Tag Archives: interview

Scott Disick to Neighbor: You’re a Disgusting Whale!

In a new interview with Ryan Seacrest, Scott Disick admits he “has issues.” Hollywood’s biggest douche then went out and proved that yesterday, getting into a dispute with a neighbor because she criticized his parking job. Multiple sources confirm that Disick stood alongside Kourtney Kardashian outside their home and screamed at the woman next door: “Look at you! You know I have to sell my house cheaper because of you! You’re disgusting, I would kill myself if I looked like you… you whale!” Hmmm… is it too late to somehow make Scott look like her? Despite Kourtney’s best efforts to calm her pathetic man down, cops were called to the scene. But no arrests were made or even citations handed out. In the interview below, Disick follows the script given to him by reality show writers and opens up to Seacrest. Do you buy a word he says in it? Scott Disick Interview

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Scott Disick to Neighbor: You’re a Disgusting Whale!

On Farts and Nudity: Eclipse Stars Talk Tent Scene

It’s the most famous scene in Eclipse , perhaps even in the entire Twilight Saga: Bella, Edward and Jacob all end up in a single tent, as the former snuggles up to the latter and… … we don’t wanna ruin it for anyone that hasn’t read the book. But Robert Pattinson , Taylor Lautner and Kristen Stewart sat down with the latest issue of Entertainment Weekly and discussed putting these words on screen. Shooting the scene took two days, Lautner said, referring to it as “my favorite, because it’s the first time Edward and Jacob are actually able to connect and understand each other.” Pattinson describes the final outcome as “erotic,” with Stewart explaining why: “In the book there’s a serious sexual tension. As I’m sleeping, Jacob is staring over my vulnerable body, and he’s naked in this f- - -ing sleeping bag because you heat up faster that way, and Jacob and Edward are leveling with each other. From there, the pair exhibited the kind of chemistry that has helped make the Twilight Saga so huge – and, let’s face it, has made Rob and Kristen a couple, even if they won’t admit it. This is the exchange that concluded this excerpt from the interview: Pattinson : I can’t really get over the fact that the word thought sounds like fart . Stewart : The word thought does not sound like fart. Pattinson : It does. Stewart : Maybe because you are an English person. Pattinson : The opening line of that scene is “Can you at least keep your farts to yourself?” I couldn’t quite get over that. Sigh . We just love this pair, don’t you?

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On Farts and Nudity: Eclipse Stars Talk Tent Scene

Rolling Stone ‘Runaway General’ Reporter: Aloof Obama ‘Didn’t Really Understand What Counterinsurgency Meant’

While the media are attempting to grapple with the change in leadership of the Afghanistan war and what that all means, one thing that could be learned from this, which has been ignored, are valid criticisms of President Barack Obama and his ability to command the U.S. military. Michael Hastings, author of the now-famous Rolling Stone magazine article “Runaway General” that captured several gotcha moments resulting in Obama relieving General Stanley McChrystal of his command, appeared on Al Jazeera English on June 23. He offered some startling insight into Obama’s failure to grasp what he was actually getting into with this Afghanistan strategy known as the counterinsurgency strategy. Hastings was asked if McChrystal had perhaps gotten the whole strategy wrong, but Hastings explained it was the President that didn’t know what he was really getting into. “I think that ship had sailed last year,” Hastings said. “I think once the decision was made to do a counterinsurgency strategy, they had a pretty clear idea in mind what they wanted to do and I think this is quite interesting. I think this is one of the issues Obama didn’t really understand what counter-insurgency meant and when the military said they wanted to do a counterinsurgency strategy that that actually meant 150,000 troops. Obama thought he could get away with just sending 21,000 over and getting a new general.” And as Hastings explained, Obama wasn’t prepared due to this miscalculation. “That clearly – anyone who has spent anytime around the military over the past few years you know, you know how many troops they wanted in Afghanistan all along, but I think Obama was clearly caught off guard by that,” Hastings said. Later in the interview, Hastings accused Obama of not dedicating a lot of his time into putting the counterinsurgency strategy (or COIN) in place. Instead the Rolling Stone reporter said Obama was looking for a quick way to fill a campaign promise with roughly a seventh of the troops needed to successfully implement the strategy. “I think it’s clear that [Defense Secretary Robert]Gates and [Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Adm. Mike] Mullen are big counterinsurgency fans and they sold Obama on the idea,” Hastings explained. ” I don’t think Obama really put too much thought into it to be honest. I think it was a campaign promise that he thought he dealt with by just sending 21,000 troops and not really thinking about what that really meant. And that was clear even last August when, you know, Bob Woodward released that report of McChrystal’s strategy – you know that the Obama administration was like, ‘Whoa, what does this mean?’ And you know, I think anyone who knows anything about COIN – that’s what they call counterinsurgency, knows that it takes a heck of a lot of guys, a heck of a lot of money and a heck of a long time.”

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Rolling Stone ‘Runaway General’ Reporter: Aloof Obama ‘Didn’t Really Understand What Counterinsurgency Meant’

Twilight Talk from Robert Pattinson, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner

Over the last few weeks, Kristen Stewart and Taylor Lautner have been traveling the globe and promoting Eclipse . Meanwhile, Robert Pattinson has been filming Water for Elephants . But all three stars will converage on Los Angeles tomorrow night for the world premiere of the third Twilight Saga film. They also sat down with Entertainment Weekly recently and talked about the franchise in general. Excerpts from the interview are below: Stewart, on Bella in Breaking Dawn : One of the main objectives of the series is to get Bella to a point where she’s mature enough to make such a hefty decision, and she goes through a lot. In the fourth one, she is going to become a wife. She is going to become a mom. She is going to become an adult and a vampire. To do it so young, it needs to be believable. I’m really excited about playing that. Pattinson, on talk that Breaking Dawn is Mormon-themed :

Lady Gaga Talks About The Heartbreak That ‘Shaped’ Her Success

‘I wouldn’t have been as successful without him,’ she tells Rolling Stone of onetime love Luke. By James Montgomery Lady Gaga on the July 2010 issue of Rolling Stone Photo: Rolling Stone Lady Gaga strikes a formidable pose on the cover of the upcoming issue of Rolling Stone — wearing little more than a thong and a pair of M-16 assault rifles on her chest — but inside the magazine, she reveals that she’s just as vulnerable as you or I, fueled creatively by a former boyfriend who broke her heart years ago. In the new issue (which hits newsstands Friday), Gaga told writer Neil Strauss that she wouldn’t have become the international star she is today if she hadn’t gone through her breakup with a former flame named Luke, a heavy-metal drummer who has inspired everything she’s done since. “I wouldn’t have been as successful without him. I’ve never really loved anyone like I loved him. Or like I love him,” Gaga said. “That relationship really shaped me. It made me into a fighter.” In the piece, Strauss wrote that, after breaking up with Luke, Gaga “promised herself she would never love again and would make him rue the day he doubted her.” And, during their interview, he asked her if the love she used to direct toward men was now being channeled into her deeply loyal “little monsters.” “I wouldn’t say that my love for my fans is equated to my attention for men. But I will say that love comes in many different forms,” Gaga replied. “And I sort of resolved that if you can’t have the guy of your dreams, there are other ways to give love.” Strauss continued to press Gaga for details about her ex, but she told him, “I don’t want to talk about him … he’s too precious to talk about.” Though, she did say one last thing about Luke and her past life, before she became Lady Gaga — and how, by the sound of things, she’ll never be looking back ever again. “[It was] love. But, you know, I don’t really know much about love,” she said. “I suppose if I knew everything about love, I wouldn’t be good at making music, would I?” Does Gaga’s heartbreak come across in her music? Share your thoughts in the comments.

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Lady Gaga Talks About The Heartbreak That ‘Shaped’ Her Success

CNN Conducts Sympathetic Interview of Another Homosexual Teen Activist

On Tuesday’s Newsroom, CNN’s Brooke Baldwin brought on another teenaged homosexual activist for a sympathetic interview to help promote their upcoming one-sided documentary , “Gary and Tony Have a Baby.” Baldwin prompted Constance McMillen to give advice to ” other teens who are suffering in silence .” The anchor also didn’t press McMillen on how she might have inconvenienced her classmates. Baldwin, who was substituting for Kyra Phillips, brought on McMillen just after bottom of the 10 am Eastern hour. The CNN anchor trumpeted how the Mississippi teen was meeting with President Obama later in the day and how she was going to be grand martial for New York’s annual homosexual prade, and first asked, “Would you trade that all in if you could have gone to the regular prom with the rest of your classmates?” After McMillen gave her initial answer, Baldwin continued by mentioning how a U.S. District Court ruled that Constance McMillen’s high school violated her rights when they cancelled their prom, but omitted that it didn’t force the school to reinstate the dance : “Now, we know that the court eventually ruled – they said, absolutely, that the school violated your constitutional rights. And I want you to explain, though, what happened, because you transferred schools, right, late in your senior year? Why did do you that?” Later in the interview, the anchor sympathized with the homosexual teen: “So you transferred schools, and I can only imagine- it’s the end of your senior year, where you can’t walk with the rest of your classmates, right? Maybe you wouldn’t have wanted to. But I understand that at graduation day, normally a happy day for a lot of us- it was pretty tearful for you. Why was that? ” Baldwin didn’t once mention how the teen’s former high school classmates might have been affected by her actions. A slanted CNN.com article from earlier on Tuesday about how McMillen and fellow homosexual teen Ceara Sturgis (whom Soledad O’Brien sympathized with during a June 15 report ) have found “support in each other” hinted at the classmates sentiment: “McMillen says despite the difficult times, she wants to return to Itawamba and begin studies at the local junior college. She wants to be near her high school girlfriend. She says it won’t be easy. ‘ My best friend — we had been friends for like seven years — has not spoken with me since the day they canceled prom ,’ she says.” The anchor closed out the interview by asking McMillen to give advice to other homosexual high school students: “Before I let you go, for people who are watching and watched your story the past few months, what message- what have you taken away from this, and what message might you have for- maybe, some other teens who are suffering in silence? ” CNN has given a full-court press to their upcoming “Gary and Tony” documentary by airing several reports which helped further homosexual activists’ agenda. Besides O’Brien’s June 15 report, the network aired a gushing two-part report on the two “powerhouse” lawyers who are leading the effort against California’s Proposition 8, and conducted two softball interviews of the two subjects of O’Brien’s documentary on Sunday and Monday. The full transcript of Brooke Baldwin’s interview of Constance McMillen from Tuesday’s Newsroom: BALDWIN: Schoolwork, prom, graduation- you know, it’s the stuff most high school seniors think about, but 18-year-old Constance McMillan will be talking about it- oh, with- oh, the president of the United States. Why? Well, she sparked that national firestorm when she tried to take her girlfriend to prom, prompting her school to cancel the dance. She is joining us live this morning from Washington, and Constance, good morning to you. Listen, I appreciate you taking a little time and talking to me before your big night with the President. Good morning. CONSTANCE MCMILLEN: Good morning. BALDWIN: Let me first ask you, when you look at everything that’s happened since the story broke- it really broke- nationwide, you are meeting with the President. You’re going to be a grand marshal of the New York gay pride parade coming up. But would you trade that all in if you could have gone to the regular prom with the rest of your classmates? MCMILLEN: No, because if I had gone to the regular prom with the rest of my classmates, then I would not have been able to bring my girlfriend, and I wouldn’t have been able to be myself. So- and that was the whole point. Like, I wasn’t going to be able to go if I wasn’t going to be able to be myself. BALDWIN: Now, we know that the court eventually ruled – they said, absolutely, that the school violated your constitutional rights. And I want you to explain, though, what happened, because you transferred schools, right, late in your senior year? Why did do you that? MCMILLEN: Well, I started- like, doing my work from home because it was- like, it was really hard for me to go to that school because of how the people were treating me. It was just really hard for me to finish school there. So I- BALDWIN: What were they doing? What were they saying to you? MCMILLEN: I mean, it was- like, it was hostile all the time. There were rumors flying around about me. Every single day, I heard a new rumor and- like, it was just- it was really, really hard to concentrate in an environment where everybody ‘s like- being really mean. (laughs) So, I decided to do my work from home, but it got really hard because some of the work that I had to do, I couldn’t do if I wasn’t in the class. BALDWIN: Right. MCMILLEN: So that’s why I transferred schools. BALDWIN: So you transferred schools, and I can only imagine- it’s the end of your senior year, where you can’t walk with the rest of your classmates, right? Maybe you wouldn’t have wanted to. But I understand that at graduation day, normally a happy day for a lot of us- it was pretty tearful for you. Why was that? MCMILLEN: Well, it was like- I mean, I really didn’t- I didn’t want to walk, but I did for my parents. But it was really hard because- like, after everything I’ve been through- like, it was just reminding me, really, that a lot of the people that I used to have that were good friends- like, I don’t have those friends anymore and- I mean, I was- I didn’t know most- I mean, the classmates- the school was wonderful. But- like, I didn’t know a lot of the people there- BALDWIN: Right. MCMILLEN: And so, I was just kind of standing there. BALDWIN: Right. MCMILLEN: It was just- it was really hard because it wasn’t- BALDWIN: Constance- go ahead- finish your thought. MCMILLEN: It wasn’t how I pictured graduation, so it was just- like, a little hard. (laughs) BALDWIN: Well, I understand you’re going on to college. Before I let you go, for people who are watching and watched your story the past few months, what message- what have you taken away from this, and what message might you have for- maybe, some other teens who are suffering in silence? MCMILLEN: I’ve learned through all of this how important it is to be an activist and how important it is to- like, stand up for yourself, because that was never my intention to start with. But- like now that I’ve been around and met all these people, I’ve learned how important it is. I’ve heard so many horror stories- so many people that go through just terrible things just because they’re gay. And- you know, if you’re going through something like that, I think you should stand up for yourself because- like, it was hard for me. I’m not going to say it wasn’t hard because it was. But I went through it so that nobody else would have to go through it, and I think that if you can do something like that and change it for a lot of other people, even though it’s hard on you, I think you should do that. BALDWIN: Constance McMillen, thank you, ma’am, for sharing your story with us this morning. Hey, good luck with the President tonight. It’s a pretty nice house he’s got. MCMILLEN: Yeah. BALDWIN: And thanks for sharing your story. Good luck with college. MCMILLEN: All right.

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CNN Conducts Sympathetic Interview of Another Homosexual Teen Activist

Rasheed Wallace Starting Game 7 for Celtics

Filed under: Celtics , Lakers , NBA Injuries , NBA Playoffs , NBA Finals LOS ANGELES — To nobody’s surprise, Doc Rivers is going with the veteran. The Boston coach confirmed before Thursday night’s Game 7 of the NBA Finals that he will start Rasheed Wallace at center against the Lakers in place of injured Kendrick Perkins . Wallace, a 15-year veteran, is the only player on either team to have played in a Game 7 of the NBA Finals, taking the floor for Detroit in a 2005 loss at San Antonio. “He’s old,” Rivers said of Wallace, 35. “I figured I’d play the oldest guys. I just think it’s a good combination with Kevin because of the size, with (Lakers center Andrew) Bynum ‘s size. I just think it’s a better fit for us.” The 6-foot-11, 230-pound Wallace will take over for the 6-10, 265-pound Perkins, who was lost in Game 6 with torn ligaments in his right knee. The other candidate to go against the 7-foot, 285-pound Bynum was 6-9, 289-pound Glen Davis , who will come off the bench in the big game at the Staples Center.

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Rasheed Wallace Starting Game 7 for Celtics

Smooth John Cena Talks Challenge of Fatal 4-Way and Future of WWE

Filed under: Pro Wrestling FanHouse had the opportunity to chat with John Cena before he participated as a celebrity judge along with Tony Parker and Erin Andrews in the Gillette Fusion ProGlide “Ultimate Summer Job” Contest on Tuesday. In our interview, John Cena discussed why he’s always been a baby-face (in the literal sense), what he’s expecting at the Fatal 4-Way event, and who he believes is a rising star in WWE. We also got his thoughts on Bryan Danielson’s disputed release from WWE and what the future holds for his beloved Boston Celtics . At WWE’s newest pay-per-view, Fatal 4-Way (Sunday, June 20 at 8 p.m. ET), Cena will defend his WWE Championship against Edge, Sheamus and Randy Orton in the main event. Our complete interview with the world champ is below.

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Smooth John Cena Talks Challenge of Fatal 4-Way and Future of WWE

50 Cent And Floyd Mayweather Talk New Albums, Fake Rappers

Fif tells Mixtape Daily that he might scrap his Black Magic album for a new concept. By Shaheem Reid, with reporting by Tim Kash 50 Cent and Floyd Mayweather Photo: MTV News The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive For the original concept of his Black Magic album , 50 Cent said he was inspired by dance music while touring overseas. Now that he’s in the U.S., on the Invitation Tour , the G-Unit team captain said he has a whole other muse for a completely different album. “I started working on it,” 50 said last week in Los Angeles. “I been working on writing to a concept for Black Magic. … I recorded 19 songs. Then when I got back to the U.S., I started writing to a different concept. I spoke to Em. He called me when I was starting in Detroit.” Before Fif could go more in-depth about his upcoming album, his friend, Floyd Mayweather — who sat in on the interview as well — announced he has an LP as well. “We’re doing a compilation album,” Money Mayweather said. The boxing champ said he’ll be highlighting various artists on the project. “We’ll probably launch it in the heat of the next bout,” Fif said. “It’ll probably be the biggest fight in the history of the sport.” Of course, 50 was referring to the long-delayed Mayweather/ Manny Pacquiao title bout. Floyd wants Pacquiao to take Olympic-style drug testing, and Manny has resisted thus far. Back to the music: Fif and Mayweather agree that a lot of the hip-hop out right now has taken a softer turn. “It’ll just make room for you to impact when [the hardcore] comes back,” 50 assessed. “No one told the world to enjoy that [softer] music temporarily. I think a big portion of why people didn’t want to hear the aggressive content is because the people conveying them were lying.” “You got rappers in today’s time, they get a small advance from their record label, get a bunch of tattoos, a few piercings on their face, go to jail for 10 or 20 days, [then] they killers,” Mayweather weighed in. “Next time out, they rock stars. I think rap is crazy, but it’s still very creative.” For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc .

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50 Cent And Floyd Mayweather Talk New Albums, Fake Rappers

On Hardball: Obama Too Cautious About Exerting His Power

Newsweek’s Howard Fineman, on Monday’s Hardball, pushed Barack Obama to “overdo” and “overstep” in his efforts to get BP to plug the leak and stop the oil spill in the Gulf, something Fineman claimed Obama hadn’t done yet because “he’s usefully and rightfully dangerous about power. I think he thought…George W. Bush overstepped in terms of executive power…he’s an observer by nature.” This observation from Fineman seems particularly odd, as it comes at the same time the President has pushed for a $50 billion in additional domestic spending. Fineman made the comment after the Politico’s Roger Simon insisted there’s only so much Obama can do, as he insisted: “He’s not Iron Man. He cannot dive a mile underwater and stop this by himself.” However host Chris Matthews asserted Obama could do more and he asked if the President will be “tough” and “really threaten BP” and openly wondered: “Does he know he’s a powerful man?” After Fineman responded that Obama needs to “overstep” a concerned Matthews questioned: “Even at the risk of being called a socialist again?” The following exchanges were aired on the June 14 edition of Hardball: CHRIS MATTHEWS: I guess the first question is can this president honestly claim he has command and control when it looks like BP is the boss? ROGER SIMON, POLITICO: No, he can’t. And he said in the interview that “We analyzed the problem and we had no greater ability to stop the leak than BP did, so we’re gonna let BP do it.” And he can’t control BP. MATTHEWS: Well looking down the road is BP going to be the big shot, and he’s going to be, as I call him, the Vatican observer watching them do what they do? And that’s all he can do. SIMON: All he can do is threaten them. All he can do is send the attorney general down there. All he can do is threaten to, to depress their stock price to such an extent they’ll go belly up. But that’s all he can do. He’s not Iron Man. He cannot dive a mile underwater and stop this by himself. … MATTHEWS: Howard, the question I have is what can he do? I’m looking back to history. I’m a political person, not an oil person, as we all are. Harry Truman, the coal miners wouldn’t mine coal after World War II. He, he conscripted them all. He drafted them. When Big Steel raised its prices and sort of, Kennedy felt was screwing them, basically, he said “Okay I’m sending the IRS to your house. I’m gonna see if you got any, any action with your secretaries at work.” He was unbelievable! He went after them and said, “Bob McNamara don’t buy any more steel from U.S. Steel.” I mean he was unbelievable. Will this president be that tough? Will he threaten, really threaten BP with all the actions of an Executive? HOWARD FINEMAN, NEWSWEEK: Well if he, if he does he’ll only be dragged kicking and screaming into it because that’s just Barack Obama’s nature. He’s judicious. MATTHEWS: Does he know he’s a powerful man? FINEMAN: He’s, he’s an observer. I think he’s usefully and rightfully dangerous about power. I think he thought George Bush, George W. Bush overstepped in terms of executive power. And it’s also, he’s an observer by nature. But before I continue I just want to say that Roger, whom I’ve known for decades, is the best in the business and we’re so happy to have him back. And, and he’s seen this before. He’s seen presidents who use power or don’t use power. If you don’t use it, you lose it. Barack Obama should overdo. He should overstep. MATTHEWS: Even at the risk of being called a socialist again? FINEMAN: Even at the risk of having a lawsuit filed against him. The Army should be in there. The Navy should be in there. They should- MATTHEWS: Okay you agree with Roger, you agree- FINEMAN: You know, and by the way BP is not in danger of going broke tomorrow. SIMON: Right. FINEMAN: But yet Obama is putting this whole escrow idea out there, so that BP can possibly do its dividend on June 21st.

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On Hardball: Obama Too Cautious About Exerting His Power