Tag Archives: France

Taylor Lautner’s Parisian Boat Ride

This weekend, Taylor Lautner was spotted leaving

Watch The Amazing Race Season 16 Episode 6 Cathy Drone? Online Stream

Watch your favorite Reality TV series “ The Amazing Race ” with its new episode entitles “Cathy Drone?” that released March 21, 2010. It’s a best show that you gonna wish to watch all the time. Get it free through streaming online. Current show and replays are always available on the specified television online. Synopsis of the episode: The seven remaining teams depart the Pit Stop at the church in Massiges, France on the sixth leg of a race around the world for one million dollars. (from TV viewer) To get access, visit and watch it here: Link 1: The Amazing Race Season 16 Episode 6 Cathy Drone? Link 2: The Amazing Race Season 16 Episode 6: Cathy Drone – Leg 6 (France) Link 3: The Amazing Race Season 16 Episode 6 Cathy Drone? Link 4: The Amazing Race Season 16 Episode 6 Cathy Drone? Watch The Amazing Race Season 16 Episode 6 Cathy Drone? Online Stream is a post from: Daily World Buzz Continue reading

Lady Gaga’s Prison GF Says Kissing Her Was ‘Electric’ [Interviews]

Heather Cassils is the awesome-looking woman who plays Lady Gaga ‘s prison girlfriend in the “Telephone” video. But she’s also a well-known artist in her own right. And she loved making out with Gaga. Doree: Were you familiar with Gaga’s work before and what did you think of it? Heather: I was not really all that familiar with her work. I had heard her music (how can you not) but what I really noticed was her appearances at the Grammys and I recall appreciating the radical outfit choices, the birdcage on the head and the bleeding performance. This is more what stuck in my head than her music because as a visual artist it was interesting to see her making reference all across the spectrum of performance art from Lee Bowery to Ron Athey. I was impressed that she was bringing these tropes into her work to bring these visuals to an entirely different audience. D: How’d you meet Gaga? Describe the process of getting asked/selected to be in the video. Were you immediately interested? H: I run my own personal training business out of a small gym in Silverlake. At my gym there is another trainer named Dallas Malloy. She is an amazing bodybuilder who is also a talented actor. Dallas called me randomly one day from an audition telling me that she a casting agent was looking for female bodybuilders. Apparently they could not find enough of them so Dallas thought of me because, although I am not as huge as pro builders, with the right camera work I can look massive. I thanked Dallas and told her that acting was not really my thing but when she told me it was to play a security guard in a woman’s prison for a Beyoncé/ Gaga video. With the mention of Beyoncé’s name I told her to give me the address. (I LOVE Destiny’s Child especially) I ended up being cast as an inmate and I went to set that day for the “camp” factor. I figured I could cross Beyoncé video off my list. Upon arriving, I was sent up to set, saddened to learn that Beyonce was rehearsing for the Grammys. We blocked the prison yard scene with a Lady Gaga double a few times. Escorted by an entourage, The Lady herself, came on set. Within minuets her people called me over. Draped in chains and clad in cat suit she extended her manicured hand to me. “Hello, I’m Lady Gaga.” “Hello, I’m Heather Cassils.” That’s how I met Lady Gaga—a bizarre and organic unfolding of events that can only take place in Los Angeles. D: Did you know what the storyline of the “Telephone” video was before you shot the scene? How was your role described to you? Are you wearing your own clothes or did they design a costume for you? H: I had no idea about the story line, except that I was to be a security guard in a woman’s prison scene ( which I thought was hilarious). My initial role was not described to me at all with the exception of the interactions I had with Gaga after meeting her. She looked me over and told me she wanted me to play her “girlfriend in prison.” She mulled over our interactions and said finally in definitively: “when I want some one I never go to them, they come to me… so you come to me.” She then told me I was to “touch her inappropriately.” As for costuming, the night before the shoot we were sent a list of clothing options to turn up in, items such as bikinis, thongs, high heels etc. At this point I panicked and called the casting director informing her that I do not do bikinis and heels. She assured me it would be okay if I turned up in some dark form fitting clothes. So I actually wore my girlfriend’s pants and leather vest that day. (Great thing about dating women is that you double your wardrobe possibilities). But generally I wear similar garb. I like to fashion my self after a Tom of Finland drawing or the illustrious art hustler of the ’70s Peter Berlin . I showed up dressed as you see in the video and was sent up to set. D: How does this video dovetail with your own art? H: In my artwork I use my body as my medium and I address many subjects, gender representation being one of them. I see the construction of my physique as a performance which purposely toys with the traditional process of Greek sculptors, who were said to find their ideal form by chipping away at a block of marble and discarding any unnecessary material. I see my body as a conceptual sculpture, a critique of the social pressure we feel to make our bodies conform to an aesthetic, binary gendered and cultural ideal. People have all sorts of reactions to my body, within the context of my art work as well as being out in the world. When I lived in London, I had a group of people pull their car over to ask me what gender I was, they just had to know, because the in between was too much for them. Not knowing and the suspension of disbelief and what that does to people—it starts with the body, but it can translate into all kinds of other important things. Visual impressions have a lot of power, more power than language, for this reason I see my being included in the Gaga video as a sort of infiltration. So if my job as artist is to think about how various symbol combine to make meaning, than I guess one could say that being in the Gaga video, and all the dialogue that has come out of being included in the video, is an extension of my art practice. D: How many takes did you have to do to get the kiss down? What was it like to kiss Lady Gaga? Is she a good kisser? H: The kiss was down from the get go. It happened very naturally and organically. I leaned into smell her and I started by kissing her neck. It was electric and when I got to her mouth, she actually kissed me. Kissing lady Gaga was like kissing any beautiful woman you feel a connection with, as soon as I touched her she was just that, very sensitive and responsive. It even eclipsed the crazy cigarette glasses that were smoking. I think we did four or five takes, it all happened so fast, it was a bit of a blur. By the last takes we were brushing ashes off each other and coughing and laughing. Talk about second hand smoke! But really it was a performance and that yes she is a good kisser but kissing my girlfriend is even more powerful as I’m totally under her spell. D: Why is it important for queer artists to increase their visibility? What are other ways you’re doing that? Do you consider yourself a political artist? Why or why not? H: It is important for queer artists to increase their visibility because it offers up options. Since I have done this video I have had over 15,000 people look at my artist website . To my surprise I have gotten a ton of really young people contacting me, telling me how much they appreciate what I have been articulating in the media and also how much they connect with my art. Some of these letters are from very young queer and disenfranchised people, who live in smaller cities with no support. Teens have written me from Germany, France and Scotland, telling me of their feelings of alienation and that by being the artist that I am, and by being outspoken about my beliefs that I have helped them alleviate their own personal feelings of shame around gender identity and sexuality. To me this is truly an honor and the ultimate service I can provide as a cultural producer. My work starts with my own body, which I have manipulated via diet and exercise to produce a physique that is not usually associated with the female gender. I see life as a sort of performance art work and that every gesture you make, every way you present yourself is a possibility to author an experience for those surrounding you which could be art. As for my more formal art practice, I create living paintings where you use a live element to have people really stay with the composition of the piece. For my most recent performance “Tiresius” I stood in a plexi podium, and fit my body inside a classical Greek male torso carved from ice, which I melted over a 5 hour period with the heat from my body. Tiresius, the Greek mythological character, makes frequent appearances in the arts – from Dante’s Inferno to T.S. Eliot’s The Wasteland, he is a crucial but almost always marginal figure straddling time, gender, life and death. Here I cast the story of Tiresius as one of endurance and transformation, in which masculinity both freezes the body, and melts away. I perform Hard Times blind, wearing prosthetic mask that makes my eyes appear to have been removed from their sockets. I wear a frosted blond wig and the deep tan of a bodybuilding lady. Clad in a coral body thong, I teeter seven feet in the air on plank of slippery wood upheld by construction scaffolding. For six minutes I perform a body building routine in slow motion. I manipulate my body into the poses with a very controlled, methodical and deliberate slowness borrowed from butoh dance. Holding such deep muscular contractions for extended periods causes an overload of the central nervous system—all my limbs convulse and shake uncontrollably. Culturally and politically, we are in a state of rotting from the inside out. Hard Times responds to the culture of consumption and denial with an image of a body that sputters and twitches with exertion to maintain its manicured surface. I will be doing a performance of Hard Times in an upcoming Movement Research Spring 2010 Festival entitled “HARDCORPS” curated by A.L. Steiner, Aki Sasamoto, Melanie Maar and Walter Dundervill. My art is a thermometer of sorts, which takes the temperature of our cultural climate. Am I political artist? I suppose I am, because nothing exists outside the realm of politics. To say you are political is a political statement. D: Did you find anything problematic about Gaga’s video when you watched it in full? Do you feel that the LGBT community was fairly represented, or is it in itself a step forward that the community can be satirized in a mainstream video? H: No, I find nothing problematic about Gaga’s video. For some one to say that it is bad to have representation of LGBTQ people in prison in a music is just ludicrous to me. To be able to poke, to parody ourselves means we have come along way. They are missing the point. In addition, Gaga is exploiting all images in the video, including herself. The structure of the video claims everything from Thelma and Louise to early sexploitation films. My friend Michelle Johnson is an EXCELLENT filmmaker has mad a film recently called Lezploitation , which reclaims of exploitation films of this era through a lesbian gaze. While Gaga may not be a lesbian, Gaga is clearly not straight but certainly she is queer. I don’t see any problem with her reclaiming these images as well! D: Anything else you’d like to add? H: In a world where technology is king, where we interact more and more on line with social networking and e-mail, it is all the more important to construct real relationships in which you effect social change for the better. It is SO important to know where our hard fought free expression comes from. If Gaga’s work speaks to people, they might also be interested in the art work of amazing trans artist Zachary Drucker, David Wojnarovich and Leigh Bowery who died of AIDS, Ron Athey, Eleanor Antin, Michel Clarke, Maria Abramovich, Adrian Piper and Emory Douglas – the lead graphic artist for the Black Panthers. Some of these artists have more notoriety than others but there work is spellbindingly beautiful and so necessary for our consciousness. [ Photos by Clover Leary ]

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Lady Gaga’s Prison GF Says Kissing Her Was ‘Electric’ [Interviews]

Lindsay Lohan’s Sweet Leather Tights

Lindsay Lohan is still in Europe doing what the Europeans do best, wearing leather pants and looking bitchy. Here she is out it France somewhere prancing around town in her tight little leather leggings and jacket looking like she owns the place. Who’s paying for this trip? She’s been there for like a month, she has no money coming in, something’s up. I bet there’s a rich old dude somewhere pulling the strings. Bastard.

Fans In Uproar Over Angelina Jolie’s Role In ‘The Tourist’

Angelina Jolie is in Paris, France filming The Tourist and in doing so has sparked a bit of controversy. Fans of best selling author Patricia Cornwell are in an uproar that Jolie has been chosen to play Kay Scarpetta. Cornwell wrote the novel the film is based on and her main character is a middle-aged woman with short blonde hair and fans fear that The Changeling actress is too sexy and too glamorous for the role. Jodie Foster was originally offered the role but turned it down and Cornwell is excited to have Jolie on board. So is this much ado about nothing or should fans of the crime novels be worried?

Brad & Angie — The Face Sucking Continues

Filed under: Paparazzi Photo , Brad & Angelina , Party All The Time Angelina Jolie took a break on the set of her latest film in France earlier today … to remind herself what the inside of Brad Pitt’s mouth tastes likeAnd action! See Also Brad & Angie Sue Over Split Story Brangelina at Super Bowl — Game On! … Permalink

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Brad & Angie — The Face Sucking Continues

JFK’s Cheating Love Letters: The Modern Translation

John F. Kennedy married Jacqueline in 1953, but he was also creeping with many international beauties—including Sweden’s Gunilla von Post , who’s now auctioning off her love letters from the horndog president-to-be. He’s lucky there was no internet back then. JFK: “It now appears as though I shall be coming to Europe at the end of August. Will you be busy – or might it be possible to meet. What are you doing now. Will you stay there for the summer – or will you return to Cagnes. I thought I might get a boat and sail around the Mediterranean for two weeks – with you as crew. What do you think?” Modern translation: “Gurl U no we met on the internet but gurl U no I want U in real life. I’m coming to where U live soon, do U want to meet up? Let’s get a hotel and get nasty. Email me.” JFK: “I was very glad to hear from you again. I still believe I shall come to Europe in the fall – and would like to be sure that you could leave Sweden and come to Paris – or perhaps go to the Cote d’Azur (sic) – Qu’est-ce que vous pense (sic)? Let me know – as I do not want to drift through Europe waiting for a message from the North that never comes. Best, Jack.” Modern translation: “I’m glad UR into it 2 gurl. It’s like R. Kelly said, I wanna get nasty with U. But yo if I come U better not stand me up. For real.” JFK: “I am still in the hospital after two months. I was terribly disappointed that at the last moment I was not able to come to Europe – especially when you were going to be in Paris – and we could have had such a good time. I expect to be here another month – then go back to Washington in January – we will finish there in July – and then without fail – I shall come over – if you are not all settled down by then. Is there any chance you will be coming to the U.S.? Best, Jack.” Modern translation: “Gurl I am so mad I cud not come but I was broke. I still want 2 sex U up and down. Why don’t U come see me? Would save me some cash. Otherwise I still come C.U. Ok.” JFK: “”I must say you are a good correspondent. Under that beautiful, controlled face that still haunts me – beats a warm heart. There is a nurse on this floor that comes from Sweden. But she is dark-black haired. I say to her how could you leave the Venice of the North. But she replies – New York is so much nicer. How can she think that. She must be French. Why do you not suggest to the Swedish Automobile Association that they send you to the U.S. to explain the beauties of driving through Sweden to American tourists – or why couldn’t your cousin have been minister to Washington instead of Warsaw. I leave here Tuesday – and then go to Palm Beach for two months to stay with my family to recover and then go back to Washington. We stay in session in Washington until the end of July and then I return to the mountains of Cagnes. Your Jack. I shall be c/o J.P. Kennedy Palm Beach Florida until March – afterward back in Washington.” Modern translation: “Gurl I want U so bad. U even finer than beyonce. I’m going outta town, here’s my email so write me. My wife will never find out.” JFK: “Many thanks for your letter. I was delighted to hear from you. Send me your picture standing in front of 45 Skyransgatan (sic). I expect to be finished here around the first of August – I thought I would come to Europe around the 12th. If you are in Sweden – I shall come there. There must be a beach in Sweden. If you go to Italy I shall come there. I should like to get a boat and sail around. Qu’est-ce que vous pensez? And then in September – I shall go to Vietnam and Japan sadly. Did you see in the paper that our friend – the cold, frozen Mr. Gavin Welby – got married to Mr. Churchill’s secy. Something must have happened. I have not met your friend – Mona Boheman as yet – but I am looking forward to asking her if she knows a beautiful Swedish girl with a quiet smile who lived on top of a mountain in the Cote d’Azur (sic) in August 1953. Jack.” Modern translation: “Gurl U no U need to send me naked photo. Like they say in that song, U spin my head right round, right round.” JFK: “”I received your letter – and the picture of Visby and your photograph – which I liked best of all. I am now planning to come on the 29th of July on the Ile de France – which gets to Le Havre the 4th of August – or the 5th of August on the United States which gets in the 10th. Sweden must be more than 120 Swedish miles from Le Havre – or is a Swedish mile 5 times longer than anyone else’s mile? I assume you got to Stockholm to to meet your sister in August. Would you send me your address in Bastaad (sic) – and I will let you know exactly where I am. It is hot here – 101° – and I am anxious to leave and to see my Swedish friend. Jack.” Modern translation: “Gurl U no your picture turns me on. I’m coming to your neighborhood to get nasty. Get ready gurl. I am so hot.” Presidential! Read em all. [Pic via ]

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JFK’s Cheating Love Letters: The Modern Translation

Kanye West On Alexander McQueen: ‘We Lost An Angel!’

‘He was so important and special,’ West blogs. ‘We lost an angel!’ By Jayson Rodriguez Alexander McQueen and Kanye West Photo: Jon Furniss/ WireImage Kanye West has always had an affinity for fashion, and the late designer Alexander McQueen was one of the rapper’s favorite icons. McQueen was found dead in London on Thursday (February 11). West remembered McQueen in a blog post on Thursday afternoon calling the edgy designer a “genius” and an “angel.” “McQueen … So devastating,” ‘Ye wrote in all capital letters. “He was a genius … He was so important and special … We lost an angel!” It wasn’t the first time the 808s & Heartbreak star shouted out the popular British native on his blog. Last year, West heaped praise on McQueen’s spring show collection , and even posted images of the entire collection online. The entry spanned four pages on the rapper’s site and featured over 30 pairs of funky heels that enamored fans of McQueen’s with their obtuse designs. West, like Kelis, Rihanna, and Lady Gaga , among other musicians and celebrities, were huge fans of McQueen’s work. The rapper regularly attended McQueen’s fashion shows: In 2007, he and his former fiance, neophyte designer Alexis Pfeiffer, were spotted in France at McQueen’s show for Paris Fashion Week. And West attended McQueen’s showcase in New York last year, during Fall Fashion Week. West called the 2009 event in a blog post. Related Videos Remembering Alexander McQueen Related Photos Lady Gaga, Rihanna, More Love Alexander McQueen Fashion Related Artists Kanye West

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Kanye West On Alexander McQueen: ‘We Lost An Angel!’

Susan Boyle In Spain

Susan Boyle arrived in Madrid where she is scheduled to sing at the gala start of the Spanish version of ‘Strictly Come Dancing’ – ‘Mira Quien Baila’, broadcast on the Telecinco. And we just love how she’s rocking the hat.

Doug Reinhardt In Paris, France

Paris Hilton and Doug Reinhardt hit up Paris, France for a little romantic getaway.