Monday, December 10, 2012

Kellan Lutz Relaxes Poolside




Twilight's Kellan Lutz was spotted showing off his impeccable physique as he takes a dip in his hotel pool in Miami, Florida.














re-posted from ohyesIam.com

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Paris Hilton’s Brother Was Secretly In Rehab!



We never really hear about Paris Hilton‘s brother, Conrad Hilton…until now!
The heiress’ 18-year-old brother Conrad was secretly seeking treatment in a Utah-based  rehab center since August and was released early.  Baby brother Hilton was busted on July 30, 2012 for violating his probation, and soon after he enrolled in rehab to make things right by the courts (and you know, for his health).
“Conrad was scheduled to be in rehab until January, but he was released early on November 11, 2012, and returned home to spend time with his family for Thanksgiving,” a source close to the Hilton family tells RadarOnline.com.
It must have been nice being out for Thanksgiving, but Conrad hasn’t been great about staying clean…his troubles started when he was just 17, when the teen collided with two parked vehicles very early in the  morning after leaving a Hollywood club.  Conrad’s older bro, Barron, also had a run in with a bad car crash in 2008.
C’mon Hiltons- you have EVERYTHING!  Try to stay out of trouble, will ya?
Photo: FameFlynet



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Adam Lambert is a Silver Fox for 'Fiasco': PHOTO


Fiasco_lambert
Adam Lambert ditches the eyeliner for a new cover story in the December 11 issue of Fiasco magazine.
Said Adam to the magazine: “For the general audience they look at the way I style myself and they go ‘errrr, that’s gay’, but you ask a handful of gay guys and they’re like ‘I would never wear that’!”

Don't miss his performance of Mad World with Cyndi Lauper from Saturday's Home for the Holidays concert HERE.

Fiasco_2_lambert


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I had to take a bus back to Boston today...

re-posted from WickedGayBlog.com 

To my surprise this team was on the same bus.  I really enjoyed this bus ride!  Such nice guys!


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2013 Mayhem Rugby Calendar




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The Most Perfectly Timed Photos Of The Year




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Betty White Hosts Kim Kardashian, 'Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' And More On 'Off Their Rockers'



Betty Whites Off Their Rockers Kim Kardashian


Betty White is hanging out with Kim Kardashian on Season 2 of "Off Their Rockers." Kardashian will guest star in the January 8 premiere episode following an episode with "Gangnam Style" performer Psy, which kicks off at 8 p.m. EST.
Other guest stars this season include Howie Mandel, Nicole Richie, Steve O, Nick Lachey, NeNe Leakes, Ed Asner, Nick Cannon and Bob Harper. "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" stars Adrienne Maloof, Camille Grammer and Kyle Richards will also stop by.
White picked up an Emmy nomination for "Betty White's Off Their Rockers" Season 1 in the Outstanding Host for a Reality or Reality-Competition picture.
"I'm 90 years old, I've been around forever. People have got to be up to here with me and to still get a nomination was just incredible," White told HuffPost TV in August 2012. "I would give anything in my power if I could trade it for a nomination for one of the girls 'cause they deserve it so much more than I do on 'Hot In Cleveland.' But you can't do that, so I'm just going to be thrilled."
On Season 2 of "Off Their Rockers," White and her senior citizen prankers will head to New York City, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Washington, DC and Seattle.


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'Spiderman' star Andrew Garfield at the Lakers Game












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Rock Musical 'bare' Opens Off-Broadway: REVIEW


Bare
BY NAVEEN KUMAR
An exhilarating and affecting rock musical that opened Off-Broadway last night at New World Stages, bare serves up an insightful depiction of emotional truths inherent to the sprawling, messy, and often wrenching experience of adolescence.
3_bareFormerly billed as ‘A Pop Opera’ when it made its world premiere in Los Angeles in 2000 and Off-Broadway bow in 2004, baregalvanized something of a cult following, and has since seen some two dozen productions both regional and international. A highly anticipated and newly revised production arrives Off-Broadway this season under the energized direction of Stafford Arima with choreography by Travis Wall.
With book and lyrics by John Hartmere and music by Damon Intrabartolo (and additional songs by Hartmere and Lynne Shankel), the show tackles many of the challenges that anyone with a taste for teen movies or musicals will likely recognize as standard territory—with the obvious exception of a sensitively rendered romance between two teenage boys at its center. The hopes and hazards of young love, the thrills and unexpected consequences of sex and substance abuse, the urgent hunger for validation from friends, parents, teachers, and (in this case) God—familiar stakes because each in our own way, we’ve all been there.
4_bareThe clever hand with which bare brings together the pains and pleasures of being young, and its particular focus on the trials of weathering high school as a gay teen perhaps explain why it has garnered a passionate and loyal following. Though its 2000 world premiere pre-dates several subsequent youth-driven musicals, this latest staging owes much to exceptional recent outings that have made a distinct mark on the landscape, including Spring Awakening and American Idiot, both helmed on Broadway by Michael Mayer.
The scribes present a story that’s alternately witty and quite touching, transforming what was a sung-through opera into a well crafted musical with book scenes that help carve out engaging characters. A virtuosic cast of young performers brings breathable life to a sometimes typical group of high-school students navigating their way through Catholic boarding school.
5_bareThe furtive gay lovers on whom the plot centers—a sensitive athlete able to pass for straight, and a more obvious candidate for class outcast, are played with endearing chemistry by impressive newcomers Jason Hite and Taylor Trensch, respectively. As their clear-eyed sympathetic teacher (with a crowd-riling turn as the Virgin Mary), Missi Pyle (The Artist) doles out bone-dry wit that cracks like a whip.
Though the whole gang rehearsing for a school production Romeo and Juliet lends formula to the plot, it’s a suitable one—bringing to the fore the high and sometimes blinding stakes of young love and the struggle to keep it secret from misguided powers that be. Seamless integration of mobile tech and digital media in both plot and design reflect the production’s keen understanding of their indispensible influence on how young people think about themselves and their relationships.
Ultimately, bare contributes an important voice to a broader conversation about equality and tolerance, all the more compelling because its impact is both visceral and incisive. Rather than hand out neatly wrapped answers to difficult questions about faith and acceptance, the show lays bare the heartbreaking pain of coming of age in a world in which these questions need to be asked at all.
Naveen Kumar is a writer and editor living in New York City. He has spent close to ten years working in the New York theatre business and recently earned a masters degree in English and Comparative Literature from Columbia University.You can follow Naveen on Twitter @Mr_NaveenKumar.


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