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Main >> News Listing >> August 2004 >> Article ID 5923
Ms. Frankenstein | Type: Internet Article |
| | Ms. Frankenstein | Aug 01, 2004 |
Summary:
Talk about rivals!
Pop diva Christina Aguilera has turned down the chance to buy a luxury apartment in New York -- after learning the owner is Britney Spears, Britain's Daily Star reports.
The skanky singer was impressed with the $4.86 million property but refused to even view it when she discovered her former Mouseketeer co- star was the seller.
Read on for the whole article |
Copies of the kiddie book My Pet Goat that President Bush was reading in a Florida classroom on Sept. 11, 2001, made infamous in Fahrenheit 911, have been selling on eBay for $30 to $50, MSN.com reports.
Ms. Frankenstein
Noted Los Angeles plastic surgeon Robert Rey shares with Star mag the most popular celebrity body parts that his patients want to emulate:
Britney Spears' stomach, Angelina Jolie's lips, Carmen Electra's breasts, Stephanie Seymour's nose and Ali Landry's legs.
No mention of J.Lo's derriere.
This day in music
1981 -- MTV is launched. The Buggles' Video Killed the Radio Star is the first music video shown.
Talk about rivals!
Pop diva Christina Aguilera has turned down the chance to buy a luxury apartment in New York -- after learning the owner is Britney Spears, Britain's Daily Star reports.
The skanky singer was impressed with the $4.86 million property but refused to even view it when she discovered her former Mouseketeer co- star was the seller.
Tax dollars at work
The U.S. Army long has lured recruits with the slogan ``Be All You Can Be,'' but now soldiers and their families can receive plastic surgery, including breast enlargements, on the taxpayers' dime.
The New Yorker reports that members of all four branches of the military can get face lifts, breast enlargements, liposuction and nose jobs for free.
Between 2000 and 2003, military doctors performed 496 breast enlargements and 1,361 liposuction surgeries on soldiers and their dependents, the mag said. It then quoted an Army spokeswoman as saying, ``The surgeons have to have someone to practice on.''
Hidden in `Trash'
You knew Andy Warhol discovered Lou Reed and the Velvet Underground, but Sissy Spacek?
``I was in Andy's Trash when I was a teen-ager,'' the Oscar-winner tells the New York Daily News.
Though her scene in the Warhol flick was cut, ``I didn't mind, because I really saw myself as a singer. I went under the name Rainbo. I had this single called John Lennon, You Went Too Far This Time, about John and Yoko Ono posing nude on their album cover.''
New look, new duds
Fashion folks in Paris are still talking about Oprah Winfrey's big purchases at the recent couture fashion shows.
Seems the slimmed-down-again talk queen spent more than $500,000 on evening and day wear by Valentino and Chanel.
Hey, if you've got it, flaunt it!
Cheap shot
``For years, California has been shipping its solid waste to Utah for disposal,'' said David Jonas in the San Francisco Chronicle.
``Now that Greg Ostertag has joined the Sacramento Kings, I guess we're even.''
The sporting news
NASCAR bad boy Tony Stewart travels with a Chihuahua, which Frank Fitzpatrick of the Philadelphia Inquirer says is ``apparently one of the few members of any species he has not yet punched.''
Royal confusion
Howard Stringer, who's chief executive officer of Sony, found himself seated one place away from the queen of England at a big, proper dinner not long ago, Liz Smith reports in Newsday.
Stringer, a Welshman, who is quite Americanized from living in New York and once running CBS News, noticed that the queen kept leaning forward in her seat and taking curious glances at him over the man seated between them.
As he had been knighted a few years ago, Stringer thought perhaps she recognized him from that occasion. Finally, the queen leaned out again, looked over at him and said, ``Sony? Sony?''
Stringer responded, ``Yes, ma'am, I am Howard Stringer, CEO of Sony in America!''
Elizabeth II nodded, satisfied, but kept leaning forward. Then she said, with emphasis: ``Your remotes! Your remotes are difficult! Too many arrows! I have to get my grandsons in to make mine work.''
The final word
In an interview with ESPN The Magazine, John Kerry said he learned about life from playing sports. You know the most frustrating thing about playing sports for Kerry? Finding a helmet that fits.
President Bush said he also played a lot of sports as a child but somehow the records were either lost or destroyed. |
Source: Ohio.com | |
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