Tag Archives: david

Elton John and David Furnish have a baby

SIR Elton John and partner David Furnish have welcomed their first child, born on Christmas Day.

See original here:
Elton John and David Furnish have a baby

Natalie Portman Loses Her Thong in Green-Band Trailer for Your Highness

As if on cue , Universal has released a new trailer for Your Highness , the medieval stoner comedy from David Gordon Green starring likely Oscar nominees Natalie Portman and James Franco. Let’s just get this out of the way pre-jump: Norbit , Norbit , Norbit , Norbit . Outstanding! Now onto the trailer.

Original post:
Natalie Portman Loses Her Thong in Green-Band Trailer for Your Highness

Scoop! Avatar’s Joel David Moore Storms Hawaii Five-0

Joel David Moore, who has played science nerds on screens both big ( Avatar ) and small ( Bones ), next will get his geek on for CBS’ Hawaii Five-0 , Movieline has learned exclusively.

Read more from the original source:
Scoop! Avatar’s Joel David Moore Storms Hawaii Five-0

Incessant: WaPo Promoting Yet Another Protest of Ants-on-Christ Video’s Removal

The Washington Post simply cannot stop putting protesters of the removal of an ants-on-Jesus video on the front page of the Style section. Once again in Friday's paper, art critic Blake Gopnik is publicizing gay artist A.A. Bronson's request that his huge color photo of his skeletal lover Felix Partz in his bed hours after he died in 1994 be removed from the exhibit:

David O. Russell Talks The Fighter

Director David O. Russell looks back on Mark Wahlberg from Three Kings to The Fighter .

See the rest here:
David O. Russell Talks The Fighter

David O. Russell Talks The Fighter

Director David O. Russell looks back on Mark Wahlberg from Three Kings to The Fighter .

The rest is here:
David O. Russell Talks The Fighter

The Most Random Celebs Ever Sing ‘Let It Be’

Filed under: Tonya Harding , Glenn Close , Music , Memba Them If you ever wanted to see the most haphazard assortment of D-list celebs ever assembled … like David Faustino , Right Said Fred , Alfonso Ribierio , Tonya Harding … oh, and Glenn Close sing along to the Beatles hit “Let It Be ,” then today is your… Read more

Continue reading here:
The Most Random Celebs Ever Sing ‘Let It Be’

Lee DeWyze Album Sales: Disastrous

Lee DeWyze seems like a very nice guy and certainly possess a lot of music talent. But these numbers speak for themselves: The American Idol champion moved 39,000 copies of his debut CD in its first week of sales, making him the least successful Idol finalist in history. Not just champion, mind you. But finalist. Period. Here’s a look at the first-week sales figures, and Billboard chart ranking, for each American Idol winner and runner-up, over the show’s first eight seasons. Best of luck, Crystal Bowersox, with your debut album, which drops on December 14. Season 8 No. 11, Kris Allen, Kris Allen (80,000) No. 3, Adam Lambert , For Your Entertainment (198,000) Season 7 No. 3, David Cook, David Cook (280,000) No. 2, David Archuleta, David Archuleta (183,000) Season 6 No. 10, Jordin Sparks, Jordin Sparks (119,000) No. 10, Blake Lewis, Audio Day Dream (98,000) Season 5 No. 2, Taylor Hicks, Taylor Hicks (298,000) No. 2, Katharine McPhee, Katharine McPhee (116,000) Season 4 No. 2, Carrie Underwood, “Some Hearts” (315,000) No. 4, Bo Bice, “The Real Thing” (227,000) Season 3 No. 8, Fantasia, Free Yourself (240,000) No. 52, Diana DeGarmo, Blue Skies (47,000) Season 2 No. 1, Ruben Studdard, Soulful (417,000) No. 1, Clay Aiken, Measure of a Man (613,000) Season 1 No. 1, Kelly Clarkson, Thankful (297,000) No. 20, Justin Guarini, Justin Guarini (57,000)

Excerpt from:
Lee DeWyze Album Sales: Disastrous

The boy who was raised a girl

When anyone has a baby the first question everyone asks is: “Is it a boy or a girl?” Biologically it is sex hormones, physical appearance and the sex chromosomes – XX for a woman, XY for a man – which dictate whether someone is male or female. But what happens if you bring up someone who was a boy as a girl? There was a case just like this in the 1960s, a case which ended in tragedy. Twins Bruce and Brian Reimer were born in Canada as two perfectly normal boys. But after seven months, both were having difficulty urinating. Acting on advice, the parents, Janet and Ron, took the boys to the hospital for a circumcision. The next morning, they received a devastating phone call – Bruce had been involved in an accident. Doctors had used a cauterizing needle instead of a blade, and the electrical equipment had malfunctioned and the surge in current had completely burned off Bruce's penis. “I could not comprehend what he was talking about,” Janet Reimer remembered. “I thought they were going to use a knife. I didn't know there was electricity involved.” Brian's operation was cancelled, and the Reimers took their twins home. Ideal experiment Months passed, and they had no idea what to do until one evening they met a man who would change their lives, and the lives of their twins, forever. Dr John Money was a psychologist specialising in sex changes. He believed that it wasn't so much biology that determines whether we are male or female, but how we are raised. “We just happened to be watching TV,” remembers Mrs Reimer. “Dr Money was on there and he was very charismatic, he seemed highly intelligent and very confident of what he was saying.” Janet wrote to Dr Money, and within a few weeks she'd taken Bruce to see him in Baltimore. For Dr Money the case provided the ideal experiment. Here was a child he believed should be brought up as the opposite sex, who even brought his own control group with him – an identical twin. If it worked this would provide irrefutable evidence that nurture could over-ride biology – and Dr Money genuinely believed that Bruce had a better chance of living a happy life as a woman than as a man without a penis. Lonely girl And so, when Bruce was 17 months old, he became Brenda. Four months later, on 3 July 1967, the first surgical step was taken – with castration. Dr Money stressed that, if they wanted the sex change to work, the parents must never let Brenda or her twin brother know that she had been born a boy. From now on they had a daughter, and every year they would go and visit Dr Money who was keeping track of the twins' progress in what became known as the John/Joan case. Brenda's identity was kept a secret. “The mother stated her daughter was much neater than her brother and, in contrast with him, disliked to be dirty,” Dr Money recorded at one of these yearly meetings. Continue reading the main story “Start Quote She was very rebellious. She was very masculine, and I could not persuade her to do anything feminine. Brenda had almost no friends growing up. Everybody ridiculed her, called her cavewoman.” End Quote Janet Reimer * Listen to the full documentary Although, in contrast, he also noted: “The girl had many tomboy traits, such as abundant physical energy, a high level of activity, stubbornness, and being often the dominant one in a girl's group.” By 1975, the children were nine years old, and Dr Money published a paper detailing his observations. The experiment, he said, had been a total success. “No-one else knows that she is the child whose case they read of in the news media at the time of the accident. “Her behaviour is so normally that of an active little girl, and so clearly different by contrast from the boyish ways of her twin brother, that it offers nothing to stimulate one's conjectures.” Suicidal Yet by the time Brenda reached puberty at 13, she was feeling suicidal. “I could see that Brenda wasn't happy as a girl,” Janet recalled. “She was very rebellious. She was very masculine, and I could not persuade her to do anything feminine. Brenda had almost no friends growing up. Everybody ridiculed her, called her cavewoman. “She was a very lonely, lonely girl.” Faced with their daughter's sadness, Brenda's parents stopped taking her to see Dr Money. Soon after, they did the one thing Dr Money had warned them against: they told her she had been born a boy. Within weeks Brenda had chosen to become David. He had re-constructive surgery and eventually he even married. He couldn't have children himself, but he loved being a stepfather to his wife's three children. Yet what David did not know was that he had still been immortalised as 'John/Jane' in medical and academic papers about gender reassignment, and that the “success” of Dr Money's theory was affecting other patients with similar gender issues. “He had no way of knowing that his case had found its way into a wide array of medical and psychological textbooks that were now establishing the protocols for how to treat hermaphrodites and people who lose their penis,” said John Colapinto, a journalist for the New York Times who uncovered David's story. “He could hardly believe that this was out there as a successful case and that it was affecting others like him.” Depression Now well into his thirties, David had become depressed. He'd lost his job and he was separated from his wife. In the spring of 2002 his brother died from a drug overdose. Two years later on 4 May 2004, when David was 38, Janet and Ron had a visit from the police. David had committed suicide. “They asked us to sit down and they said they had some bad news, that David was dead. I just cried.” Cases like “John/Joan” – where an accident had taken place – are very rare. But there are still decisions being made about whether to bring children up as male or female if they suffer from what is called Disorders of Sex Development. “We now have well-functioning multi-disciplinary teams around the country so that the decision will be taken by a variety of professionals,” explained Polly Carmichael from Great Ormond Street Hospital. “The parents would be much more involved in terms of the decision making process. In her experience, these decisions have been successful in helping children to grow up to lead a happy and fulfilling life. “One of the wonderful thing about working with children and their families is that children are amazingly resilient. “With support, I'm constantly amazed at what children are able to take on and manage.” http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-11814300 added by: Dmerza1989

Gift Guide: These Pillowcases Tell a Story (Literally)

Scottish visual artist David Shrigley has worked in a variety of media from cartoons to music videos to spoken-word pieces. Now he can add “bedding” to the list, with the mordantly whimsical bedtime story he’s written for two pillowcases that make a perfect gift for bedtime readers and entertainment-starved insomniacs alike.

Read the original post:
Gift Guide: These Pillowcases Tell a Story (Literally)