Friday, March 21, 2008

Lauren Conrad: I love audrina and brody




Lauren Conrad of "The Hills" wants to set the record straight about Audrina Patridge and Brody Jenner, her friends and co-stars on the MTV reality show.

On Conrad's MySpace page she opens up about her recent Us magazine article that included the headline "How Audrina and Brody Betrayed Me."

"Hey! I just wanted to take a moment to clear something up," Conrad wrote on her blog. "I do not feel betrayed by Audrina or Brody. I love them both and said nothing to contradict this. I understand that headlines sell magazines, but I value my friendships above magazine sales any day."

Conrad also took the time to praise the upcoming season of "The Hills."

"I got to see some of the first episode yesterday and it looks amazing," she wrote. "I’m sooooooo excited for everyone to see Paris."

Saturday, December 1, 2007

Music producer says Britney Spears is preggers




Music producer says Britney Spears is preggers

Is Britney Spears pregnant? According to music producer J.R. Rotem , she is. "It's true," Rotem reportedly told In Touch magazine. But Spears' buddy Sam Lutfi says otherwise. "Don't know who made it up. J.R. doesn't even know what's up. It's fake."
Brad Pitt vows no more nudity in his films

The man who brought joy to so many with his fit physique is packing it away forever. Brad Pitt , 43, has vowed not to film any more nude scenes. "I don't want to be embarrassed when my kids get old enough to see my films," said Pitt to the BBC. Sniff. Where's the tissue? Pitt added that there might be fewer films in his future. "Who knows how many I'll get to do now, so I want to do something I'm interested in. Otherwise, I don't want to bother. I think it's a younger person's game."
Andy Garcia remembers NFL star Taylor

In a statement to the Miami Herald, "Ocean's Thirteen" actor Andy Garcia said NFL star Sean Taylor was a "hero." Taylor, 24, died Tuesday after being shot in his home by an intruder. Taylor's girlfriend, Jackie Garcia, who is Andy Garcia's niece, hid in the bedroom with the couple's 18-month daughter. Garcia spoke of Taylor's "heroic action" as "a testament to his humanity and courage." Garcia, 51, added, "We will always remember him as a caring and loving individual, especially to his new family."

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• The very pregnant pop singer Christina Aguilera reveals quite a bit in January's Marie Claire. In addition to giving an in-depth interview, Aguilera poses nude. She reveals why she kept quiet about the pregnancy. "I didn't want to make the audience uncomfortable, like 'Pregnant lady onstage!' " The issue hits newsstands Dec. 11.

• "Sopranos" actress Drea de Matteo , 35, had a baby girl, Alabama Gypsy Rose, on Wednesday.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Morissette Lands Movie Role

HOLLYWOOD - Singer Alanis Morissette has landed a role in upcoming movie Radio Free Albemuth.

Morissette will play a young cancer sufferer in the movie adaptation of a novel by Philip K. Dick, the science-fiction writer behind box office hits Blade Runner, Minority Report and Total Recall.

The 33-year-old says, "I feel blessed to portray Sylvia and to be part of this story being told in film."

Whitaker to Star in 'American Gangster' TV Offshoot

HOLLYWOOD - Denzel Washington and Russell Crowe's new movie American Gangster already has a TV spin-off, which will star another Oscar winner, Forest Whitaker.

As American Gangster hits theaters, cable network Showtime has announced Whitaker will play Harlem drug lord Leroy Barnes in a new drama series called Mr. Untouchable.

Cuba Gooding Jr., yet another Oscar winner, portrays the New York heroin dealer, who was dubbed Mr. Untouchable by the media in the 1970s, in American Gangster.

Whitaker's film will follow the fortunes of Barnes, who built a drug empire that rivaled that of the Mafia.

Mr. Untouchable has no official ties to director Ridley Scott's American Gangster.

Strike Brings Top Talk Shows to a Standstill

HOLLYWOOD - Top late-night talk shows The Tonight Show, The Daily Show and The Late Show have become the first big victims of the Hollywood writer's strike.

Producers of the three programs scrapped plans to air on Monday night as the walkout kicked off, following a weekend of desperate talks to halt the strike.

The Tonight Show host Jay Leno briefly joined the picket line outside the NBC studios in Burbank, California--where his show is taped--after network bosses announced the show would immediately go into reruns.

David Letterman's The Late Show will also run a series of repeats this week, as will The Daily Show and a series of daytime talk shows.

The strike started on a noisy note as picketing writers began chanting loudly outside CBS and Paramount Studios in Hollywood early on Monday morning.

Those organized outside Paramount wore red strike T-shirts and carried signs reading, "Writers Guild of America on Strike."

McCartney Seeking Full Custody


HOLLYWOOD - Paul McCartney is seeking full custody of his 4-year-old daughter with Heather Mills, following the ex-model's suicide revelations on TV last Wednesday.

Mills, 39, ranted to a British interviewer that she was finding life impossible following a string of bad press--and had contemplated ending her life after her marriage to the former Beatle ended in May 2006.

But her TV confessions have worried McCartney, who fears their daughter Beatrice could be at risk from Mills' erratic behavior.

A close pal tells British newspaper The News of the World, "Paul fears Heather's lost the plot and needs help. He's deeply worried.

"She claimed to the world that her life's at risk. If that's true, so is Bea's and she must be with her dad.

"Paul's main concern is Bea's safety and well-being. Going for full custody is a last resort but he's really scared for his child. He doesn't feel he's got a choice now.

"Paul did plead with Heather to consider Bea before she went on these TV shows, but she ignored him. Now he's deeply concerned their daughter is growing more aware of the public war between them."

The estranged couple had previously agreed for Mills to take primary custody, with McCartney entitled to regular visits.

The news of McCartney's plans for full custody come as Mills faces questioning by social services about her ability as a mother.

A senior U.K. health visitor says, "There is a duty of care. We will investigate the claims that a woman has considered taking her own life and decide whether these claims can be substantiated. If there are grounds for concern we will decide on the next course of action."

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Defence names tax man as CIO


THE Department of Defence has poached Australian Taxation Office technology boss Greg Farr to serve as its new chief information officer.


Greg Farr's appointment as Defence CIO comes just days before he's scheduled to brief vendors on the ATO's $1 billion outsourcing program


The appointment casts a shadow over the ATO's looming $1 billion outsourcing program and comes just days before Mr Farr was scheduled to brief vendors on the initiative.

Defence named Mr Farr, the ATO's second commissioner and senior technology executive, as its new CIO in a statement late Friday.

Mr Farr will start work at the end of next month.

"We are delighted to welcome Mr Farr to the Defence organisation and look forward to working with him on what is an increasingly vital part of our activities, including in support of ADF operations," Secretary of Defence Nick Warner said.

Mr Farr's appointment follows a decision by Defence to reopen applications for the CIO job to public servants after it failed to attract enough interest from private sector technology bosses.

Coles CIO Peter Mahler and former Qantas and Telstra IT head Fiona Balfour are both understood to have been targeted by Defence but the organisation was expected to struggle to match private sector pay scales.

Peter Lambert has been serving as acting chief information officer at Defence.

An independent review carried out earlier this year had advised Defence to bring in an IT expert from the private sector.

While Mr Farr's appointment does not fulfil that recommendation it does embrace advice that the department draw upon external expertise to revitalise its troubled technology operations.

Mr Farr will step into an organisation battered by controversy and struggling to deliver major IT projects including a $100 million upgrade of its mission critical payroll and human resources platform.

The department has three core business system projects underway and Mr Farr will also have to grapple with myriad military systems.

Defence is one of the country's largest and most sophisticated users of information and communications technology and the role of leading its IT operations is considered one of the most challenging CIO jobs in Australia.

The department has also struggled to hold onto technology leaders and it has had two full-time and two acting CIOs aside from Mr Farr in the last four years.

The most recent full-time chief information officer, Air Vice-Marshall John Monaghan, resigned from the position to pursue a private sector career in March, precipitating a six-month search for a new permanent technology boss.

Mr Farr leaves the ATO as the organisation prepares to retender its decade-old infrastructure outsourcing agreement with EDS.

An ATO spokeswoman said that Mr Farr's appointment to Defence was not likely to impact the $1 billion outsourcing project, which kicks off at the end of October and will run until mid-2010.

Mr Farr has been central to determining the outsourcing strategy and has also overseen the agency's on-going, $724 million technology Change Program.

"Mr Farr has played a key role in leading the Change Program and leaves us well on the road to the successful roll-out of the remaining releases. In particular we have a high level of confidence for release 3.1 and 3.2, with a lot of the hard work behind us," the spokeswoman said.

"The talent of our people is being recognised increasingly by others in the public service and Greg’s appointment recognises the value others place in our capabilities."

ATO chief information officer Bill Gibson will continue to manage the tax office's technology sourcing strategy on a day-to-day basis and the agency has commissioned a recruitment firm to start the hunt for a new second commissioner.

"Our own people are being considered as well as others in the field to be provided to government for consideration," the spokeswoman said.