Tag Archives: psych

What’s Next For Fantasia After Overdose? PR Expert Weighs In

‘I don’t think this is a career-breaker,’ Howard Bragman tells MTV News of apparent suicide attempt. By James Montgomery Fantasia Barrino Photo: Larry Busacca/ Getty Images In the day since former “American Idol” winner Fantasia Barrino was rushed to a North Carolina hospital after an apparent suicide attempt, reaction from her fans has been mixed. Some have expressed their support for the singer, while others have criticized her for being “selfish,” given that she is the mother of a 9-year-old girl. While that criticism might seem harsh, it’s certainly par for the course, according to public-relations executive Howard Bragman, who has overseen the career rehabilitations of Isaiah Washington and Naomi Campbell. Barrino can’t worry about what some of her fans might think of her right now, he said, because she has to focus on her own health. And no matter how bad things seem right now, the forgiveness will come. “I think the number-one thing Fantasia has to do is heal. I think she has to get some psychological help, find out what brought her to this moment, and make sure it doesn’t happen again … that is number one,” Bragman told MTV News. “And once that’s under control, then you start to look at your projects on the horizon. You don’t give yourself this timetable. But assuming she’s well enough in a matter of weeks or months to promote her album or her projects, well, the reality is, we live in a very forgiving society. “We like rehab, we like rebirth, we like reconnecting with people,” he continued. “We’re willing to give people a second chance if they look us in the eye and [tell us] why they’re going on with their lives and why they deserve a second chance. I don’t think this is a career-breaker.” Speaking of that career, Barrino will eventually have to return her focus to upcoming projects, including a second season of her VH1 reality show “Fantasia for Real” in September and a new album, Back to Me, which is due August 24. When she finally does, she needs to prepare herself for an onslaught of questions about just what happened Monday. So the best possible strategy, according to Bragman, is to be proactive about things. “I think she’s certainly going to get asked the question about what happened. And if she were my client, I would do one or two very well-orchestrated interviews, possibly a print interview, a People magazine, and then a broadcast interview … and get it out there,” he said. “And then if you’re asked about it again, you say, ‘You know, I’ve really talked about that a lot, and I feel comfortable with what I said, and I’m here to promote my album’ to change the focus a little.” Bragman added that Barrino needs to take time for herself and only come back when she feels strong enough to do so. And when she does, he expects that her fans will welcome her back with open arms. “I think we go back to talent, and I think she’s got great talent, she’s got great heart and great spirit, and I think we want her to succeed,” he said. “I don’t think she’s one of those people we don’t want to see do well. … We’re on her side, and I think she’s going to feel the love when she goes back out there.” Where should Fantasia go from here? Share your thoughts in the comments. Related Photos Fantasia’s Career In Photos Related Artists Fantasia

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What’s Next For Fantasia After Overdose? PR Expert Weighs In

On CNN, Tavis Smiley Sees Racism in Rangel, Waters Probes; Actress Trashes Limbaugh

PBS talk show host Tavis Smiley guest-hosted on CNN’s Larry King Live on Tuesday night, and perhaps unsurprisingly, encouraged the view that there’s racism in the congressional ethics investigations of Charlie Rangel and Maxine Waters. “Facts are facts. The names that keep coming out happen to be members of the Congressional Black Caucus.” Smiley never seemed to consider whether the charges had merit — on the content of these politicians’ character — only on the color of their skin. He asked actress Aisha Tyler about this alleged outbreak of racism in the Democrat-dominated Congress, and Tyler unleashed an attack on Rush Limbaugh for suggesting the media thinks Michelle Obama’s entitled to a lavish vacation in Spain because of America’s sordid racial past: SMILEY: I wanted to raise this with Aisha. Maxine Waters on this radio show, on “The Tom Joyner Show” today — and I’m paraphrasing here — makes the point that this committee is established under Democrats, but the names that keep leaking out on the folks under investigation happen to be African- American members of Congress. Eight names of members of the Congressional Black Caucus, including, of course, Charlie Rangel, including Maxine Waters, have leaked out. What do you make of that? TYLER: Look, if I was a conspiracy theorist, or if I was a little bit more dead inside that I already am, if I had been deadened more by the political process over the last two years than I already have been, you would see a pattern of trying to besmirched the president’s name by association. I think what we have generally — I mean, when you look at something like the FLOTUS trip to Spain and everyone criticizing her for not taking American trips — she’s already taken four American vacations here. There’s this ongoing effort to call regular kind of common behavior into question and associate it somehow with race. Taking a lavish trip to Spain with 60 Secret Service agents isn’t “common behavior,” even if Mrs. Obama can’t travel without an entourage. Limbaugh’s brief commentary was addressed to the point that the liberal media have long defended the Obamas in everything they do, with the added psychoanalysis that the Obama deserve a different, more charitable standard of analysis because they are the historic first black family in the White House. What was seriously phony in this conversation was Tyler and Smiley expressing oh-so-great reluctance to see racism in every criticism of a black politician: TYLER: I hate to be in that want place. I don’t ever want to be in that place mentally. It’s not a fun place for me to be, to be always thinking about things being motivated racially. SMILEY: But — I think the R-word is over-used in this country. But facts are facts. The names that keep coming out happen to be members of the Congressional Black Caucus. STEPHANIE MILLER: As you know, it’s a complete mistake when Fox News is talking about Shirley Sherrod and runs footage of Maxine Waters by accident, and talking about John Conyers and runs footage of William Jefferson by mistake. You know that’s just a mistake. TYLER: You don’t even want to say what the subtext is in there. It’s such a clam. You know what I mean? You don’t even want to bring it up. I do think the word racism is over-used in this country. At the same time, what I do think is happening right now is there’s more of a subtext of racialism, where when you have somebody like Rush Limbaugh saying that the reason that Michelle Obama went to Spain is that black people are trying to get some of what white people have enjoyed. I mean, come on. Smiley was so enjoying Tyler’s attacks on Limbaugh that he returned to encouraging them after a commercial break: SMILEY: Welcome back to Larry King Live, joined now by our panel. Before the break, Aisha, you were starting to lay out for us your formulation at least about the Michelle Obama trip to Spain. I want to go around the horn, but go ahead and finish your point. TYLER: The thing that I’m really struggling with here — and I’m not going to call Rush Limbaugh, but that is a racialist attitude to say that somehow black people have never traveled abroad until the First Lady got her shot at Spain. I mean, look, I speak three languages. I lived in Europe. I lived overseas. The idea that somehow she’s getting back at white people for slavery by paying her own way to take her daughter to Spain is just extraordinary hyperbole of the highest order. And it’s ridiculous. Tyler was the one picking up the “extraordinary hyperbole” in alleging Limbaugh had said “black people have never traveled abroad” or that Michelle is “getting back at white people for slavery” with the Spain trip — neither of which he said.

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On CNN, Tavis Smiley Sees Racism in Rangel, Waters Probes; Actress Trashes Limbaugh

Of All People: Schultz Slams Chris Christie With Fat Jokes

What’s next: Bill Clinton cutting an ad vexing David Vitter on the issue of fidelity? Of all people, Ed Schultz spent an entire segment this evening going after Chris Christie . . . about his girth. I counted no fewer than seven separate barbs that Schultz directed Christie’s way over his weight.  He began with a photo of the NJ Governor with the graphic “Battle of the Bulge.”   It got heavier from there. “This morning, Beckster [Glenn Beck] had some sizeable praise for the job-cutting governor.” “On his radio program, Laura Ingraham backed him up with this hefty endorsement .” ” Christie’s couch-potato lifestyle .” “Chris Christie is a guy who makes the middle-class, the poor and schoolkids pay for his fat-cat buddies to keep their living high on the hog lifestyle.” “To say he’d be a good president? That would be some pretty hefty Psycho Talk.” Schultz seems to have a penchant for throwing stones from deep within a glass house.  As I reported here yesterday, after Ed mocked Karl Rove for a brief stumble in giving the call-in number while guest-hosting for Rush Limbaugh, Schultz proceeded to butcher the pronunciation of a guest’s name.  Tonight, the significantly un-svelte Schultz taunts Chris Christie over his weight.  Why would Ed want to highlight his own hypocrisy?  When Christie’s opponent in the NJ gubernatorial race, then-incumbent governor Jon Corzine, ran an ad taunting Christie over his avoirdupois, it famously blew up in his face .  Is Ed sure he wants to go down the same losing road?

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Of All People: Schultz Slams Chris Christie With Fat Jokes

Ground Zero Mosque Backlash a Symptom of Economy Says Think Progress Blogger

Is it “the economy, stupid” or is it just that the economy makes people stupid? Either way Matt Yglesias, ThinkProgress.org blogger extraordinaire , believes the economy is what’s driving conservative furor over the “Ground Zero Mosque.” On MSNBC’s August 9 broadcast of “Countdown,” Yglesias did his best to psychoanalyze people that are upset a mosque is being built in the shadow of Ground Zero, where over 2,600 people died in the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks. According to Yglesias, whose blog, ThinkProgress.org, is a function the George Soros-funded Center for American Progress, opposition to the plan had nothing to do with sensitivities but instead economics. The anti-mosque sentiment, he believed, couldn’t exist without masterminds like former Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich whipping conservatives against the mosque into a frenzy. “Well, it seems to me that there is or at least there – it’s much more visible than it used to be because we’re seeing it stoked by sort of the leads in the conservative movement, by Sarah Palin, by Newt Gingrich, by others, in a way that we never had before 9/11,” Yglesias said. “And I think what’s happening is that when the economy goes down, people become anxious, you see, historically, a lot of increase in xenophobia, in fear and in sort of intolerance . And we’ve got the conservative movement leaders, very opportunistically trying to take advantage of that, try to play on people’s anxieties, and build this kind of anti-Muslim hysteria in a way that President Bush never did in 2001 and 2002.” Yglesias, who also saw nothing wrong with his participation in Ezra Klein’s JournoList, a listserv that left several members of the liberal media intelligentsia embarrassed for their downright angry, conspiratorial and mean-spirited comments from it that have come to light, then went for a historical analogy. He compared the current anti-illegal immigration sentiment to President Herbert Hoover, Depression-era United States deportation of as many as 500,000 Mexicans, regardless of legality . “I think it’s really part of an interconnected series of rising xenophobic and anti-foreign sentiment,” Yglesias said. “In particularly with immigration, every time there’s a major economic downturn, you see new anti-immigrant measures. In 1929, President Hoover launched what he called the Mexican Repatriation Initiative where they sort of swept around the American southwest pretty indiscriminately, finding people of Mexico origin and kicking them back. And this is what happens when the economy goes down – people get more worried about people who are different from them. And politicians who are unscrupulous, you know, really to play on that instead of trying to address the underlying problems in the country.” It’s not known if Yglesias is aware of the problems in Arizona because of the wave of illegal immigrants coming across the Mexican border , but in his view this is nothing more than people wanting jobs and not other issues that come with unfettered movement across international borders. “Well, the idea is that when jobs are scarce, you know, maybe if you round some people up and kick them out, and their jobs will come to other people,” Yglesias said. “Of course, the economy doesn’t really work that way. If 10 percent of the population vanished tomorrow, it would be economic chaos, not extra jobs. But, you know, that’s the kind of zero sum thinking that people get into when they become nervous about things they’re seeing in their life and in their community. And we had in the 1880s as well. That’s when we shut the door to immigrants from China and Japan.”

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Ground Zero Mosque Backlash a Symptom of Economy Says Think Progress Blogger

Schultz Mocks Rove Radio Work, But Can’t Pronounce ‘Cousteau’

From the Department Of People In Glass Houses . . . Early in his MSNBC show this evening, Ed Schultz mocked Karl Rove’s performance in filling in for Rush Limbaugh today.  In particular, Schultz slammed Rove for his brief problem in providing the show’s call-in number.   But later in the show, Ed himself ran head-first into a rhetorical roadblock, stumbling badly when it came to pronouncing the most famous name in the world of ocean studies: Cousteau. ED SCHULTZ: And in Psycho Talk tonight, Karl Rove filled in for the Drugster [Schultz’s nasty nickname for Rush] on his radio show today, and I think old Turd Blossom should probably stick to his day job across the street over at Fox . . . Rove’s debut as a radio host was a total disaster. Right off the bat he had a hell of a time finding the call-in number, even though it was right on the screen in front of him. But later, it was Ed’s turn to pronounce a name so famous it’s the first one that comes up in Google search when you type in Jacques.  Here was Ed’s heroic struggle as he sought to introduce Phillipe, grandson of the famous oceanographer. SCHULTZ:  Coming up . . . world-renowned environmental expert Philippe Castoo, Cas–, Coh-stow will join us, coming up here in just a moment.  Give Phillipe credit for his French sang froid in–just–managing to suppress a smirk at poor Ed’s problems. Note: Ed also let some professional jealousy creep into his roasting of Rove/Limbaugh. Schultz spoke sarcastically [longingly?] of “that high-impact, totally-entertaining, right-wing radio on five million stations across America that we just can’t live without.”

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Schultz Mocks Rove Radio Work, But Can’t Pronounce ‘Cousteau’

Same-sex Marriage Judge Finds That a Child Has Neither a Need Nor a Right to a Mother

U.S. District Judge Vaughn R. Walker, who ruled last week that a voter-approved amendment to California’s constitution that limited marriage to the union of one man and one woman violated the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, based that ruling in part on his finding that a child does not need and has no right to a mother.   Nor, he found, does a child have a need or a right to a father.   “Children do not need to be raised by a male parent and a female parent to be well-adjusted, and having both a male and a female parent does not increase the likelihood that a child will be well-adjusted,” the judge wrote in finding of fact No. 71 in  his opinion .   “The gender of a child’s parent is not a factor in a child’s adjustment,” the judge stated in finding of fact No. 70. “The sexual orientation of an individual does not determine whether that individual can be a good parent. Children raised by gay or lesbian parents are as likely as children raised by heterosexual parents to be healthy, successful and well-adjusted. The research supporting this conclusion is accepted beyond serious debate in the field of developmental psychology.”   Despite Walker’s claim that this “fact” is “beyond serious debate,” one of the sources he cited for it was a  brochure  published by the American Psychological Association (APA) that was entered into evidence in the case, which specifically stated twice: “Few studies are available regarding children of gay fathers.” Walker did not quote this part of the brochure in his opinion.   However, Walker did quote this same brochure as saying: “[S]ocial science has shown that the concerns often raised about children of lesbian and gay parents–concerns that are generally grounded in prejudice against and stereotypes about gay people–are unfounded.”   This quote comes from a side-bar box on page five of the six-page APA brochure. The box purports to answer the “most common questions” about homosexual parents, posing four such questions and giving the APA’s answer to them.   The first is: “Do children of lesbian and gay parents have more problems with sexual identity than do children of heterosexual parents?”   The full answer in the brochure is as follows: “For instance, do these children develop problems in gender identity and/or in gender role behavior? The answer from research is clear: sexual and gender identities (including gender identity, gender-role behavior, and sexual orientation) develop in much the same way among children of lesbian mothers as they do among children of heterosexual parents. Few studies are available regarding children of gay fathers.”   The brochure does not explain why the APA concludes that the “answer from research is clear” that children of homosexual parents do not have more problems with sexual identity than children with mothers and fathers when in fact, as the brochure itself states, “[f]ew studies are available regarding children of gay fathers.” Nor does Judge Walker explain how his finding of “fact” that the gender of parents does not matter to children is “beyond serious debate” when in fact his own source stipulates that “[f]ew studies are available regarding children of gay fathers.”   The second question answered in the brochure is:  “Do children raised by lesbian or gay parents have problems in personal development in areas other than sexual identity?”   The entirety of the answer provided in the brochure states:  “For example, are the children of lesbian or gay parents more vulnerable to mental breakdown, do they have more behavior problems, or are they less psychologically healthy than other children? Again, studies of personality, self-concept, and behavior problems show few differences between children of lesbian mothers and children of heterosexual parents. Few studies are available regarding children of gay fathers.” Judge Walker does not quote this part of the brochure in his finding that the gender of parents does not matter, nor does he explain how his finding can be “beyond serious debate” when in fact the very evidence he uses to establish this point states that “[f]ew studies are available regarding gay fathers.”   To further his case that the well-being of children is no bar to declaring same-sex marriage a right protected  by the Fourteenth Amendment, Judge Walker makes a finding of fact that the state of California already legally recognizes that the gender of parents is irrelevant.  As Walker reports it, California laws goes so far as to “encourage” homosexuals to acquire children whether through adoption, foster care, or artificially conceiving a child and, presumably, in the case of a male-male couple, securing a female to gestate the child until the male-male couple can take custody of it.   “California law permits and encourages gays and lesbians to become parents through adoption, foster parenting or assistive reproductive technology,” writes Walker in finding of fact No. 49. “Approximately 18 percent of same-sex couples in California are raising children.”   To support this finding, Walker notes that California’s attorney general, who is Jerry Brown, “admits that the laws of California recognize no relationship between a person’s sexual orientation and his or her ability to raise children.”   “Attorney General admits,” writes Walker, “that California law protects the right of gay men and lesbians in same-sex relationships to be foster parents and to adopt children by forbidding discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.” Walker’s ruling declaring same-sex marriage protected under the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution, if upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court, would have ramifications far beyond California, requiring states across the union to recognize same-sex marriages while wiping out any legal protection a child might have from being handed over by state governments to same-sex couples either through adoption or foster parenthood.   The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment as applied by Walker would require states to grant a marriage license to same-sex couples and would-be parents, while implicitly annihilating the notion that each American child has an equal right to a mother and a father.    A child put out for adoption or foster parenting by the state, or a child conceived through technological means and gestated in a hired womb, would have no right not to be assigned to a homosexual couple who would act as his or her father and father or mother and mother. Crossposted at NB sister site CNS News   

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Same-sex Marriage Judge Finds That a Child Has Neither a Need Nor a Right to a Mother

‘Disappearance Of Alice Creed’ Was ‘Demanding,’ Gemma Arterton Says

‘I didn’t know if I was going to be able to achieve the level of terror and angst,’ actress tells MTV News of brutal new film. By Eric Ditzian Gemma Arterton Photo: mtv news In 2010, we’ve seen Gemma Arterton battling gods in ancient Greece in “Clash of the Titans” and galloping on horses across the sands of time in “Prince of Persia.” But American audiences have never seen the 24-year-old British actress as we do in “The Disappearance of Alice Creed.” From her very first moment onscreen in this taut thriller of an indie flick, she’s physically and emotionally stripped bare. Arterton plays the title character, a woman from a wealthy family who’s kidnapped and held hostage in an anonymous room. She spends a great deal of the film tied to a bed, a ball gag stuffed in her mouth as she’s routinely stripped naked and forced into one humiliating act after another. Yet as the film evolves, Alice strikes a plan of her own, beginning to snatch back power from her two male captors. With secrets revealed in a piecemeal fashion, you start to realize exactly how she came to be in this utterly dysfunctional dynamic. With the movie now in theaters, Arterton sat down with MTV News to talk about the difficulties of the shoot, how filming nude scenes is no big deal and why “Alice Creed” has given her the opportunity to embrace smaller movies rather than those big-budget action flicks. MTV : On behalf of the moviegoing public, I’d like to say congratulations for delivering the most dysfunctional love triangle of the year! Gemma Arterton : It is! It is! But let’s not reveal too much. MTV : That’s all we’ll say. It is a difficult and often brutal movie from the very first scene, when you’re abducted, stripped naked and tied up. How do you get into that mind-set on set? Arterton : You just do it. We shot in sequence, which is really unusual. So from the first day, I was filming that stuff. It was the stuff, physically, that I wasn’t looking forward to, because it was really demanding, and I was exhausted at the end of it. But actually, I was more intimidated and nervous about the rest of the film, which, psychologically and emotionally, is so dramatic. I didn’t know if I was going to be able to achieve the level of terror and angst. You just go for it. When I read the script, I just loved it. I hadn’t read anything that held me like that before. All of the physical things that happen, I went, “Yeah, it’s not great to have to do those things, but it’s part of this wonderful film, and I’m not going to complain about it. I’m just going to do it.” MTV : Speaking of those difficult things, there are some brutal nude scenes. The night before, are you dreading filming that stuff, or is it just another day at the office? Arterton : Honestly, it is just another day at the office. I know it’s really hard to believe, [but] I was thinking so much about all the other stuff I had to do, all of the crying and the fear, that that was just the easy bit, in a way. I didn’t have to worry about anything. I think it’s good to treat it like that. I remember when we were on set, everyone is always so respectful and they really make a fuss out of you. I remember just trying to make everybody laugh in those scenes, because then the tension is broken and everyone can just get on with the job. A lot of a hoo-ha is made out of [nudity]. Also, I’m a really big fan of French cinema, and it’s not a big deal for French actors and French moviemakers. It’s just another part of the movie. If it’s relevant, it should be like that. MTV : Also, the ball gag you always have to wear. By the end of it, my jaw was hurting. How long did you have to suffer? Arterton : Oh, the ball gag! For the first week, I was really like the overzealous actor going, “Put it on really tight. I want to feel it, and the handcuffs and all that.” And then I started actually hurting myself, and I had these cuts at the side of my mouth and my wrists were bruised, so we worked out a way I could fake it. But it was just, take after take, just pop the ball gag in. If I was talking too much, they’d pop the ball gag back in. Actually, they used to disinfect it every day with mouthwash. So now with mouthwash, I get that kind of memory of the ball gag. MTV : “Alice Creed” is very different from what American audiences have seen from you after “Clash” and “Prince of Persia.” What is more your sweet spot? Is it the big blockbuster or the indie flicks? Arterton : This sort of movie is the type of thing I see that I will buy on DVD and will read about and be excited about. I do like blockbusters, but for me, it’s a very different style of acting. The reason I wanted to do this film is, I just wanted to do something that was focused on the story and the acting. It’s really exciting making the big movies, because it’s what you imagine, when you’re a kid, moviemaking is like. As an actor, this film is the most satisfying type of work. Since making this movie, my career has changed. It’s done me more favors than anything else I’ve done, although it’s probably been seen by less people. MTV : What are the types of roles that are coming your way? Arterton : Whereas before it was usually the girl role, it’s now movies where the girl is leading the movie. Also, more quirky indie films. Before, people make an assumption of you based on the pop side of the work you do. I’m so pleased, because now I can do both! MTV : So what’s next for you? Anything you’d like to reveal? Arterton : I’d love to tell you, because they’re so cool. But they’re not fully financed, so I don’t want to jinx it. I just can’t wait to tell everybody! Check out everything we’ve got on “The Disappearance of Alice Creed.” For breaking news, celebrity columns, humor and more — updated around the clock — visit MTVMoviesBlog.com .

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‘Disappearance Of Alice Creed’ Was ‘Demanding,’ Gemma Arterton Says

Mammalampa Lamps: Naturally Poetic Lighting from Latvia

Images: Mammalampa Latvia may be a little off the beaten track in terms of tourist destinations, but it’s evident that its newfound psyche has a bit of old-world charm merging with a modern muscularity. Case in point: take a look at these lamps by Mammalampa , a design firm based in the capital of Riga. Their mission: “[to declare] a gentle war [by] making lamps differently without adapting, killing or violently beautifying materials. Our lamps are created in the image of living materials touched by the… Read the full story on TreeHugger

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Mammalampa Lamps: Naturally Poetic Lighting from Latvia

Scott Disick Enters Therapy, Remains Douchey

Scott Disick is still a douchebag. But reports now indicate he’s a sober douchebag. Following his especially crazed, drunken actions on Sunday’s episode of Kourtney and Khloe Take Miami , sources say Scott has had a “wake-up call” and entered therapy. “Scott realized that Kourtney could bar him from seeing Mason if he kept drinking. That’s what ultimately led him to get help,” the insider tells Life & Style . Another source gets more specific to E! News and adds: “Scott received outpatient rehab treatment and counseling for alcohol use and psychological issues after his Miami outburst. He’s still being treated.” This would be great, encouraging news… if we believed a single word about this family was not contrived by a team of publicists.

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Scott Disick Enters Therapy, Remains Douchey

The Deadly Neurotoxin Used Daily By Millions

All Industry-Funded Studies Give Aspartame Clean Bill of Health, While Majority of Independent Research Find Indications of Hazards A 1996 review of 165 studies [vii] [viii] believed to be relevant to human safety, by Dr. Ralph G. Walton, a professor of Clinical Psychiatry, showed a remarkable discrepancy between study results and their source of funding. Of the 165 studies, 74 had industry related funding (such as Searle, Nutrasweet