democrats in 2001 when President Bush proposed his first tax cut, we would make no deal with the administration. No negotiations, no compromise, nothing. We were going for all the marbles. This would be Obama’s Waterloo – just as healthcare was Clinton’s in 1994. Only, the hardliners overlooked a few key facts: Obama was elected with 53% of the vote, not Clinton’s 42%. The liberal block within the Democratic congressional caucus is bigger and stronger than it was in 1993-94. And of course the Democrats also remember their history, and also remember the consequences of their 1994 failure. This time, when we went for all the marbles, we ended with none. (You can read the rest of Frum’s article here ) I have made this point over and over again on this blog. The reason the Republicans fought so hard, and played so dirty, is because they knew that passing this bill would be extremely helpful to the Democrats in the long run. When they saw it getting closer and closer to passing the Republicans and the Teabaggers, became more and more horrified that after this was passed, without their support, they would be marginalized or even cease to exist. I don’t how long it will take before

Media Matters points out multiple falsehoods in recent Palin Facebook post.

I posted about his yesterday, but Media Matters has used its team of researchers to do a much fuller investigation of her many illogical statements and outright lies. Palin’s Facebook ghostwriter blogs the

Bristol Palin to make acting debut.

Bristol Palin, arguably the most famous teen mother in America, will make her acting debut playing herself on ABC Family’s “The Secret Life of the American Teenager,” the network announced today. “I am thrilled to be on this show and to be part of a program that educates teens and young adults about the consequences of teen pregnancy,” Palin said in a statement. First I would like to say I am very happy that Bristol gets the opportunity to follow Levi’s dream of being an actor. (Did anybody else ever hear that Bristol wanted to act before?) However I am a little puzzled by the show that she chose to make her debut. According to a statement from ABC Family, the show “deals honestly and directly with the consequences of an unplanned pregnancy in a non-exploitative manner and explores how the core character’s relationships with her mother, father, sister and friends are affected. . . . We hope the show encourages teenagers and parents to open up a dialogue about issues important to them. . . .” I mean Bristol’s tale of being a teen mother is hardly typical, now is it? First her pregnancy gets announced to the national media during a presidential campaign. She then spends several months cohabitating with her boyfriend in Wasilla while her mother is giving speeches across the country. Then she supposedly gives birth to her baby in December but hides from view until February 16, when she suddenly reappears on the Greta Van Susteren show where she, quite truthfully, admits that “abstinence isn’t realistic”. During the time between giving birth and making her television appearance Bristol kicks her “fiancee” to the curb. Next she appears as an ambassador for Candies , but for some reason seems to do very little to earn the title. (Sound familiar?) And then, just like her mother, she quits and we hear very little from her until recently. Today Bristol lives in a compound on a dead lake, and allows her mother to sic her attack lawyer on the boy who made her the most famous teen mother in the world in order to wrest custody of their child away from him. Somehow I don’t see a lot of teens relating to Bristol’s bizarre life. And I do not want to be cruel but Bristol always appeared to be VERY uncomfortable in front of the camera so I kind of wonder how she will do when she is expected to remember lines of dialogue and emote on command. Still it will be interesting to see if yet another rumor gets confirmed when we see her appear before the camera again. Hmm I wonder if this will be filmed in the Wasilla studio, or if Bristol has to leave her babies (However many there are!) in order to fly out of state? I know a VERY nice family that would be glad to watch at least one of them for her. Update: It looks like Bristol is not the only one getting ready for her close up . This will be Sarah’s first time on the show in anything other than a brief skit. I wonder if Leno has the guts to turn to her and ask “So, what about all of those babies?”

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Bristol Palin to make acting debut.

B.G. Is Optimistic About Gun-Possession Case

On the heels of Lil Boosie, Lil Wayne verdicts, rapper says he feels good about his own prospects. By Shaheem Reid B.G

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B.G. Is Optimistic About Gun-Possession Case

Domestic Violence Victims Don’t Have To Cope Alone

Rihanna and Chris Brown shed light on the issue of dating abuse. By Gil Kaufman Photo: Stockbyte Victims of domestic violence often feel ashamed, confused, embarrassed and humiliated after being assaulted by their partners. Though in many instances the victims keep those feelings to themselves, they’re better off if they share them with a specialist who can help them work through the trauma

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Domestic Violence Victims Don’t Have To Cope Alone

Chris Brown Opens Up About Rihanna Assault In MTV News Special

‘I don’t want to be that person,’ he tells Sway during ‘Chris Brown: The Interview.’ By Jayson Rodriguez Chris Brown Photo: MTV News Chris Brown opened up about his assault on former girlfriend Rihanna during the MTV News special “Chris Brown: The Interview” on Friday (November 6), elaborating on his destructive behavior, explaining his previous apologies and describing his ongoing therapy sessions. Brown told MTV News correspondent Sway that he has finally come to terms with the fact that he was capable of such violence.

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Chris Brown Opens Up About Rihanna Assault In MTV News Special

Climate change could kill 250,000 children next year

Climate change could kill 250,000 children next year, and the figure could rise to more than 400,000 by 2030, according to Save the Children. The charity warns that over 900 million children in the next generation will be affected by water shortages and 160 million more children will be at risk of catching malaria – one of the biggest killers of children under five – as it spreads to new parts of the world

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Climate change could kill 250,000 children next year