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Oscar Index: Giddyup, War Horse!

Well, this should go pretty fast: The holiday week has offered a dearth of new narratives to trace and pulses to take, with only one film demonstrating any significant mobility in the studies coming out Movieline’s Institute for the Advanced Study of Kudos Forensics. Let’s get to it! The Leading 10: 1. The Artist 2. War Horse 3. The Descendants 4. The Help 5. Hugo 6. Midnight in Paris 7. Moneyball 8. The Tree of Life 9. Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close 10. Bridesmaids Outsiders: The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo ; Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy ; The Ides of March ; Drive First things first: The Academy sent out its 2012 nomination ballots this week, a few thousand bits of live ammunition to keep voters alert as they catch up on any an all screenings over the holiday hiatus. And while pretty much every last hint of buzz halted on the late-coming Extremely Loud & Incredibly Close — except, I suppose, this writer’s survey that singled out EL&IC as the “‘Awards Season Screener’ of choice from family members visiting over the holiday weekend” — we witnessed a fairly serious resurgence for War Horse . It all started when DreamWorks and Disney opened up virtually every public screening of the film to card-carrying AMPAS and guild members — an unconventional mid-season move that nevertheless opened up 2,700 screens to voters mere days before they received their nomination ballots. They have weeks to send them back, of course, but the studios’ faith in the film was reflected in its terrific two-day holiday haul; only Mission: Impossible – Ghost Protocol performed better commercially. And with many key critics (including our own Stephanie Zacharek ) offering their praises as well, there’s not really any choice but to move the Horse back among the front-runners. Let me just defer to Sasha Stone, who wrote most persuasively on the matter earlier this week: War Horse has everything your Best Picture winner needs: waterworks, prestigious director (that he mimics John Ford here is a win/win), war (bad Germans even) and men. Lots and lots and lots of men. There is a young girl who tends to Joey for a time, and because he’s a religious figure he works his magic on her inability to do much of anything, what with a disease ravaging her body and all — but the miracle horse! Oh, the miracle horse! And a mother who tends to the boy who tends to Joey — “Someday we’ll be together,” the boy says at the beginning. Looks like there aren’t too many women folk around for the poor kid to fall in love with — but he has the miracle horse, by god. But for the most part War Horse tells the story of young men going into battle and the horses who sacrificed themselves for war. It’s about the inherent goodness of people and thus the Oscar race will underline that and bold it. Yup. And that’s just a socio-historical perspective related to the Academy. Factor in the timing and the early box-office windfall of it all — not to mention the slumping likes of The Descendants and Hugo in particular — and there’s your War Horse second wind. But is it too early? We shall see — especially awaiting the DGA and PGA award nominations in the weeks ahead. In any case, also worth noting in light of the EL&IC stillbirth and the putative Bridesmaids insurgency is Steve Pond’s intriguing analysis from the Critics Choice Awards front, where he and the accountant overseeing the Broadcast Film Critics Association nominations — often cited as one of the more reliable Oscar precursors — yielded this bit of insight: A large majority of the Broadcast Film Critics’ more than 250 critics cast ballots, which asked them to rank their favorite movies, one through five. On those ballots, 33 different films received first-place votes. Under the Oscar system, the race is immediately narrowed to those 33 films; every other movie is out of the running, no matter how many second- or third-place votes it received. According to [accountant Debby] Britton, 10 of the 33 films fell below the 1 percent threshold. Those 10 then had their ballots redistributed, with the vote going to the film ranked second on the ballot, assuming that film was among the 22 movies still in the running. (If it wasn’t, she would move down the ballot until she found a movie that was.) When those ballots were redistributed, CMM then looked at what was left. At this point, under the Oscar system, any movie with more than 5 percent of the vote would became a nominee; any movie with less than that would not. And when Britton did the final math, she came up with eight nominees. On the other hand, EL&IC actually made the list of Critics Choice Awards Best Picture nominees, so… Yeah. In short, eight nominations sounds about right, but it could swing plus or minus one nominee either way. Developing, etc. The Leading 5: 1. Michel Hazanavicius, The Artist 2. Steven Spielberg, War Horse 3. Alexander Payne, The Descendants 4. Martin Scorsese, Hugo 5. Woody Allen, Midnight in Paris Outsiders : Bennett Miller, Moneyball ; Stephen Daldry, Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close ; David Fincher, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo ; Tate Taylor, The Help ; Nicolas Winding Refn, Drive More of the same as above. Really nothing to add. The Leading 5: 1. Meryl Streep, The Iron Lady 2. Viola Davis, The Help 3. Michelle Williams, My Week With Marilyn 4. Tilda Swinton, We Need to Talk About Kevin 5. Glenn Close, Albert Nobbs Outsiders : Rooney Mara, The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo ; Charlize Theron, Young Adult ; Elizabeth Olsen, Martha Marcy May Marlene ; Felicity Jones, Like Crazy ; Kirsten Dunst, Melancholia There’s a little movement around the also-rans — Swinton receiving the boost of a slightly more aggressive campaign on behalf of Kevin , Mara reaping the most of Dragon Tattoo ‘s solid holiday showing — but no one came close to matching the full-court press for Streep. Did anyone not show up for her at the Kennedy Center Honors ? I mean, thank you for your Williams love, Oklahoma Film Critics Circle , but my God. The Leading 5: 1. Jean Dujardin, The Artist 2. Brad Pitt, Moneyball 3. George Clooney, The Descendants 4. Michael Fassbender, Shame 5. Leonardo DiCaprio, J. Edgar Outsiders : Gary Oldman, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy ; Demi

Where Will Kim Kardashian, Lady Gaga Party On New Year’s?

From New York to L.A., celebs have plans to ring in 2012 with a bang. By Jocelyn Vena Kim Kardashian Photo: Denise Truscello New Year’s Eve is the last chance you’ll have to party in 2011. And as the days to plan out your big night begin to dwindle, MTV News is rounding up some of the biggest parties on the planet. From Los Angeles to New York, there’s something for everyone. The Kardashians will be hosting several parties all over Las Vegas. Kim will be at Tao (for a fee of reportedly $600,000), Kourtney, along with the Madden Brothers, will party it up at Chateau Nightclub & Gardens at Paris while Rob has it on lock at Tryst. Other big Sin City parties include Chris Brown’s shindig at Pure, Mary J. Blige’s bash at RPM Nightclub, Bruno Mars at The Bank and B.o.B at LAX (the club, not the airport). Professional party rockers LMFAO will be shufflin’ all night long at Haze Nightclub at Aria. Newly engaged John Legend will perform at the Palms with T-Pain and Paul Oakenfold. As celeb-filled as it may seem, not all the stars will be in Vegas. In Los Angeles, Mario Lopez is hosting a party at Hollywood & Highland that boasts performances by Lupe Fiasco and Cobra Starship. And in Chicago, “American Idol” alum Lee Dwyze will be at the Hard Rock Hotel with DJ Chris Kennedy (Chris Masterson) spinning tunes. Kanye West’s plans have yet to be determined, but he recently tweeted he’s looking for a place to DJ right into 2012. We’re sure someone will find a place for him at their party. New York is the home of all things New Year’s. Fergie and will.i.am will both be in the Big Apple to ring in 2012. The Black Eyed Peas’ leading lady will be at 1Oak, while will.i.am be DJing at Surrender. Lady Gaga has been booked to perform on two NYE specials: the 40th annual “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” and the Japanese program “Kohaku Uta Gassen.” For those who want to snuggle up on their couch and avoid all the partying madness, MTV has your back. This year Demi Lovato, Mac Miller, Selena Gomez, J. Cole, Jason Derulo and more will be on hand for “NYE in NYC 2012,” which will air live at 11 p.m. ET on Saturday (December 31) from Times Square, where the famous ball drops on, you guessed it, MTV. What are your New Year’s Eve plans? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Lady Gaga

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Where Will Kim Kardashian, Lady Gaga Party On New Year’s?

Margaret, Melancholia and More: Alison’s Top 10 Movies of 2011

I found 2011 to be a great, overstuffed year in film, though the sweeping trend of nostalgia that peaked during this awards season left me a little cold. Hugo , War Horse , The Artist , The Adventures of Tintin , The Help , even the self-aware looking back of Midnight in Paris — when it’s been such a turbulent 12 months beyond the movies, the comfort of evoking the past, especially the cinephilic past, is understandable, particularly with attendance down once again. But the features I really loved tended to be more prickly, vital affairs, about tragedy and life messily, stubbornly going on in its aftermath — ones that reminded us that film can not only be a great escape, but can also engage and reflect the outside world. 10. Shame Steve McQueen’s sophomore effort took flack from some who found it moralizing in its portrayal of sex addiction, but it’s not a film about a condition, it’s a film about damage. Michael Fassbender plays a man who’s left a traumatic childhood behind and has shored himself up in the city that never sleeps with an immaculate condo and a high-powered job that almost hide his underlying desperation and his inability to connect or open up to anyone on anything other than a physical level. It’s one of the loneliest portraits of urban living I’ve ever seen. 9. Warrior The neglected blockbuster of our Occupy Wall Street era, Warrior drapes Rocky trappings over characters and settings more immediate than you’d ever expect at a multiplex. Its two brothers, in what should have been star-making turns from Tom Hardy and Joel Edgerton, head to the cage after taking beatings elsewhere — one’s left the Marines on less than ideal terms after the death of colleague, the other’s upside down on his mortgage and unable to support his family on a teacher’s salary. Add to that the fact that the tournament in which they both compete was started by a former Wall Street type putting up the money to see “who the toughest man on the planet is,” and you have a rousing, violent fight film with a seriously bittersweet edge. 8. The Arbor Andrea Dunbar grew up in run-down Bradford council estates, drank heavily, had three kids by different fathers, wrote a trio of acclaimed plays about the life she knew and died at age 29. Clio Barnard’s documentary about the playwright brilliantly stages its interviews as their own performance, lip-synched by actors in the settings in which Dunbar and her children grew up and lived, and offering a piercing glimpse of how tragedy is taken up — her second work Rita, Sue and Bob Too was made into a film directed by Alan Clarke — and passed down, to her heroin-addicted eldest Lorraine. 7. Certified Copy It’s never clear which part of Juliette Binoche’s antiques dealer and William Shimell’s writer’s relationship is the pretense — are they strangers who play at being married, or a married couple playing at meeting as strangers? The thesis of Shimell’s book may or may not line up with that of Abbas Kiarostami’s film — the relationship between art and reproduction, original and copy — but the figuring out, and the slippery nature of the connection the pair on screen, is delicious. 6. The Tree of Life It’s a film about a family that stretches from the beginning of the universe to a possible vision of the afterlife — if it may not be wholly lovable, its ambition alone should earn respect. But it’s the evocative immersion on childhood that lingered with me after Terrence Malick’s more grandiose imagery had faded, the tactile sense of that Texas street, the house, the endless possibility, uncertainty and wonder of being young and new to the world, the flashes of memory — the offering of a drink to a prisoner, the caress of a baby’s foot, the goading of a younger sibling to touch a light socket — that break up the more iconic moments with startling specificity. 5. Margaret Messy, vivid and wonderful, Kenneth Lonergan’s difficult production has become a critics’ cause, in part because of how tough it’s been to actually see. It’s worth the trouble, and in some ways better because of the long wait in reaching the few theaters it did — it now looks less like a movie about post-9/11 New York and more one about the city in all of its anonymous, chaotic glory, about a teenage girl’s first horrific brush with mortality and about the strange places that life leads us. 4. Take Shelter Few films have attempted to capture our age of anxiety like Jeff Nichols’s drama, about catastrophic dreams that may be caused by mental illness, but seem just as much to spring from the sense of uncertainty with which we’ve all been infected. Anchored by a stunning performance from Michael Shannon, Take Shelter presents a look at quiet breakdown spurred on by a desire to protect one’s loved ones, and pairs it with frightening scenes of monstrous storms and shadowy attackers that rival any of this year’s horror movies. 3. Into the Abyss Trust Werner Herzog to find stories so strange and moving in a terrible small-town triple murder over an automobile. The Texas of this film is recognizable, but it’s also near-mythic — a place of universally broken families, sudden violence, prison reunions and hard-earned redemption. Taken alone, the interviews with Melyssa Burkett or Jared Tolbert would be enough to make the film. As part of a kaleidoscope of suffering and hope, they’re highlights in something dark, funny and expressly moving about the persistence of human nature in the face of loss. 2. A Separation A marriage falls apart over the decision of whether or not to leave Iran in Asghar Farhadi’s magnificent drama, and encompasses in its disintegration a snapshot of the fractured nation that’s so nuanced, empathetic and complex it quickens the heart. Certainly the smartest film of the year, both as a self-contained work and in the respect it offers the audience, A Separation is unadorned by a score or flashy camera tricks — it doesn’t need them. 1. Melancholia The opposite of love isn’t hate, it’s indifference, and in Lars von Trier’s film it’s the awesome force of Kirsten Dunst’s depression-fueled disinterest that exudes a gravitational drag on everyone around here even before the arrival of the destructive planet of the title. Before the breathtaking apocalyptic imagery appears — the object looming closer in the sky, the static sparking from fingertips — Melancholia is already a devastating look at an illness that leaves you unable to connect to what life has to offer, even on an extravagant wedding day that seems to compress half a lifetime into a night. But it’s that the film turns to offer a sympathetic eye to Charlotte Gainsbourg’s anxious sibling in the second half that makes it great, and that gives it a soul. As she struggles to hold everything together in the face of approaching disaster, even Dunst’s depressive is moved to offer her a conciliatory gesture as the world ends. Follow Alison Willmore on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Margaret, Melancholia and More: Alison’s Top 10 Movies of 2011

Don’t Hate, Celebrate the Top 9 Not-So-Guilty Pleasures of 2011

Traditionally a “guilty pleasure” is something you’d be embarrassed for the world to know you secretly enjoyed or for your Facebook friends to see you clicked on, but you know what? Around here we embrace the bad-to-godawful movies we love, and besides; what the heck does it even mean to like something ironically, you insufferable hipster? Toss away your pretentious hat, sit down in the circle of trust, take a deep breath, and join Movieline in unabashedly celebrating the inane, misguided, off-the-mark, and downright B-A-D but nevertheless shamelessly entertaining movies of the year – the Top 9 Not-So-Guilty Pleasures of 2011 . Because we all love some terrible things, don’t we? 9. Nick Nolte in Zookeeper Maybe I just cribbed from everyone’s Worst Movies of 2011 list. Maybe Nick Nolte’s work as a TGI Friday’s-loving gorilla named Bernie in Zookeeper eclipses his shattering work in Warrior on the basis of its cringe-worthiness alone. And maybe I feel so bad that poor Nolte had to sing Florida’s “Low” in character as a gorilla opposite Kevin James that it’s endeared me to his scenes. Also: Primates instantly make any movie better. Everybody knows that. 8. The year in Armond White-isms Call for his head all you want, I’ll staunchly defend notorious film critic Armond White (The man who once coined the phrase “abortionhorny” and thought Lady Gaga would make for better Lisbeth Salander casting!) to the end, purely because his reviews are so goddamn entertaining. Add to that the iconoclast take on movies, supported by left-field arguments that are sometimes so crazy they make complete sense, and you’ve got an essential voice in contemporary movie writing. Even if he raved over Adam Sandler in drag; let that be an exception. 7. The Footloose soundtrack I have no fondness for Blake Shelton’s feeble country mimicry of a Kenny Loggins cover, but Movieline’s Louis Virtel was won over by the Footloose remake’s contempo-pop soundtrack of redos. They can’t all be Karen O-Led Zeppelin covers, I suppose. Let’s hear it for the art of pop homage done toe-tappingly well enough? 6. Gerard Depardieu PeeGate At first, it seemed like French acting legend Gerard Depardieu, to quote 2011′s viral sensation the Honey Badger, simply did not give a shit. But unlike the year’s other infamous celebrity incidents (Lars and the Nazi Joke Heard ‘Round the Word, Madonna’s HydrangeaGate), this one boiled down to one man’s humble humanity (and prostate issues). So ridiculous was the tale that Anderson Cooper broke his dashing resolve to giggle through his on-air report, but think of Gerard and embrace his moment of weakness; there’s no shame in acknowledging our fragile human vulnerabilities from time to time. 5. Season of the Witch / Drive Angry / Trespass (AKA A Good Year for Nic Cage) I wouldn’t call it a banner year for Nicolas Cage himself, but it was a great year to be a Nic Cage watcher. He started out 2011 with the medieval gift of silliness that was Season of the Witch , guzzled beer from his enemy’s skull in the genre pic Drive Angry , and (with the other Nic – Nicole Kidman) bequeathed us with Joel Schumacher’s Trespass , a film Movieline’s S.T. VanAirsdale loved, and laughed through, unapologetically. All one big set-up to watch him pee fire! 4. Tyler Perry’s Madea’s Big Happy Family My personal conversion to the church of Tyler Perry happened earlier this year when I found myself rolling in the aisles during Madea’s Big Happy Family . Is Perry’s Madea a cartoonish, hulking hurricane of a woman? Does she reinforce unfortunate cultural stereotypes even as she doles out totally reasonable life advice? All I know is Perry – the performer, the director, the check-cashing media tycoon (and sensitive man of the world) – is some kind of genius to have made an empire out of a wig, a muumuu, and an attitude, one that further allows him a pedestal from which he geniunely consoles and encourages his fans. Hallelujer, indeed. 3. Lonely Island’s “Jack Sparrow” All you need to know, if you don’t already, is that Jorma Taccone, Andy Samberg, and Akiva Shaffer – AKA Lonely Island – wrote an inspired ditty and snared icon of yesteryear Michael Bolton to sing the hook. Only ginormous film fan Michael Bolton turned it into a song about Pirates of the Caribbean , Forrest Gump , and all of his favorite movies — an ode to the cheesy, cliched movies we all love. Instant karaoke classic. 2. The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn Love it or hate it, the Twilight Saga is what it is. And when Robert Pattinson started chowing down on Kristen Stewart’s pregnant belly in the kooky denouement of Bill Condon’s vampire sequel, shit started getting so, so real. AND THEN THE WOLF GUY FELL FOR THE BABY AND OH MY GOD YES. 1. Abduction Speaking of Twilight , the universe that Stephenie Meyer created inadvertently led, in turn, to my number one most enjoyable film experience of the year: Sitting through the entirety of Abduction . Terrible line readings, second unit typos, Taylor Lautner’s posturing ’80s action-inspired swagger – it was all there, and it was all insanely terrible and great at the same time. Does this border on liking Abduction ironically? Maybe, but I couldn’t help it. Just know this: Every second of feeble-handed acting, directing, and writing held my attention rapt and engaged my senses; I came alive imagining the winding thicket of talent, dollars, and choices that could’ve churned out such a product. Was any of it intentional – was John Singleton just fucking with us all? Probably not, but still; this holiday season give yourself the gift of watching Abduction and soak in the glory of the ultimate Bad Movie We Love of 2011. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Don’t Hate, Celebrate the Top 9 Not-So-Guilty Pleasures of 2011

Margin Midnight Mara Marlene: Louis’s 10 Favorite Films of 2011

I realize I may have given away some of these choices with my utterly correct listing of the year’s ten best performances , but no matter! 2011′s finest cinema, specifically the top three choices on my list, gifted us with bleak, but comprehensive glimpses into personal isolation. I love when a movie is resolutely grim — reminds me of home. Here are my top ten films of 2011. 10. Win Win Director Thomas McCarthy’s understated, thoughtful look at a suburban wrestling coach’s (Paul Giamatti) dubious business dealings dredges up your pity and empathy at different moments, but it mostly acquaints you with one of the best teenage performances of the past few years in newcomer and real-life wrestling prodigy Alex Shaffer. It helps that his character is well-written too. As McCarthy explained to us about the emotional lives of teenagers, “They’re struggling with all kinds of things — who they are, what they are, what they want to be. That, for many of those kids, is a very private and scary struggle. A lot of times how that manifests itself is a very deadpan approach to the world: ‘I’m not going to let you see what I’m feeling until I’m ready to really show that.’” When Shaffer is ready to show, it’s a poignant sight. 9. The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo I knew I was in for a treat the minute I heard Trent Reznor and Karen O’s cover of “Immigrant Song,” but David Fincher’s Dragon Tattoo so improves upon the original Swedish film trilogy thanks to two fantastic assets: blisteringly chilly cinematography and the commanding work of Rooney Mara as well-pierced heroine Lisbeth Salander. It may drag in parts, but Mara’s conviction merits a 160-minute runtime. 8. Weekend Tom Cullen and Chris New play the most insightful lovers of the year in Andrew Haigh’s low-key story of one lonely gay man’s short affair with a candid, self-possessed artist. The movie is especially incisive in its depiction of two men who relate both romantically and — in an empathetic way — fraternally. There’s not a pretentious or cloying moment in this wholly believable story. 7. Midnight in Paris Whimsy: I’m usually not a fan! But Midnight in Paris ‘s droll journey back to the heyday of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, and Salvador Dali makes a wonderful protagonist out of Owen Wilson, a gorgeous backdrop for Marion Cotillard’s all-consuming charisma, and a weirdly perfect scene for the film’s moral. You either go with this movie’s kooky historical lark or you don’t, but every actor in that post-midnight time portal is just so fun. My favorite: Kathy Bates as a staunchly supportive Gertrude Stein. 6. Young Adult Forget the hype about “unlikable” heroine Mavis Gary, the grizzled authoress Charlize Theron plays in the new Jason Reitman/Diablo Cody joint Young Adult — She’s an imperturbable, amazingly deluded woman-child whose self-assured mania is more engrossing and “likable” than most characters you’ll encounter this year. I’d like to offer a new tagline for this cranky, suburban comedy: Assholes are Awesome .

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Margin Midnight Mara Marlene: Louis’s 10 Favorite Films of 2011

Bossip Exclusive: “Watch The Throne” Concertgoer Has A Run-In With Julius And Desiree Perez Beyonce’ That Almost Gets Him Booted

Pure comedy… File this Bossip Exclusive under “Random Celebrity Encounters!” By now most of you may have seen the footage of Yeezy having some of his Tacoma “Watch The Throne” concertgoers booted out of the venue, but one of our Bossip supporters wrote in with an interesting firsthand account of his own. How many of you would be surprised to hear that this one includes more “evidence” that B aby Bump BeyBey may not be totin’ a lil Camel hump at all??? Check out the details below: It all started out fine around 7:20PM when my brother and I arrived in the VIP section. Of course, excited he and I were taking pictures of ourselves, stuntin’ and posting them on Facebook. We’re big Jay-Z and Kanye West fans. The show was slated to begin at 7:30. Hours had passed but there were no signs of Kanye or Jay-Z. Unfortunately, at this time it didn’t even appear the show was remotely sold out. We were worried it wouldn’t even happen, especially since Tacoma had already been a rescheduled city. Anyway… The crowds finally did come BUT there were 4 VIP sofa seats, reserved but not taken at the time of the show. At this time (around 9) a staff member of the Tacoma Dome entered the VIP section and assured everyone the show would be starting soon. At this point everyone is hawking the first row VIP seats since they were unclaimed. Being upstanding guy that I am, I thought,”Why try to sneak or creep into a VIP seat that isn’t yours when you can just ask?” I asked the staff member, “If those seats aren’t taken by the time the show begins, can my brother and I move up a VIP seat to be just a little closer to the stage.” She replied, “They are reserved; typically for entourage, but if they are unclaimed, you can. However, if they do come, please be compliant and return to your original seats.” The lights dim. The show begins. No one has checked for the seats. And most of VIP rushes to the seats. My seat happens to belong to a “Perez,Desiree.” “Sorry Desiree, you missed out,” I think to myself. Only to find out seconds later Desiree Perez is “Queen Bey” herself…I guess she really does want to be a Latina…*shrug* Of course Julius asks everyone to go back to their seats. And we do. As we all are walking back, Jay-Z runs to the stage and the camera phones are pulled out by everyone. (HOUSTON WE HAVE A PROBLEM) Because I already had committed the ultimate, sitting in “Queen Bey’s” throne. I was finger pointed out of the crowd by Julius. Not for taking pictures of Jay-Z, but according to Julius snapping photos of Beyonce after he had asked me to stop three times. I was falsely accused and wrongfully removed from not only the section but the building. I never snapped one photo. Being the real soldier that I am I told my brother to stay put, I didn’t do anything wrong and neither did he. Worried that he would be taunted by hecklers I knew I had to do something to get back in. I talked to security. There was nothing they could do to get me back in VIP. Unfortunately,”What they say goes there. It was ridiculous,” he said. Two of the staff supervisors attempted to tell Julius my minor brother was still there and he needed supervision. Julias’s response: “Not my problem…” The staff said there was little they could do as they winked at me. I was given section A8 pass (nose bleeds) and my VIP badge was taken away.I’m thinking WTF?! However, they walked me to the front row! This all sounds great right? Unfortunately not… I was back in, but I had no visual of my brother. And someone in the section threw a phone at Kanye West! I’m thinkin’, “Dang let me get out of here, before I really end up in some s h y t… The security let’s me near VIP. I’m by the sound and video cameras. And I can make signals with my brother. Great I win! Right?! Yes! but by how much… Three goon lookin’ Black dudes wearing all Black walk pass eying me up and down like I’m short. I’m thinkin’ that s h y t cray, do I know these dudes from somewhere? As I eye lock them, they continue to walk to the VIP section and get in the front row with Julius, Bey “and nem.” I’m surrounded by white staff members so of course they punk arses didn’t do anything… I rock out to Big Pimpin, Goldigger, All of the Lights and Paris beside and behind my brother for the rest of the show in the tech section. As the shows ends we leave to our car unscathed. But here’s the thing… 1.The short glimpse I got of “Queen Bey” I can tell you, she does not appear pregnant! I worked the midwifery hall at Valley Medical Center and I’ve seen plenty of pregnant women. The bumps are bigger no matter how petite the frame. 2.Julius and her may be sexing for him to get so riled up over someone who could give two s h y t s about Beyonce. Maybe I was lookin’ too fly tonight because she looked at me and she wasn’t throwing shade. 3.There may be something to the Illuminati rumors. Those dudes in all black and wantin’ to run up on someone who did nothing and wasn’t even in their section is real suspect. sorry for the long winded story, but it is what it is…. WOW!!! Rolling on the floor at the Desiree Perez business. SMH @ that Illuminati royal family. Here are some photos for those of you who need proof dude was indeed there:

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Bossip Exclusive: “Watch The Throne” Concertgoer Has A Run-In With Julius And Desiree Perez Beyonce’ That Almost Gets Him Booted

Britney Spears ‘In A Good Place,’ Kevin Federline Says

K-Fed says he’s ‘totally happy’ for his ex-wife as pop star celebrates engagement in Las Vegas. By Jocelyn Vena Britney Spears and Jason Trawick in Las Vegas Photo: Denise Truscello/WireImage Britney Spears spent the weekend celebrating her engagement to Jason Trawick in Las Vegas with friends and family. On Friday, hours after the news of their impending marriage was confirmed, the singer took to her Facebook page to make it official, changing her relationship status to “engaged.” She also shared with her fans on Twitter just how excited she is to be tying the knot with longtime boyfriend Trawick. “Still glowing!” she wrote . “About to jump on a plane to Planet Hollywood in Vegas. Throwing a Bday Party for Jason at Chateau Night Club. So fun. Xxoo. And celebrate they did. People.com reported that the couple and her two sons checked into Planet Hollywood before making their first public appearance since the news broke. Spears rocked not only a body-hugging Herv

My story isn’t like most others. I actually met Justin…

My story isn’t like most others. I actually met Justin Bieber before he was an international superstar! For my drama class, we took an overnight trip to Stratford, Ontario to watch some of their infamous plays about Shakespeare and such. My class mates and I were walking to the theatre from where we were staying to go see a play called, “My One and Only.” From a distance, we saw this kid jamming out on the guitar and singing his heart out, to a crowd of people while sitting on the steps outside the theatre. As we got closer, we were so  mesmerized by the amount of talent that this boy had , that we were literally late in getting to the show. We easily listened to him play three songs. At the end, we all got into a group photo with him and I dropped a five dollar bill into his guitar case (yes, that’s right, I personally gave Justin money). A couple years later, I was looking back through old photo’s and all of a sudden I was like HOLY CRAP IT’S JUSTIN BIEBER! I put the pieces together that Justin Bieber is from Stratford and I legit freaked out! I will never forget this moment!   -@LaurenK_PLL Read more here: My story isn’t like most others. I actually met Justin…

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My story isn’t like most others. I actually met Justin…

My name’s Camille, I’m 16 and I’m French. I…

My name’s Camille, I’m 16 and I’m French. I met Justin Bieber on March 29th 2011 . I’ve had already seen him at some showcases and stuff, but never met him. The dream began on the 28th. I was in History, and my friend I was going to see at the Bieber’s concert was calling me. My heart began to beat a bit faster, and I asked my teacher if I could go to the restroom. He said yes. I called my friend back and she was kind of screaming on the phone that we were going to meet Justin the day after. So she explained me how she won a contest etc… On the 29th, direction Paris! I was going to meet Justin at 5pm with the guys who won the meet and greet. I found out my friend, and we were searching for the person who had to give us the pass to go to the wings, you know. So we were kind of running everywhere, and we found the girl like 10 minutes before the meeting. We were not more than 10 who were going to meet him. The Bieber crew was inside and a LOT of fans were around every entrances. A security man made us go inside the yard. I felt like a celebrity for 10 seconds, quite a good feeling, haha. Ryan Good was inside the yard too, signing autographs through the barrier. I was the only one who saw him, so I warn the other ones. We joined him, and he was so nice, so funny. He took a picture with everybody but me, and I was like “What about me?” and he was laughing and took a picture with another person. At the end, everybody had his or her photo with him but me, and he was going to sign autographs again, and I said “Ryan that’s not funny!”, he laughed, and he took a picture with me finally. Then, we went inside. The Braun’s brothers were there, they explained us quickly the Meet and greet rules. Then Justin arrived and we finally met him.  My friend went directly to him, and I was just putting off my bag and jacket. Justin was watching me like “Eh, why do you take your time, do you know you’re meeting JUSTIN BIEBER right now?” and he was quite right haha. So, I hugged him tight, and he laughed a bit. We talked a bit in french, in english too. We took a picture together, and my friend was like “Fuck, I was moving on the picture” (she said it in french) and I answered (in french) “That’s shitty for you” and Justin laughed, and I was really surprised he understood french that well, which made me laughed. I hugged him one last time, he was so sweet. I was supposed to leave, but Kenny was there since the beggining and I just COULDN’T leave without even talking with him. My friend was gone. So I talked with Kenny a bit, and he was laughing when I was talking, probably about my accent. I gave him my twitter and he followed me 3 days later.  Justin didn’t really understand why I was still there when some other fans were there to take a pic. I took back my stuff and he waved me, and it was finished. Then, he did a perfect show as usual. That was amazing, and Justin is such a sweet and down to earth person. I’m not rich, I’m not lucky, I don’t know any organizers or things like that. I’m just like all the other fans. And I met him. I want you all to never give up, it will happen if you believe in it. -@camillehoussin Continue reading here: My name’s Camille, I’m 16 and I’m French. I…

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My name’s Camille, I’m 16 and I’m French. I…

Michelle McGee Sex Tape: So Real. So Wrong.

Michelle “Bombshell” McGee , the tattooed, fame-seeking floozy who broke up Jesse James’ marriage to Sandra Bullock in 2010, apparently starred in a sex tape. Shocking, we know. McGee got down and dirty with two equally-tattooed sex fiends earlier this year, and the private XXX liaisons were all caught on tape. Seriously. TMZ has a pic . Unlike the Tupac sex tape, which was just sold to a private collector, the Michelle McGee sex tape is now in the hands of a giant porn company. Yeah baby. The Bombshell footage documents two separate sexual encounters: 1. With a tatted-up dude; 2. With a tatted-up woman. Both were filmed in the last year. It’s unclear how, but we’re told the tapes were acquired by porn giant Red Light District (of 1 Night in Paris fame) which plans to release the footage next year. Somehow we don’t imagine that will be a big seller, even if it is a hot 2-DVD box set. McGee, for once in her waste of a life, could not be reached for comment. [Photo: WENN.com]

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Michelle McGee Sex Tape: So Real. So Wrong.