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Flo Rida, Alison Sweeney, Melissa Joan Hart Reminisce On ‘When I Was 17’

Stars remember huge ragers and making out with their hands on latest episode. By Mawuse Ziegbe Flo Rida Photo: MTV Flo Rida didn’t waste any time getting on his hip-hop grind as a teen, starting his career as a member of the rap crew the Groundhoggz. In addition to picking up some practice in the rap game, the “Elevator” rapper also developed an important part of his persona: his moniker. “When I was 17, to be a part of a group like the Groundhoggz, you definitely have to come up with a name,” the MC recalled on the latest episode of “When I Was 17.” “At first, I was going by the name of Ruckus Pimp. I just thought that was like a little bit out there, so I went to over to my boy’s house. He’s just like, ‘Man, we got to come up with a name today.’ ” The MC explained that he and his homie put their heads together to come up with a tag. The rapper eventually thought of a handle inspired by his southern roots. “So, OK, I sat up there for about an hour and finally, it hit me,” he says. “Take Florida, break it in half and there you go: Flo Rida.” While Flo Rida was laying the groundwork for his future, Melissa Joan Hart’s career was in full swing. The star of Nickelodeon’s “Clarissa Explains It All” often spent long stretches of time away from loved ones, so she once threw a huge rager when she had a break from shooting. “One time [Melissa] called and said, ‘Listen, Nicole, I want to have a few people over my dad’s house. Can you organize something?’ ” her friend Nicole remembered. “It’s a small town, not too much happening, so if Melissa was coming home and said she wanted to have a party, everybody was going to show up.” Hart’s sister Trisha remembered that the bash got a wee bit out of hand. “All these people started coming through the door,” she said. “It was unstoppable.” Hart agreed the soiree got pretty raucous. “Pretty much the whole town showed up,” she recalled. “It was probably a few hundred people in and out all night. You couldn’t shut it down. It became chaos.” Like Hart, Alison Sweeney was already a working actress as a teen, starring on the long-running soap “Days of our Lives.” However, when work and school collided is when the drama really began. Sweeney remembered a moment when some of her on-set antics caused a problem in the classroom. “I had a scene with the girl who plays my sister, and Carrie was teaching Sami how to French kiss and Carrie said, ‘Well, you can practice on your hand.’ So we had a whole scene where we’re literally making out with our hands. Making kissing noises, like actually kissing our hands,” she recalled. “Six weeks later, I’m in my U.S. history class and the teacher had a VCR that was broken so he had to go get another one. And while we were waiting for him to come back, the kids are like, ‘Let’s watch ‘Days of our Lives.’ ” And just like some loopy daytime-TV plot twist, the embarrassing make-out scene Sweeney had taped earlier was playing, much to the amusement of her fellow high-schoolers. “It was so horrifying and I didn’t know what to do. I thought about breaking the TV but I sat there at my desk and I just put my hands in my desk and covered my face,” she said. “I was so mortified.” “When I Was 17” airs Saturdays at 11 a.m. on MTV Related Videos When I Was 17 (Season 2) | Ep. 4 | Melissa Joan Heart, Flo Rida, Alison Sweeney Related Photos When I Was 17 (Season 2) | Ep. 4 | Melissa Joan Hart, Flo Rida, Alison Sweeney

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Flo Rida, Alison Sweeney, Melissa Joan Hart Reminisce On ‘When I Was 17’

Made in Dagenham’s Andrea Riseborough on Her Oscar-Season Trifecta

When it rains, it pours for some young actors. Take Jessica Chastain or Gemma Arterton , who’ve spoken here recently about the flukes of scheduling that have made 2010 the busiest years of their lives. Or take Andrea Riseborough, the 29-year-old British actress who brought not one, not two, but three prestige films to this year’s Toronto Film Festival — including this week’s Made in Dagenham and breakthrough-level work opposite Sam Riley in Brighton Rock .

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Made in Dagenham’s Andrea Riseborough on Her Oscar-Season Trifecta

Mel Gibson Case Turns Even Uglier as Two Potential Witnesses Threatened

The already messy Mel Gibson/Oksana Grigorieva case is turning into a full-on circus, complete with porn stars, threats of violence, and an alleged vehicular homicide attempt. While Gibson hasn’t won any allies lately , new accusations again suggest that neither side’s hands are clean. Violet Kowal, a Polish porn star rumored to have been involved with Gibson, and her bodyguard Nikko Riley have claimed that their lives were threatened after refusing to fabricate evidence on behalf of Grigorieva in her abuse case against Gibson.

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Mel Gibson Case Turns Even Uglier as Two Potential Witnesses Threatened

An entire week without Facebook?

http://watercooler.freedomblogging.com/2010/09/16/a-week-without-facebook-pennsy… An experiment by a small PA college is evaluating the role of social media on the lives of its students. For one week, which began on Monday, students as well as staff have no access to social media sites which include Twitter and Facebook. The school says this is not a punishment, but an experiment. Click the link for more. added by: twoon

An Inside Account of the Shady Side of Modeling [Interview]

A five-year project filming the lives of model Sara Ziff and her friends is now a documentary called Picture Me , which premieres after the close of New York Fashion Week tomorrow. We spoke with one of the models, Sena Cech . More

Kings of Leon ‘Radioactive’ Video Pays Tribute To Band’s Southern Roots

Tennessee rock quartet serves up all-American apple pie and soda in sun-drenched clip for gospel-tinged single. By Peter de Saint Phalle Kings of Leon Photo: Gareth Cattermole/ Getty Images Kings of Leon have featured exploding buildings (“Notion”) and fast-paced montages of sold-out concert venues (“Use Somebody”) in their videos, but for their newest, they take a more laid-back approach. The band released the sepia-tone video for “Radioactive” on Wednesday (September 8) on their website , KingsofLeon.com, and it finds the Kings at a Southern-style summer barbecue. The band substitutes beer and cigarettes for sodas and pie as a youth choir is seen backing the band throughout the song. “It’s in the water/ It’s where you came from,” lead vocalist Caleb Followill belts out on the track’s chorus. As images of sun-drenched green fields and tables full of apple pies are set to gospel vocals and Matthew Followill’s heavy guitar riffs, “Radioactive” provides a glimpse of KOL’s Southern origins. “We grew up in this type of lifestyle,” drummer Nathan Followill explained in a video posted on the group’s site about making the video. “Gospel music was a big part of us growing up, so to be able to come back and revisit that part of our lives at this stage in our lives is a very special thing.” The VMA-nominated Kings of Leon (“Use Somebody” is up for Best Rock Video) are originally from Tennessee, but they can call most of the Southern states home after spending much of their childhoods traveling with their father, a Pentecostal preacher, to various Southern churches and congregations. “Radioactive” is the first single from the band’s fifth studio album, Come Around Sundown, which is set to for a October 19 release. There were problems, however, in the early stages, bassist Jared Followill explained in the video. The new single almost didn’t make it onto the upcoming record. “The choruses started off kind of spiritual but the verses were never matched up to them at all. … We went into the studio and we tried it and it wasn’t really working … we were going to scrap the whole song.” It was only when the band began recalling childhood memories that the tune came to life. “Caleb, he kind of went back to an old spiritual song that we had all sung growing up,” Jared continued. “It matched up with the chorus so nice that it all worked out from there.” What do you think of KOL’s new video for “Radioactive”? Tell us in the comments! Related Artists Kings Of Leon

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Kings of Leon ‘Radioactive’ Video Pays Tribute To Band’s Southern Roots

AUSTRALIA…Independents Bob Katter, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor to give decision on government

THEIR time is up – Australia has waited 17 days and now three men will decide who will form government. Since the Gillard Government went into caretaker mode almost two months ago, thousands of cancer patients have gone without drug treatments, pay rises have been delayed and a solution to the asylum seeker issue is on hold. With national retailers and business leaders claiming consumer confidence was also being affected by the uncertainty, the way is finally clear for Bob Katter, Rob Oakeshott and Tony Windsor to make a decision. Late yesterday, agreement was reached with Tony Abbott on critical parliamentary reforms already agreed to by Julia Gillard. As Labor sources revealed the “momentum” appeared to be going their way, Coalition insiders said a “realism” had set in that it was unlikely to go theirs. Both major parties yesterday also offered unprecedented regional development packages in a final round of meetings with the independents. Sources close to the negotiations said both sides had offered “significant” regional development assistance, including prime ministerial oversight of regional and rural policy as well as funding for regional infrastructure. Ms Gillard needs only one of the three independent's support to take Labor to 75 out of the 150 seats in Parliament, one short of being able to form government, but denying Mr Abbott government as well. To avoid a deadlock and a return to the polls at least two would have to back Labor, or all three would need to go with the Coalition. Mr Oakeshott yesterday alluded to the possibility that they were split in who to support: “It does look like we may have to make some choices about whether we stick together or not.” But the long wait for government is starting to take its toll on the lives of Australians. Patients with bowel cancer and those at risk of acute myeloid leukemia are waiting for a government to be formed so it can rubber stamp an expert government committee's recommendation it subsidise two new high-cost drugs – the $20,000-a-year Erbitux and $40,000-a-year Vidaza. Dr Anna Williamson from the Leukemia Foundation said some patients were talking about mortgaging their houses to pay for the drugs as they feared the ongoing delay in approving subsidies could endanger their lives. A national equal pay case for 200,000 social workers has also been affected. A new pipeline to improve water supply water to Canberra, which is still facing water restrictions, is on hold waiting approval from Environment Minister Peter Garrett. Negotiations over a new offshore refugee processing centre in either East Timor or Nauru can't take place during the caretaker period, while more boatloads of asylum seekers arrive. Retail figures show Australians are delaying purchases on big-ticket items such as whitegoods and furniture, a delay which retail groups believe is so consumers can ascertain which policy direction a new government will take. “We want a decision as soon as possible, but certainly we want to ensure that whatever decision is made is made in the interests of the country,” Australian Retailers Association director Russell Zimmerman said. added by: eden49

Fourteen more US troops killed in Afghanistan: What are they dying for?

Another 14 US troops have been killed in Afghanistan since Saturday, with the death toll so far this year already rising to the level reached for all of 2010. A pair of roadside bombings took the lives of seven soldiers on Monday, five of them dying in a blast that tore apart a Humvee in which they were riding. Bomb blasts took the lives of four others in southern Afghanistan over the weekend, while three were killed in clashes with armed groups resisting the US-led occupation. These latest deaths bring US fatalities for the month to nearly 50, after the record 65 killed in July. NATO has announced that it is investigating yet another report of civilians killed in a US bombing. The air strike last Thursday hit children who were collecting scrap metal on a mountain in the province of Kunar, which borders Pakistan. A local police commander said that the six children killed by the US bombs were aged six to 12. Another child was seriously wounded. After a much-reported decline in US air strikes, attributed to orders from sacked US senior commander in Afghanistan Gen. Stanley McChrystal that were designed to reduce civilian casualties, such strikes are back up again. According to figures released by the Air Force, US warplanes flew 5,500 “close air support” missions in June and July of 2010, compared to 4,600 in the same months last year. With the Obama administration's Afghanistan surge having brought US troops up to the full strength of nearly 100,000, together with another 40,000 troops from NATO and other allied countries, fighting has intensified and casualties among both US troops and Afghan civilians are up sharply. New revelations of rampant corruption and CIA payoffs to the US-backed Kabul government raise the inescapable question: What are they dying for? Among the bodies shipped back to the US through Dover Air Base in flag-draped coffins this past week was that of a 20-year-old from Elizabeth, New Jersey, Army Specialist Pedro Millet, who was killed by an improvised explosive device in southern Afghanistan. “I feel like someone ripped my heart out. I have no heart. My baby is gone,” the soldier's mother, Denise Meletiche, told reporters outside her home after making the painful journey from the base in Delaware. She said that her son had joined the Army without telling her, explaining only afterwards that he did it to get money to go to college. “I was against the Army,” she said. “I'm against war.” The soldier's stepfather said that Army recruiters had been allowed into Pedro's high school and enticed him into joining the military. “We're losing kids in a war, and what are they doing about it?” he said. “This is ridiculous.” What can justify such human sacrifices? Obama, like Bush before him, has tried to frighten the American people into supporting this brutal war by claiming it is necessary to defeat terrorism. This is just as much a lie coming out of the Democratic president's mouth as it was when uttered by his Republican predecessor. US military and intelligence officials have repeatedly acknowledged that there are less than 100 Al Qaeda members in all of Afghanistan–compared to 100,000 US troops. Moreover, the 91,000 classified documents released by WikiLeaks, most of them battlefield reports, make virtually no mention of American troops pursuing terrorists. On the contrary, they are fighting to suppress resistance to foreign occupation, a resistance that enjoys broad support from the Afghan people. A recent poll taken in Helmand and Kandahar provinces by the International Council on Security and Development, a London-based think tank, bears this out. It found that three quarters of the male population believed it was wrong to collaborate with the US-led occupation forces. Roughly the same share said that the Afghan government officials in the area were connected either to drug traffickers or to the armed groups opposing the occupation. These figures are essentially in sync with those reported by the Pentagon itself in the spring, indicating that less than a quarter of the people in the areas where US forces are battling to suppress Afghan resistance support the government of President Hamid Karzai. Another study released by the United Nations last January provided a vivid illustration of why Karzai and his cronies are so hated. It found that 52 percent of Afghan adults had been forced to pay at least one bribe to a public official in the previous 12 months, and that, collectively, Afghans had paid out $2.49 billion in bribes in 2009, an amount equal to nearly one-quarter of the country's gross domestic product. In a television interview broadcast at the beginning of this month, Obama admitted to the American people that “Nobody thinks that Afghanistan is going to be a model Jeffersonian democracy.” cont. added by: JanforGore

Kelly Brook NAKED On Love Magazine

Kelly Brook‘s cover of Love Magazine is racier than her Playboy Magazine cover, but my goodness what a banging body. This cover follows Kelly’s month of nakedness as Kelly has posed nude for Reebok, is featured nude in her film Piranha 3D, Playboy and now this: ‘Having this movie coming added by: ineedmyfix

Purple Party Bus

Have fun on he Playa’s most stylish form of public transportation. Burning Man Lives! TONIGHT 9/8c

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Purple Party Bus