Celebrities Who Outed Others As Gay Celebrities love spilling the tea on each other. That includes calling each other gay . It happens and it’s a dirty game, especially if they’re outing celebrities who don’t want to have their sexual orientations go public. These celebrities tried to out others as gay and it got really messy. Look at the instances of it happening after the flip…
NBC has announced that Nightly News anchor Brian Williams will be suspended for six months without pay. Williams has been accused of lying about events that took place while he was covering the Iraq War in 2003. After he stated on his January 31 broadcast that he was riding in a helicopter that was shot down by an RPG, Williams was forced to admit that he had lied after several witnesses came forward with claims that Williams had, in fact, been miles away when the event that he described took place. Since then, Williams’ credibility has come under attack, and several media outlets have reported other instances in which Williams may have been less than honest with his viewers. Last week, the New York Post claimed that Williams lied his experiences in Hurricane Katrina . Today, the same newspaper reported that Williams lied about another war story , as he allegedly embellished the details of an incident that he experienced in Israel in 2007. Williams announced a leave of absence from the network on February 8, and there was widespread speculation about whether or not NBC would take disciplinary action against the beloved newsman. Williams reportedly had a meeting with network heads this afternoon where he was informed of their decision.
Occasionally volatile actor Alec Baldwin has issued an apology for the crazy incident that saw him get kicked off an American Airlines flight on Tuesday. Baldwin became irate after his game of Words With Friends was interrupted with the flight from JFK to LAX still at the gate, but the cabin doors closed. When he was asked to turn off his phone, Baldwin retreated to the bathroom and allegedly slammed the door, leading the pilot to call for his removal. Today, he’s feeling bad about all this. He writes: “First off, I would like to apologize to the other passengers onboard the American Airlines flight that I was thrown off of yesterday. It was never my intention to inconvenience anyone with my ‘issue’ with a certain flight attendant.” “I suppose a part of my frustration lay with the fact that I had flown American for over 20 years and was brand loyal, in the extreme.” “The ticket agents and Admiral’s Club staff have always been nothing but abundantly helpful, as I have flown hundreds of thousands of miles with the one carrier.” “My confusion began when the flight, already a half hour behind schedule, boarded, the door closed, and we proceeded to sit at the gate for another 15 minutes.” “I then did what I have nearly always done and that was to pull out my phone to complete any other messaging I had to do before take off.” “In nearly all other instances, the flight attendants seemed to be unbothered by and said nothing about such activity, by me or anyone else, until we actually were pulling away from the gate.” “In this case, while other people were still manipulating their own phones, this one employee singled me out to put my phone away. Afterward, we still sat at the gate. I pulled out my phone again, while others did the same.” “Again, I was singled out by this woman in the most unpleasant of tones. I guess the fact that this woman, who had decided to make some example of me, while everyone else was left undisturbed, did get the better of me.” “However, I have learned a valuable lesson.” Continue reading Alec’s mea culpa on The Huffington Post …