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Friday, September 10, 2010

Former VH1 Celeb Rehab Cast Member Rodney King Now Engaged

Rodney King
(THAINDIAN NEWS) Rodney Glen King, the American, who was the victim in a police brutality case which involved Los Angeles Police Department on March 3, 1991 is all set to marry his juror Cynthia Kelly. Rodney King and Cynthia Kelly first met each other in 1994 Newport Beach pizzeria. Later Cynthia Kelly awarded him a $3.8 million settlement for his case. However, the source close to the couple confirmed the news to the media.




Initially Rodney King and Cynthia Kelly started their relationship much before, however, later they split up owing to the differences between them. Even Rodney King joined the cast of VH1’s “Celebrity Rehab with Dr. Drew” after his multiple arrests for being under influence of PCP or alcohol. In one of his interviews Rodney King said that about four months ago he called up Cynthia Kelly on a whim as they had not spoken with each other for many years. Rodney King added that suddenly they reconnected with one another and it seemed that they would never be apart from each other.
Rodney King seemed really happy when he said that Cynthia Kelly is “Godsend” and a blessing to his life. The victim of police brutality said that he does not know what he would have without her in his life. Rodney King was excited when he said that he cant wait to make Cynthia Kelly his wife. However, the couple has not announced the date of their marriage yet. Rodney King was brutally beaten by police in 1991 which led to Los Angeles Riot later in 1992. The riots lasted for four days and claimed about 55 lives.


More at : 
thaindian.com

Details On Funeral For LFO Singer Former VH1 Star





According to TMZ, family and friends are planning a "close, intimate ceremony" for LFO singer Rich Cronin, who died earlier this week after a long fight with leukemia.

The wake will be held on Sunday in Kingston, MA, with the funeral the following day.

LFO was a rap/pop trio who broke out in 1999 with the song "Summer Girls". They had a handful of hits over the next few years, but went on hiatus in 2003 due to frustrations over their boy band image. In 2009, they announced that they were reuniting, but then officially broke up in September.

Rich Cronin was a founder and lead singer of the group. After LFO, he was on the VH1 reality show Mission: Man Band, which saw him and other boy band veterans try to form a new group. In 2008, he released a solo album called Billion Dollar Sound. During this time, he was also a member of the duo Loose Cannons with ex-Bad Ronald rapper Doug Ray.

Rich was diagnosed with leukemia in 2005, but by 2006 was in remission. His condition worsened over the summer and he died after a stroke on Wednesday at the age of 35.

Warner Bros. Pitches 'Dr. Drew' Talk Show





Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution is beginning to make dates with key TV station groups to pitch a new syndicated talk show featuring Dr. Drew Pinsky for fall 2011, according to industry sources. Pinsky, known as Dr. Drew, and Warner Bros.' Telepictures announced in April that they were developing the show. Dr. Drew is best known for hosting reality shows like VH1's "Celebrity Rehab."


Earlier this year, Pinsky, an internist who is board certified in addiction medicine, was being considered for "Lifechangers," a spinoff of Warner Bros.' Extra. But that show didn't pan out. The new show is said to be an informational hour. Telepictures taped a couple of pilots with Pinsky over the past few months, according to sources.

Fantasia Barrino reveals the pain beneath the fame

Singer Fantasia Barrino poses for a portrait at Print restaurant in New York.




Douglas Quenqua
New York Times
NEW YORK—As it turns out, there is a limit to Fantasia Barrino’s tolerance for exposure.
“Why don’t we go back to the car?” she asked, perched on a small sliver of couch at Dusk, a bar in Manhattan. “I’d be more comfortable talking there.”
It was an uncharacteristic moment of shyness from a woman who’s lately been anything but. In the weeks after a suicide attempt, Barrino, the American Idol winner, Broadway star and recording artist, has been everywhere — Behind the Music on VH1, Good Morning America, Lopez Tonight, and on and on — telling her story and promoting her new album, Back to Me.
All that talking has elicited questions. Isn’t the timing of all this a bit fortuitous? Is all this tragedy for real?
“Even from day one I’ve been an open book,” she said, in the back seat of a Lincoln Navigator, sipping red wine she’d brought from her hotel. “Ain’t no need for me to hide now, ain’t no need for me to change now, no need for me to start lying, either. I never did that.”
There are divas who stake their allure on being remote, who use a scrim of made-up personas and “reinventions” to keep fans guessing about their real lives (See: Lady Gaga, Beyoncé, Madonna). Then there are singers like Barrino, whose personal tragedies make up the raw material of their careers.
In the six years since winning “The Idol,” as she calls it, Barrino has published an autobiography, played herself in the Lifetime movie Fantasia Barrino: Life Is Not a Fairy Tale, and starred in her own VH1 reality show, Fantasia for Real. (She also took a detour to Broadway, in a highly acclaimed turn in The Color Purple.) Through it all, Barrino, now 26, has been candid about the sometimes grim facts of her upbringing: raped at age 14, a high school dropout and single mother by 16, and the more recent estrangement from her father, who sued Barrino over allegations in her book that he had physically abused her.
On the August night before her new album’s release, Barrino came to Dusk with her manager, her publicist, a reporter, some members of her band and an enormous bodyguard to sing karaoke, celebrate and, once again, tell her story.
Her appearance quickly attracted attention, so she retreated with the reporter to the Lincoln to talk in private. There she recounted the events that led to her intentional overdose of sleeping pills and aspirin on Aug. 9: the affair with a married man, the foreclosure on her home, the realities of a self-described “country girl” catapulted to fame by a reality show.
“I wanted to be so away from all this noise in my world,” she said, wearing black shorts, a vest and booties with 4-inch heels. “Whether it’s ‘mommy’ or ‘Tasia, I need a bill paid,’ or ‘we need you here at the record company.’ No one was taking care of me. It was only what I could do for other people.” A nameplate on her necklace read “Gorgeous,” and on either hand were rings that wrapped over several fingers.
Considering how tragedy has fuelled her career — and given the lacklustre sales of her last album — skeptics have questioned the legitimacy of her most recent round of troubles.
“Here we are a mere two weeks” after her overdose, read a post on the online message board Sodahead.com, “and Fantasia is up and about, working the talk-show circuit. And lo and behold, she has an album coming up. What a coincidence!”
Barrino says she has heard such misgivings and has an answer for people who voice them.
“I don’t think I needed any more publicity than what I was getting,” she said, shaking her head. The story of her affair and the subsequent lawsuit from the man’s wife “was on every news station,” she said. “It was on CNN, it was on Nancy Grace. They were having debates.”
Still, why not take some time for yourself after such a tragic event? “I couldn’t really afford to take more time off,” she said. “I’m still fighting my way out of debt.”
Barrino’s post-Idol story has become familiar in a culture increasingly populated by reality show winners. James Huysman, a psychologist who has spent 15 years consulting with reality shows and their contestants, says that people with tragic backgrounds make great TV but, like lottery winners, are rarely well served by the instant success that the medium hands them.
“When you take a wounded person and infuse them with absolute stardom and celebrity status, all you’ve transformed is the external,” he said in a telephone interview. “But from within you’re still the same person, the same low self-esteem, the same anxiety, the same fears, the same pain.”
Huysman compared Barrino to Susan Boyle, the dowdy Scottish woman who found fame onBritain’s Got Talent but soon ended up in a psychiatric hospital. “All we did was dress her up to make her palatable to a spiritually bankrupt viewership,” Huysman said. But that doesn’t mean Boyle was mentally prepared for the pressures of stardom, to say nothing of the shifting expectations of those around her.
Back in the car, Barrino said much the same thing about herself. After being crowned byAmerican Idol in 2004, she said, she wrongly assumed money would never be a problem again, and began trying to care for an unsustainable group of friends and family.
“I created the monster myself,” she said. “I’m big on family and I want to see everybody happy. That’s where I messed up.” The result, she said, was the debt she is still trying to work out of.
At this point, Barrino took the reporter’s pad and sketched an iceberg. “This part on top that everyone can see, this is Fantasia,” she said. “This is the celebrity, this is the smiles, the bubbly spirits, the red carpets, the cars, the fancy clothes.”
Then pointing to the much larger part of the iceberg below the water: “But here is Tasia,” she said, using her childhood nickname. “Now that’s hurt, that’s fear, the trust issues.”
The key to her recovery, she said, was “to be both. I’m not going to pretend anymore.”
TheStar.com

Gloria Responds To Matt Barnes Arrest





Not long after being released from jail, after he was booked on charges of domestic abuse, Matt Barnes tweeted not to believe what you read.

Today Barnes' fiancé -- Gloria Govan -- denied there was any abuse through the couple's shared publicist, in a statement to the Sacramento Bee.


"Any accusation of domestic violence are false. My fiancé, Matt Barnes, has never physically abused me or my family."

This confirms that the woman involved was Govan, who has twins with Barnes. The couple was due to be married recently but the wedding was called off just before the event, although the couple said at the time they were continuing their relationship.

Govan is a cast member of VH1's "Basketball Wives."

Police came out to Barnes home in Sacramento after an incomplete 911 call. Police found injuries on both parties but determined that Barnes had been the aggressor and arrested him.

As we reported last night, Barnes had said that this was not as it appeared in a text to a local television reporter, Bryan May of News10:


"U know any domestic violence situation 9 outa 10 times the man gets arrested. That's the case here I was the victim but still got arrested. No matter what I say people are gonna think what they want...

We have no idea what happened in the Barnes household. Maybe nothing. However this points to a bigger societal issue -- it is common for the female in a domestic violence situation to protect the man. It makes convictions on the charges challenging. It makes the pattern of violence harder to stop.

What exactly happened in the Barnes house remains a mystery. But you can be sure of one thing through all of this -- the Lakers front office isn't happy.

Chad Ochocinco to make appearance on WWE Raw

What is Chad Ochocinco’s next stop after Sunday’s visit to Foxboro against the Patriots?According to WWE.com, US Bank Arena for Monday Night Raw.

Sept. 13, 2010: Chad Ochocinco
He’s a wide receiver for the Cincinnati Bengals, a reality TV show star on VH1′s Ochocinco: The Ultimate Catch and the consummate showman. So, what’s left for Chad Ochocinco? Guest hosting Raw, of course!

When Raw rolls into his home turf of Cincinnati, Ohio, Ochocinco will be on hand to soak up all the action.

Here’s a list of the top 10 football players to wrestle – note – we’re not assuming that Chad is actually going to wrestle.

Last year, Ben Roethlisberger and the Steelers offensive line appeared on Raw 24 hours after Pittsburgh played the San Diego Chargers. Coach Mike Tomlin only offered up a “no comment” on his reaction to the news.

VH1s Royce Reed: Dwight Howard Baby Mama Says Superman’s a Not-So-Super Dad

Roycewhitetank3_display_image
Former NBA team dancer and Basketball Wives star Royce Reed has taken issue with Dwight Howard's daddy skills.

According to TMZ, Reed filed a motion Wednesday in an Orange County, Florida court asking the court to appoint a guardian to make sure Howard adheres to the scheduled visits in their tenuous custody arrangement.
Additionally, Reed is requesting Howard be monitored when in the care of their son. Apparently, she is not thrilled with Superman's inability to monitor the two-year old child, who she maintains has no desire to be cared for by his father

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