Tag Archives: personality

Russell Brand Needs To Loosen Up

And no, we’re not talking about his personality. The comedian was spotted on his way to the gym in West Hollywood… And we can’t help but notice his skinny jeans are getting skinnier by the day. We never thought getting into Russell Brand ‘s pants would be difficult… But from the looks of it…it is.

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Russell Brand Needs To Loosen Up

‘My Life As Liz’ Star Liz Lee Recalls Touching Snooki’s Poof

‘After touching it, I was just inspired,’ she says of the ‘Jersey Shore’ starlet’s now-famous hairstyle. By Jocelyn Vena “My Life as Liz” star Liz Lee Photo: MTV News Back in December, MTV News had some of the “Jersey Shore” stars stop by to chat about the show. That day, “My Life as Liz” star Liz Lee also happened to be hanging around the MTV News offices. Lee got the chance to meet Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi — and her now-famous hairstyle. “I got to touch her poof! … She has a magnificent poof,” Lee said about the encounter with her fellow MTV star. “Like, after touching it, I was just inspired. Like, I wanted to go do charity work.” Lee even made a cameo as MTV News staffers asked Snooki for advice. While Lee doesn’t wear the hairstyle herself, a lot of the girls in her Texas hometown, where her show takes place, sport poofs very similar to the one made famous by the “Jersey Shore” star. “I feel like I’m afraid to touch Cori [Cooper]’s poof,” Lee said of her “My Life as Liz” nemesis. “I’d probably have to wash my hands afterwards, sanitize a little bit. And I don’t think I’d ever touch Cori’s poof.” Lee admitted to being a fan of Snooki’s hairstyle, but she isn’t quite sure she has the personality to rock that look. “I don’t think I’m the right girl for a poof,” she said. “I don’t think it’s really flattering for me. Snooki’s poof is magnificent. Cori’s poof is … gross.” Don’t miss “My Life as Liz” every Monday at 10:30 p.m. on MTV.

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‘My Life As Liz’ Star Liz Lee Recalls Touching Snooki’s Poof

‘Jersey Shore’ Cast Laugh It Up On ‘The View’

Snooki, the Situation and company talk about fame, season two and beyond. By Jocelyn Vena “Jersey Shore” cast Photo: Scott Gries/ Picture Group When the cast of “Jersey Shore” stopped by “The View” on Tuesday (February 23), Joy Behar was determined to dig into the personal lives of the cast, wondering just how Italian they are, if they are watching the money they are making and if they use protection when they have sex. But for most of the interview, the MTV reality stars cracked jokes and talked about their newfound fame. When Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi was asked when she knew she was famous, she quickly responded, “Pretty much at birth. Just my personality and my look. I don’t know. I mean just look at me. I have good style. I think it’s all the hair.” While it seems like Snooki gets a lot of the attention, Michael “The Situation” Sorrentino and the rest of the crew insisted that no one is jealous of each other’s fame. “Everyone gets their own stuff,” he explained, before turning down the chance to show off his infamous abs. “You know what, I really don’t want to cheapen the product these days. The brand is actually the situation.” Paul “Pauly D” DelVecchio added that he’s not about to quit his night job now that he’s famous. “I’m still DJ-ing,” he said. “But now my rate went up.” Sammi “Sweetheart” Giancola and Ronnie Ortiz-Magro remained tight-lipped about their relationship status, but Jenni “J-Woww” Farley revealed that she and her boyfriend are back together. “We’re fine now,” she said. “Nobody realizes that we weren’t even together for two weeks.” So, what’s next for the cast? While Vinny Guadagnino is just hoping that season two of “Jersey Shore” takes place somewhere warm, the Situation has a good idea of what he wants to do in the long term: He’s got his sights set on Hollywood. “I got a deep belief in myself that I can do anything, so after maybe doing one or two more years of reality, if that, then I’ll move on to possibly acting,” he said. “If it doesn’t work out, then hey, I tried. I shot for the stars. If you hit the moon, you’re still OK.” Related Photos Where Should The Cast Of ‘Jersey Shore’ Go For Season 2?

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‘Jersey Shore’ Cast Laugh It Up On ‘The View’

John Mayer Moves On From Playboy Interview At Detroit Show

Singer talks to the crowd a lot during two-hour concert, but makes no mention of his recent controversial comments. By Adam Graham John Mayer (file) Photo: Paul Bergen/Redferns AUBURN HILLS, Michigan — Those who feared John Mayer would zip his lip and let his guitar do the talking in the wake of Playboy -gate needn’t have worried. During Mayer’s Battle Studies Tour stop Friday night (February 12) at the Palace of Auburn Hills in suburban Detroit, the embattled singer talked — and talked and talked — from the stage, but not about Jessica “Sexual Napalm” Simpson, his affinity for pornography or the racist and homosexual slurs in the Playboy interview that landed him in hot water earlier this week. Instead, Mayer mused about VH1 Classic, the 1970s and Sylvester Stallone — namely “Over the Top,” 1987’s Stallone-starring arm-wrestling epic. “Me taking off my jacket, you understand, is sort of like Sylvester Stallone turning his hat around in ‘Over the Top,’ ” Mayer told the crowd of 12,000, after removing the black jacket he wore during the first couple of songs of Friday’s show. “You know, like Sylvester Stallone says in ‘Over the Top,’ one movie in a giant string of arm-wrestling movies. That’s when you know Hollywood was flush with cash. Somebody walked in and said, ‘I got an idea, you take Stallone … ‘ they’re like, ‘Sold. Wait, hold on, what’s he doing?’ ‘He’s arm wrestling.’ ‘Double sold. Let’s do it.’ ” The off-the-cuff riff felt like Mayer trying out new stand-up material, as he wondered aloud if anyone actually uttered the words “Over the Top” in the film. Basically, he seemed like he was back to his jokey, irreverent self, and he let his onstage apology in Nashville on Wednesday — and his tweeted apologies the same day — speak for themselves. Mayer, backed by his five-piece band and two backup singers, opened the two-hour concert with “Heartbreak Warfare,” his current single, and continued through a host of material from Battle Studies and his previous efforts. Covers of Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer” and the Police’s “Message in a Bottle” were added into the mix, and a mid-show run-through of his very first single, “No Such Thing,” was performed acoustically: “How I used to play it at coffee shops,” he said. If so desired, plenty could be read into the video screens behind Mayer that projected a blazing wall of fire or lyrics such as “I’ll come through, like I do when the world keeps testing me, testing me, testing me” (from “Vultures”). But through his lighthearted stage banter and sincere thank-yous to the crowd for spending their Friday evening with him, he seemed doggedly determined to move forward from the controversy. Kara Dubay of Rochester Hills, Michigan, didn’t mind spending her Friday with Mayer and wasn’t concerned about his comments from the Playboy interview. “I don’t care what he does in his personal life, really,” the 19-year-old college student said. “I like him for his music, so I don’t think [his personal life] is anyone’s business.” David Trierweiler of Grand Rapids, Michigan, said he thought Mayer’s comments in the Playboy article were lost in translation. “I think he meant well, it just came across wrong,” said Trierweiler, 22. “By no means did he mean to say anything against anyone else.” Katelyn Van Slyke, a graduate student at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, agreed. “I think that everyone takes what he says way too seriously. Everything he says is like a joke with himself. He’s a funny guy.” She said Friday’s concert and the warm reception he received from the 80 percent capacity crowd proved he can move past the negativity caused by the racy interview. “He can move on from it. He’s a weird guy, and his personality goes into his music, that’s what makes him so unique,” she said. “He apologized, and I don’t think he’s a bad guy. He’s just taken way too seriously.” Related Artists John Mayer

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John Mayer Moves On From Playboy Interview At Detroit Show

New For DSM-V: White House Press Personality Disorder

Two days ago, NBC News White House correspondent Chuck Todd was whining to the Washington Post that Barack Obama doesn’t talk to the press enough. Yesterday, Obama talked to the press. Today, Todd whined about Obama talking to the press. The point has repeatedly been made that the men and women who cover the White House are a needy, preening, insecure, irrational, and emotionally unstable pack of professional stalkers whose confused feelings of adulation, jealousy, covetousness, and hatred for the man whose decisions and behavior govern the contours of their careers has corroded into an indecipherable slurry of rage and bottomless longing. But it bears repeating! The sheer clueless gall of the reporters, including Todd, who whined to the Post ‘s Howard Kurtz on Monday about Obama’s unavailability to the press was astonishing enough given the long and documented history of complaints as recently as six months ago that Obama was “overexposed.” But for Todd to wonder aloud today whether Obama erred in doing precisely what he demanded that Obama do just 48 hours ago has to be some sort of cry for help—a howl of pain from a troubled man in the grips of affliction that we’ll call White House Personality Disorder. Here’s Todd on Monday, complaining to Kurtz about being cut off from Obama’s inner thoughts and deepest desires: NBC White House reporter Chuck Todd calls the situation a “shame,” saying the administration is trying to control the message rather than allowing Obama to be seen “unscripted.” Here he was this morning, on his MSNBC show, complaining to former Clinton spokesman Joe Lockhart about Obama being too omnipresent: I’ll be honest—it felt like he didn’t have a lot of news to announce…. Is it good to put the president out on a day like that, when you don’t have a lot of news to announce? This rapidfire and profoundly irrational vacillation between spurned desire and outraged rejection is characteristic of White House Press Personality Disorder, a variant of borderline personality disorder unique to the hothouse environment of the D.C. press corps, where the intense pressures to both love and hate, protect and attack a single powerful father figure whom reporters are endlessly charged with thinking and talking about deforms fragile psyches every day. The National Institute of Mental Health’s analysis of borderline personality disorder can be transferred quite cleanly to its White House cousin: People with BPD often have highly unstable patterns of social relationships. While they can develop intense but stormy attachments, their attitudes towards family, friends, and loved ones may suddenly shift from idealization (great admiration and love) to devaluation (intense anger and dislike). Thus, they may form an immediate attachment and idealize the other person, but when a slight separation or conflict occurs, they switch unexpectedly to the other extreme and angrily accuse the other person of not caring for them at all. That sounds very familiar . The “Obama never talks to us” complaints came on the heels of a universal round of “Obama’s performance in from the of the Republicans was awesome” hallelujahs, which came on the heels of an unrelenting barrage of “Obama’s lost his mojo” analyses, which came on the heels of a round of “Obama’s State of the Union speech was a powerful performance” reports, and on and on in a ceaseless up-and-down series of “stormy attachments” and sudden “devaluations.” White House Press Personality Disorder is also characterized by obsessive nitpicking and a tendency to impute significance to objectively meaningless data, which can be seen in today’s Politico story discerning a troubling decline in the number of times the word “[LAUGHTER]” appears in transcripts of the White House press briefings : In the first six months of the Obama administration, briefings produced an average of 179 laughs per month. Over the past six months, the average has dropped down to 89. [snip] “There definitely aren’t a lot of laughs around the briefing room these days,” says Washington Examiner White House correspondent Julie Mason. “Robert’s little digs and evasions have lost their power to amuse – particularly since we haven’t had a presser since July.” The piece was published at 4 a.m. today—early bird WINS THE DAY!—so we can presume that Politico’s Patrick Gavin, who chronicled the death of laughter, interviewed Mason yesterday, which means that she uttered the words “particularly since we haven’t had a presser since July” on the day that Barack Obama held a presser . What’s unclear from Gavin’s account of the mirthless briefing room is whether the missing “[LAUGHTER]”s are due to Gibbs attempting fewer gags or getting fewer laughs for the gags he attempts. But whatever: We know that the briefings are now morose and somber affairs owing to Obama refusal to talk to the press except for yesterday. This is what these people make us think of:

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New For DSM-V: White House Press Personality Disorder

Fanookers and Doormats: Sprucing Up TV’s Gay Characters

AfterElton put together a sadly hopeful little roundup of “gay” TV pilots currently in various stages of development today. It got us thinking about the current slate of gay folks on TV, and wishing for some new variations.

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Fanookers and Doormats: Sprucing Up TV’s Gay Characters

The Lauren Conrad Reading List

After the loss of two celebrated writers this week — Howard Zinn and J.D. Salinger — it’s easy to feel like there’s nobody left

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The Lauren Conrad Reading List

Be Good Johnny Weir: Glitter and Be Fey, But Not Gay

Be Good Johnny Weir , a peculiarly thoughtful new documentary series about be-spangled Olympic figure skater Johnny Weir, premiered on the Sundance Channel last night and we gave it a watch. And you know what?

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Be Good Johnny Weir: Glitter and Be Fey, But Not Gay

How Gaming Helped Create Roxxxy’s Skin-Deep Personality

If you can get past the skin-soft silicon, the over-sexualized mouth, the transparent nightie and uncomfortably-separated thighs, Douglas Hines latest invention could offer some interesting insight into the way games interact with people.

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How Gaming Helped Create Roxxxy’s Skin-Deep Personality

Channing Tatum, Burnt Penis Featured in Details Magazine

Channing Tatum is featured in the latest issue of Details . Inside the magazine, the actors opens up about two important stories from his life: His diagnosis of depression. The time he burned his penis

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Channing Tatum, Burnt Penis Featured in Details Magazine