Dropping the latest celebrity news
CRAZED Kate Price put on a boozy live sex show and threatened me: “I’ll cut your f***ing face.”

The wild model flew into a rage because she thought I work for the magazine that prints husband Peter Andre’s column.
Kate vowed to slice me inside Ibiza superclub Eden, where she left nothing to the imagination as she stripped to her tiny thong and then exposed herself.

She dirty-danced with a group of lads, including model Anthony Lowther, 28, who she took back to her hotel to spend the night with.
A clubber said: “It was pretty steamy stuff. She kept hitching her dress up and didn’t seem to care that we could all see everything.
“She was grinding up against the lads and her girlfriends and their hands were all over her.”

But it was her threat to slash me that showed just how much Kate has gone off the rails since her split from singer Peter, 36, last month.
The 31-year-old model, alias Jordan, thought that I work for new! magazine, which carries Peter’s weekly column.
She flew at me with a manic look in her eyes and spat in my face: “I’m gonna cut your f***ing face. I swear to f***ing God I’ll cut you.”
Then one of her female pals dragged her off and she stumbled away as if nothing had happened.
Kate, who had declared she was “throwing a f***ing divorce party”, was caught up in a brawl before she even arrived at the club.
Clothes Show model Anthony and her ex Matt Peacock grappled with photographers on the streets of San Antonio.
When Kate arrived at Eden she had to be carried in by Anthony, who was keen to try to keep her out of trouble.
Then she homed in on Matt, 27, who she was dating when she met Peter on I’m A Celebrity in 2004.
Kate headed to the VIP area of the club, where she drank bottle after bottle of champagne while grinding her body between the lads.

A club source added: “She insisted on a table near the DJ booth so that the whole crowd could see her.”
But the flirting ended in tears for Matt when Jordan picked Anthony over him to join her back at her “adult-only party hotel” which boasts “unadulterated hedonism”.
Devastated Matt was comforted by pals after being ditched at 4am.
Earlier in the evening Kate had been so trashed, Girls Aloud star Sarah Harding, 27 – one of her bridesmaids – refused to be photo-graphed with her when they met at the Ibiza Rocks launch party.
The chaotic scenes came as Peter spent quality time with the couple’s children in Cyprus.
He enjoyed the sun with stepson Harvey, seven, son Junior, four, and daughter Princess Tiaámii, one.
Team Andre

A HEN party staged a mini protest against Jordan outside her hotel in Ibiza last night.
A gaggle of girls in pink leggings and demin skirts made their feelings for the glamour model clear by scrawling “Team Andre” across their stomachs.
One had “You’re ugly. Gonna cut you up” scribbled on her back, in reference to the remarks Jordan reportedly made to a female journalist because she thought she worked at the magazine which estranged husband Peter Andre writes a column for.
Jordan - real name Katie Price - is on the holiday isle to shoot her raunchy new calendar.
She’s also fitted in a wild night and been spotted out with beefy model Anthony Lowther.
Meanwhile, Peter is holidaying with their kids Princess and Junior, as well as his step-son Harvey, in Cyprus, where he had an emotional reunion with his mum Thea today.
Pete Sobs as mum jets in

SHATTERED Peter Andre breaks down yesterday after discovering his worried mum has jetted half way round the world to see him. Peter, 36, wept on Thea’s shoulder after she flew into Cyprus from her home in Australia.
Choking back the tears, he said: “I can’t help it, it’s six weeks of emotion coming out.”
Mysterious Girl singer Peter, who is staying at his holiday home on the island, went to the airport to pick up his older sister Debbie and her son.

He took along his kids with Jordan - Junior, four, and Princess Tiaamii, one - and disabled Harvey, her seven-year-old lad with ex soccer ace Dwight Yorke.

A source close to the star said: “He was stunned to see his mum at the airport.
“She’s been really worried about him, especially as he’s lost so much weight. She wanted to see him for herself and comfort him.
“It was all too much for Pete and he just broke down.
“He couldn’t believe his mum had flown all that way to see him.”
Peter’s dad Savvas was not well enough to travel so stayed at home in Australia’s Gold Coast.
The scene couldn’t have been more different in Ibiza, where Jordan, 31, has been partying with pals.

It is expected Peter will use pictures of his wife living it up when he goes to court to seek custody of the kids.
The divorce could be finalised in as little as five weeks.
Jordans Steamy Night With New Hunk
JORDAN got hot and steamy with her new man last night as she pressed up against him in a nightclub and then took him back to her hotel.

The 31-year-old, real name Katie Price, partied with male model Anthony Lowther, 28, for the third night in a row in Ibiza.
She danced up against him intimately in club Pacha as they leaned on railings.
The mum-of-three, whose pink bra showed through her tiny white dress, later left the venue hand-in-hand with Anthony.
They headed back to her exclusive five-star hotel together and her new flame stayed the night.
The pair finally emerged at 4.15pm today on the balcony of her hotel room.

His company comes despite Katie admitting yesterday that she “can’t find a man that will take her”.
She also told fellow hotel guests that there was nothing going on between her and Anthony, despite being seen kissing and cuddling him throughout her stay on the Balearic Isle.
Katie also moaned to pals that she was randy and needed a “s**g”.

Remember meeting Dommy-Do-Rightly a couple of weeks ago? The Hollywood wannabe princess who definitely thinks her sh-t don’t stank?
Well, Dommy dearest just doesn’t know how to keep her indiscretions all that quiet. Which, of course, we love.
The TV, and attempted big-screen, queen has been in one fairly high-profile relaysh and is definitely no stranger to the dating scene—despite her youngish age. Well, it turns out she’s much more experienced than any of you would have guessed.
Think you know what we mean?
DDR is a freak in the sheets! Her lap-dancin’, powder-inhalin’ party ways were just the beginning, kids, ’cause we just got sex-smelly wind of a crazyass threesome DDR recently had overseas. After splitting with her boyfriend, Dommy got her skank on during one of her save-the-world efforts. And we’re talking about a totally kinky ménage à trois!
One stud, one gal and Ms. Rightly doing the horizontal mambo all drunken night long! Oh love it, she’s into girls, too—don’t tell Carrie Prejean! (Anything that reeks of being gay sends that bitch over the edge, as you know.)
Seriously, looking at little miss blondie, you would never think she had it in her—we don’t know whether to be impressed or disturbed. Most likely the latter, because despite D’s efforts to the contrary, publicly, Ms. D.-R. just lacks total sex appeal in our very biased minds.
And it ain’t: Anna Paquin, Lauren Conrad, AnnaLynne McCord
Dear Ted:
I was wondering: If you weren’t the respectful married man you are, which one of your closeted Blind Vices would you prefer to get down and dirty with? Personally, if Dashed Dingle-Dream really is who I think he is (amazing eyes and lips, sexy voice ‘n’ smile, supercool TV show?), I’d die for that guy. But what can a girl do, huh? One thing’s for sure: helluva sexy couple, DDD and Judas Jack-Off. So tell me, Teddy Bear, who would you choose?
—BrGirl
Dear Hypothetical Ho:
Neither. I don’t go for closet cases, not for a long time.
Dear Ted:
All you talk about is Twilight, Robsten, Robert Pattinson. Come on, tell us more about Nevis Devine. I miss him!
—Cibele
Dear Bringing Back Bi:
I’m sure you don’t miss him as much as you think you do.
Dear Ted:
Has Robert Pattinson ever been a victim of your Blind Vice?
—Am
Dearing Damning Det:
Not sure I like your usage of the term “victim.” It’s a damn honor to be a Blind Vicer!
Dear Ted:
I love your site. Can you please tell me if Rob is bisexual?
—NGuyenkim
Dear Rob Lover:
Would that change how you feel about him?
Dear Ted:
Now that the last three episodes of Pushing Daisies are being aired, I was just wondering if Lee Pace has ever been a B.V.?
—Orangmango
Dear Pushing Pace:
Not even close.
Dear Ted:
First, let me say that I love you and your Truth, Lies & Ted segment. I am also a huge fan of your Blind Vice articles, and I am hoping you will give us another hint at who Terry Tush-Trade is. My guess is that TTT is Nikki Reed and the significant other is Sage Dill, who she is always photographed with. Can you please give us loyal readers another hint or two?
—Keishana
Dear Scary Close:
Not Nik, sorry! (Good guess, though)
Dear Ted:
Have you ever assigned more than one Blind Vice moniker to the same person?
—Some Girl
Dear Great Question:
No.
Dear Ted:
What is Fake à la Ferocity up to these days? Is she still using ways other than dieting to stay skinny?
—B Sell
Dear Quick Fix:
Does Suri Cruise have a best-seller in her?
Dear Ted:
I must admit I’m never good at guessing games. So your Blind Vice posts really don’t do much for me—though I love reading ‘em all. But my question is, how do you keep track of all the monikers you use for each one of them? Do you even keep track of them at all? Do you have a ledger/notebook to write down their moniker so they don’t get mixed up? Thanks!
—Pregnant Diva
Dear Overorganized:
Bet you would like to get your hands on our Blind Vice archive then. It does exist. With real names and everything!
Dear Ted:
On an intelligence scale from 1 to 10, with 1 being genius, how would you rate Brad Pitt?
—Whatsnew
Dear Brains or Beauty:
If 1 is genius, then dim-bulb Brad goes to 11 for hooking up with that chilly, fake Angelina. [Ed: Oh! I see what you did there, Teddy...]
Dear Ted:
Is Terry Tush-Trade Justin Chon?
—TLS
Dear Wrong Tush:
Sorry, Triple T is more recognizable than Mr. Chon.
Dear Ted:
I know you can’t be too specific with your descriptions of Toothy Tile, but can you say what his age range is? 20-30, 30-40, over 50?
—Al
Dear Aged Whine:
Nice try. Toothy’s of legal age for everything.
Dear Ted:
What happened to Brain-Fry Noodlestein? Is he getting help? Is that why we haven’t heard from him in a while?
—Mimi
Dear Brain-Bashed:
Not getting help, but has managed to stay level enough to be kept out of the news. Doesn’t mean he’s better tho, not at all.
Dear Ted:
Please stop posting that picture of Carrie Prejean with the weird fake-for-the-cameras smile and spooky, scary stare. It really scares the bejeezus out of me! I know all her antics have been quite public, but I was just curious that if they weren’t, what Blind Vice moniker would you give her?
—Juliet
Dear Rep ‘n’ Ruined:
The possibilities for nicknaming this drag queen are endless. Secretly Sapphic sound good?
Dear Ted:
Has Toothy Tile ever done a movie with Jennifer Aniston?
—Kelly in Bar Harbor
Dear Det. Toothy:
Yes.

Years after her death, Mariliyn Monroe’s sex goddess image - the platinum locks and beauty mark - continues to inspire blondes worldwide - just look no further than Madonna and Gwen Stefani

Brigitte Bardot’s mussed head of blonde curls put a french spin on the blonde bombshell look

With her two-toned bleach-blonde hair, Deborah Harry became the definitive icon of punk rock style as the frontwoman of Blondie

While Madonna is the icon of reinvention (is there a hair colour she hasn’t tried) the Material Girl always comes back to her blonde roots.

Since she exploded on to the scene as waif-like teen in the Calvin Klein campaigns, Kate Moss has morphed into a modern-day style icon; her signature blonde mop never straying far from the just-out-bed hair that epitomises her cooly nonchalant look.

Pamela Anderson has gone from Baywatch beach goddess to the trash-tastic face for Vivienne Westwood.

She’s one of the original "supers" of the nineties who forst shot to fame due to her striking resemblance to classic blonde Brigitte Bardot and now Claudia Schiffer’s is one of the most recognisable blondes in the business.

Reese Witherspoon embodied one of the most recognisable movie characters of the nineties as the charming Elle Woods in Legally Blonde - going out to prove that not all blondes are bimbos

Her platinum blonde locks haven’t changed since she first broke onto the scene with her band No Doubt and had many drawing comparisons to Marilyn Monroe. These days a more polished Stefani complements her blonde locks with an avant garde style that’s all her own.

Brit model Agyness Deyn has been called everything from the "next Kate Moss" to this generation’s style icon and has inspired one of the most copied blonde crops around the globe.
In the latest promo for Monday’s special hour-long episode of Jon & Kate Plus 8, Jon and Kate Gosselin separately talk about their marital struggles.
Watch the Jon & Kate Plus 8 promo video on TLC’s official site.
“We haven’t really known where we were going, but we’ve been dealing with this for a long time,” a teary-eyed Kate tells the camera. “[It's] a slow progression that has not popped…
Join Us on Facebook and Twitter for even more up to the minute celebrity news and photos!
Leighton Meester is at the center of a sex-tape scandal after stills from a red-hot home movie allegedly featuring the Gossip Girl star appeared online.
TMZ.com reports that a film of the actress romping with her boyfriend is being offered around various media outlets, including celebhotline.com.
And the rumors gathered weight when still images allegedly taken from the sex tape — showing a woman who bears a striking resemblance to the actress — were posted on a Web site on Friday.
According to TMZ.com, the short movie was shot several years ago and shows Meester in “mostly innocuous” nude scenes with her then-boyfriend.
A spokesman for celebhotline.com tells TMZ, “We’ve seen the tape and we’re hoping to close the deal.”
Meester’s representative had not issued a comment as WENN went to press.
(c) 2009 WORLD ENTERTAINMENT NEWS NETWORK LTD. All global rights reserved. No unauthorized copying or re-distributing permitted.
http://www.hollywood.com/news/Meester_Involved_in_Sex_Tape_Rumors/5657799
Source

American networks have made a habit of swiping and remaking British programs, but the latest import from across the pond will be 100 percent authentic. Merlin (premieres Sunday, 8 pm/ET, NBC), loosely based on the Arthurian legends of the famed sorcerer, arrives stateside as the first British drama to air on a U.S. network — un-retouched, un-recast — since The New Avengers more than 30 years ago.
"I think we probably played a fast one on NBC!" star Bradley James tells TVGuide.com. "It’s probably quite difficult to recast this one and remake it in an American way. Hopefully it goes over well and it will be worth NBC’s while. We’ll keep our fingers crossed."
James plays Prince Arthur on the fantasy, sword-fighting series. No, that’s not a typo. It’s Prince Arthur, not King.
Unlike past incarnations of the legend, Merlin follows the early years of the mythical wizard and the pre-golden age of Camelot, where, as the series opens, King Uther (Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s Anthony Head) has outlawed magic. In the spirit of borrowing, the premise was inspired by that of Smallville.
"I’m not sure who Arthur’s character would be, but you’ve got the obvious link between Clark Kent and Merlin. Those are the guys with the powers eventually," James says. "We have the advantage of building on what’s worked for them. The producers have done a good job of recreating the story in a way that people want to tune in even though they know the legend."
As a Brit, James was familiar with the legend, but warns viewers will probably be unfamiliar with his Arthur — a spoiled, arrogant teen who clashes with his mentor Merlin (Colin Morgan). Naturally, as the 13-episode season progresses, so does their relationship — and Arthur himself. "Underneath this bravado, deep down he’s got that inner strength and character," James says. "You have to scratch away at it, and with Merlin’s help that becomes more evident. We’re all aware of the man he’ll become; it’s just about how he gets there."
And he will get there, right? Currently filming Season 2, James says he doesn’t know how long the show can go on for, opting to take the one-season-at-a-time mentality. "If you get it right more often than not, then the show can continue to grow," he says. "But I don’t think anyone’s interested in flogging a dead donkey, just relying on loyal fans."
Nor are they interested in deviating too much from the tale for a few extra years and extra drama. "How on earth are they doing [Smallville] without Lex Luthor?" James says. "We had a similar situation over here with Robin Hood where for some reason they killed off Maid Marian. It seems a bit daft to me when you know where the story’s going and all of the sudden you change it a little bit so it can’t get there.
"The producers might find themselves a way, if they need to, to kill me, but hopefully they won’t do that! I think we’re all enjoying ourselves at the moment. Things are going according to plan."

The 28-year-old, the hot young Capt. Kirk in ‘Star Trek,’ is heating up the boards too: in the Geffen’s political drama ‘Farragut North.’
By Irene Lacher
June 21, 2009
Chris Pine is splayed across a red restaurant banquette as if it were the throne Hollywood is offering him as one of its newly anointed male hotties. To say Pine’s actual seating is not a throne would be an understatement. The star of Paramount Pictures’ summer hit film "Star Trek" is perched on tattered old furnishings that would look at home in an Edward Hopper painting. The ratty red banquette will be a focal point of action in the political drama "Farragut North," when it opens at the Geffen Playhouse on Wednesday.
Pine, 28, costars with " Sex and the City’s" Chris Noth as media massagers in the psychological drama inspired by Howard Dean’s 2004 campaign, which briefly claimed the energies of the playwright and recovering politico Beau Willimon. Pine plays Stephen, a wunderkind press secretary who prides himself on his ability to manipulate any situation.
At the moment, Stephen is trying to work his magic on an attractive young intern played by " Juno’s" Olivia Thirlby, who was in the New York production’s original cast last fall. In a Geffen rehearsal room, under the watchful eye of director Doug Hughes (who also helmed the current Mark Taper Forum production of David Mamet’s "Oleanna"), Molly/Olivia has just entered to drop off an envelope for Stephen/Chris at a dingy restaurant in East Des Moines, Iowa, where he’s making calls. And now he’s trying to beguile her into sticking around for a drink.
The characters play a flirtatious game of verbal ping-pong, and then Pine suddenly mimes reeling in Thirlby as if she’s on the end of an invisible hook. Hughes is delighted. "Your silver-tongued eloquence claims another helpless victim," he says.
Pine’s smile grows even broader. "It’s just another day, Doug," he replies.
Pine may be self-mocking when he says that, but then that’s part of the charm that got him into this enviable position in the first place. Directors and writers who’ve worked with him quickly volunteer that he’s a great guy to have around, not an overgrown enfant terrible like so many other young lions of Hollywood who will go unnamed.
When "Star Trek" director J.J. Abrams cast him in the pivotal role of Capt. Kirk, the filmmaker was looking for "a relative unknown who had to behave as if he were an experienced movie star without any of the negatives of being a big movie star," he said. "He had to treat the cast and crew in a way that would make the other actors feel safe and the crew feel appreciated. And he was impeccable."

Add a wicked sense of humor and piercing blue eyes, and it’s easy to see how Pine has burst onto the scene as one of the action heroes of summer. What may be less obvious is why he took the dark and relatively low-profile stage role of Stephen, who personifies "Farragut North’s" catchphrase that it’s a play "about the lust for power and the costs one will endure to achieve it." (Warner Bros. is developing the film version, with Leonardo DiCaprio attached to star and George Clooney to direct.)
"I was in a hotel room with my girlfriend at the time, and I had a bunch of scripts to read — film and theater — and I saved it for last because I’d heard it was really good, and I wanted to end my night on a good note, being excited," Pine says of his early-spring decision to take the part during a lull in the "Star Trek" publicity grind. "I couldn’t put it down. The twist at the end completely threw me. I thought Beau’s sense of dialogue was so right on and so — I don’t want to say real, because that’s dumb — but real without being affected, and intelligent, but not so intelligent to make you feel like a dumbass. And I’m very interested in the world of politics, so it appealed to me on that end."
As Pine discusses the play during a break in rehearsal at the Geffen, his mind and body seem to be in constant motion. He alternately scratches his side and reaches for the coffee table as he mulls over certain questions, waiting for the right answer to finish percolating. He’s casually dressed in a blue button-down shirt, black jeans and high-top sneakers and a new beard. The facial fuzz was inspired by Willimon’s hirsute college buddy and political mentor, Jay Carson, who worked for Hillary and Bill and, at only 26, served as Dean’s national spokesman in 2004.
Pine is trying on the beard to see if it helps him penetrate Stephen’s miserable je ne sais quoi. He acknowledges that he’s not quite there yet.
"I’m having a hard time not judging him," he says. "But there’s a primal drive in him to win at all costs that I’m coming to understand. That need comes from all the damage that all of us carry in one form or another. It’s just his ability to screw other people over, it’s that Machiavellian politician in him. . . . Once I can pinpoint that, I’ll be able to take it, hopefully, to a different level. But it sure is a lot of fun."

Not just guy candy
In fact, the dark Stephen is just as much a typical Chris Pine role as the stellar Kirk is. His brief career has already swept the spectrum of characters, from heroes to antiheroes.
And for the most part, the dividing line is the one that separates film and theater.
Pine’s first big-screen role was as an arm charm for Anne Hathaway in 2004’s "Princess Diaries 2," a service he also provided Lindsay Lohan’s character in 2006 in "Just My Luck." He quickly moved on to the young hero role in the 2008 film " Bottle Shock," in which, as with "Star Trek," he played a hapless young man who tries to live up to his father’s legacy (a scion of the family business much like Pine himself, the son of "CHiPs" veteran Robert Pine and TV actress Gwynne Gilford, and a third-generation thespian from what he calls "a working-class Hollywood" family, presumably because they literally worked).
Yet one of Pine’s favorite film roles was not a lead but rather the "redneck neo-Nazi hit man" of 2006’s "Smokin’ Aces." And while he was becoming better known for his good-guy film parts, he was earning critics’ notice in much darker roles onstage, such as the vicious Carter in Neil LaBute’s "Fat Pig" at the Geffen in 2007 and the amoral journalist of Ronan Noone’s 2006 one-man drama "The Atheist" in New York.
Of Pine’s work in "Fat Pig," LaBute says: "He had what I felt would have worked for either of the male characters in that piece — the good guy or the bad guy. He had a watchability. I think he isn’t looking at [his career situation] as, ‘I have this chance of being a star.’ He knows a good role is a good role, and if it’s a bad guy, they often get the best lines. It’s great to see him going off to do a piece of theater. He’s approaching it as, ‘What is the best material I have at the moment?‘ "
Willimon thinks the pattern of Pine’s acting credits reflects the opportunities available to a young guy with leading-man looks, and "it doesn’t have as much to do with Chris Pine as it does with the chasm between theater and film," he says. "In general, film — particularly Hollywood films — tend to lean more toward the good hero who overcomes obstacles and comes out on top. Theater, largely because it doesn’t bear the same commercial burden that film does, has the luxury and the bravery to take on risks and support the other sort of heroes — call it the antihero. Sometimes obstacles do not result in a happy ending — or a more complex ending than triumph."
In August, Pine moves on to his own happy ending when he starts filming 20th Century Fox’s "Unstoppable" with Denzel Washington. In the thriller directed by Tony Scott, he and Washington will play conductors trying to stop a runaway train carrying toxic chemicals. It’s probably reasonable to assume that there are a couple of hero roles in there somewhere.
Pine seems gobsmacked about the opportunity to work with the two-time Oscar winner, an experience he anticipates will be tantamount to earning an acting PhD. "I don’t ever want to be so precious to eschew those kinds of roles because I’m on some mission to be the artiste in Hollywood," says Pine, who credits his family with keeping his feet on the ground. "But I think there’s a closeted Peter Lorre inside me that loves to play the fun, darker, weirder roles that hopefully I’ll get the chance to play as I move ahead in my career."

Too many Pine posts? Maybe we should have a tag…
Source

Zachary Quinto and Milo Ventimiglia shoot new scenes for the upcoming fourth season of NBC’s hit sci-fi series Heroes in downtown Los Angeles on Friday (June 19). Robert Knepper, who most recently played bad boy T-Bag on Fox’s Prison Break, will play the new lead villain on Heroes. The 49-year-old actor will play Samuel, a Jim Jones type — charismatic but evil, with a twisted sense of humor — who will veer into the lives of all heroes. Also joining the cast is Californication co-star Madeline Zima, who will play Gretchen, an edgy outsider and college roommate to Claire Bennett (Hayden Panettiere).










I thought ZQ was in NYC. Guess not.