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Sunday, December 19, 2010

Best VH1 Winner Of 2010: The Winner Is....





Mindy - 78.9%
Mz. Berry - 7.9%
Gabby- 6.6%
Jacob-3.9%
Kerry-2.6%
Rubi-.0.0%

Congrats to Mindy for winning Best VH1 Winner Of 2010 earning 78.9% of your votes. The highest percentage so far. 


Next Category:
Best VH1 Fight Of 2010

2010 Winner List:

Best VH1 Male Reality Star Of 2010: Chi Chi (I Love Money 4)
Best VH1 Female Reality Star Of 2010: Heartbreaker (For The Love Of Ray-J 2)
Best VH1 Breakout Star Of 2010: Tara (Ochocinco: The Ultimate Catch)
Best VH1 Celebrity Of 2010: Bret Michaels (Bret Michaels: Life As I Know It)
Best VH1 Duo Of 2010  Feisty/Marcia (I Love Money 4)
Best VH1 HBIC Of 2010 - Heartbreaker (For The Love Of Ray-J 2)
Best VH1 Winer Of 2010 - Mindy ( I Love Money 4)


Saturday, December 18, 2010

Celebrity Rehab 4 - Episode 4 and Episode 5 Recaps

Celebrity Rehab 4 - Episode 4 & 5 Recap

Once again VH1 has aired 2 new episodes of Celebrity Rehab this past week. Here are the recaps.

Summary Of Episode 4 & 5
As the first week of treatment comes to an end, many of the patients' withdrawal symptoms cause them to be agitated and hypersensitive toward one another. The bickering between Janice Dickinson and Rachel Utichel comes to a head, and Eric Roberts begins to open up about his painful past. Rachel Uchitel's sudden departure from treatment triggers the patients' abandonment issues and sends them spiraling out of control in a heated and emotional process group. Everyone urges Rachel to return to treatment except for Janice Dickinson, whose harsh judgment of Rachel isolates her from the group, and ultimately leads to a severe panic attack.

Frankie Shows Up At Keyshia Cole's Album Release Party

Celebrity Rehab 4 cast member Frankie showed to to her daughter Keyshia Cole's album release party for " Calling All Angels" which hit stores next week.


Keyshia Cole threw a pre-album release party and she invited her family. Her mom was there and her sister Neffe.


via gossippond.com

Friday, December 17, 2010

What Chilli Wants Tionna Smalls Opens Boutique



Making the jump from relationship expert to small business owner may seem like a huge career change for some. But for Tionna Smalls, it's one in the same.
You might remember Smalls from the VH1 reality show, "What Chilli Wants," where Smalls played relationship expert to singer Chili of the 90's, all-girl, hip hop group, TLC.
Well, the Brooklyn native last week launched an accessories boutique for women in Bed-Stuy called Lovey's, located at 377 Marcus Garvey Boulevard, between Hancock Street and Jefferson Avenue. The boutique features a wide range of high-end and affordable jewelry, handbags and gifts.
"I love the neighborhood and I love the community of Bed-Stuy," said Smalls. "You can tell there are a lot of people here who are either fabulous or want to be fabulous, and I think I can help them out."
Smalls said that she considers herself a visionary and that vision came in handy when creating Lovey's. After taking over the space, she knocked down the six-foot ceiling and installed a higher one, got rid of the old lighting and removed the rusted and peeling paint on the wall.
The transformation resulted in a space that's fashionably chic, yet fun and playful. Bright pink walls surround the shop and a naked mannequin draped in necklaces stands on one side. Accessories and bags line the side walls and fill the front counter display, while a table full of brightly colored jewelry sits in the middle of the store.
"What's great about how the accessories are setup is that it makes the store look bigger than it actually is," said Smalls. "Even though it's less than 500 square feet, you don't feel cramped walking around here."
The items that Smalls sells at Lovey's are intended to be affordable for the Bed-Stuy community. Nothing is over $100, and most of the bags run for about $30. Several different pairs of earrings are on display for $10 or less. Items also can be returned in the same condition with a receipt for store credit.
In addition to selling accessories, Smalls says she plans to use the space for a series of neighborhood events.
"We're hosting a party for Halsey Street Grill, and I'd love to start having a series of all-women pow-wows and conferences here where we can have some real talk," said Smalls.
From the start of her career, Smalls has always worked for herself. In addition to having her own relationship advice column on Gawker.com, she hosted her own Internet radio show on BlogTalkRadio and released an advice book for women called, "Girl, Get Your Mind Right."


She's now preparing to release her second book and the season-two kick-off of "What Chili Wants" the first week of January 2011. 
"With my attitude, I need to be my own boss," said Smalls with a laugh. "This store feels like a natural progression to me because I've always been about helping women. My blog tried to help women with their relationships and now my store will help them look fabulous."

Sneak Peek: BASKETBALL WIVES Suzie Visits Gloria To Talk About Evelyn


VH1 TV Shows | Music Videos | Celebrity Photos | News & Gossip


Here is the a sneak peek of the next episode of Basketball Wives. Suzie visits Gloria to talks about her fight with  Evelyn

Vh1 wins multi-year telecast rights for Grammy Awards

MUMBAI: In a multi-year deal, Vh1 has bagged the rights for the music industry's biggest event The Grammy Awards which will air on 14 February at 6.30 am with a repeat at 9 pm.
Earlier the event was telecast on Star World.
Vh1 will be running content around the event from January to March. The show recognises various genres of music including pop, rock and classical.
Vh1 head Ferzad Palia said, “Our treatement of this event will be different. We are not looking at it as just a one off event. We want to give it the respect and worth it deserves which in the past might not have been the case. This will boost our reach and help increase perception. We expect the upper scale youth and older people to watch this."




With exciting programming around the event, contests to watch the show live in LA and a massive marketing campaign, Vh1 is dedicating the first 60 days of 2011 to the Grammy Awards.
"We are committed to making this the most watched telecast of the show ever in India," says Palia.
Over the next three months, shows and initiatives will kick off. The channel will kick off the 'Ticket to Ride to the Grammy' contest. While the modalities are being worked out, two winners will be flown to Los Angeles for the event.




The broadcaster will do a 360 degree marketing initiative to create awareness for this, covering multiple touchpoints including gyms, malls, cinema halls.
There is a Grammy Nominated Videos Music Block which will showxcase the nominees. The Grammy Winners Music Block will showcase past winners. Once the 2011 edition of the Grammy Awards is over, this block will feature the current winners. My Night At The Grammy is a post event special and will get reactions and check out on fashion.



via radioandmusic.com

VH1 Interviews Rachel Uchital


VH1 does an interview with Celebrity Rehab 4 cast member and Tiger Wood's mistress Rachel Uchtital.

Are you enjoying watching the show?
Yeah. It’s so fun. Every Wednesday night, Leif, Jeremy, Jason Wahler and Jason Davis come over to my apartment and we watch it together. [On Wednesday], we liked it so much that we watched the repeats that came on right after. We liked it so much that we watched the two hours over again! It was so great to be able to watch what we were a part of. We were like, “Oh my god, this is such good TV.” We laughed, we cried. The whole thing was real, none of it was staged, but on TV it looks so dramatic. We were laughing about how dramatic are as people. We didn’t realize it.


How do you feel about implicitly being categorized as a celebrity as a result of participating in this show?
“Celebrity” has never been a word I embraced. It’s not like I signed up to be a celebrity. My name became “infamous” over the course of a few months before I was offered the show, and continued to after, but I was hesitant to sign on because I didn’t feel like I was a celebrity. I forget how many people know my name. Now, for the first time ever, I’m being recognized as a celebrity for doing a show, and at the same time, not being misunderstood anymore for what the media has made me out to be. I’m so honored that VH1 gave me the opportunity to do that. I don’t care so much about the status. From getting to hang out with seven celebrities and kind of morph into one, I realized that the word “celebrity” is a misleading title for somebody. All it means is that their name is known by a lot of people.


I can’t even imagine what it’s like to go from being anonymous to reported on all the time. Even still, people write about you – I’ve seen blogs run stories on Celebrity Rehab episodes as though they were gossip items.
Oh, they are?


You don’t follow that stuff?
No. I don’t anymore. I used to, like a year ago because I was so freaked out that people were talking so much about me. But no, I don’t follow it. Once in a while, someone will forward me something that’s funny or to ask, “Is this true?” But I don’t look at that stuff anymore for the most part.


Is ignorance bliss in this case?
Yeah. I went through a really low point of looking what the media was saying about me, and it really took a toll on my self-esteem. I had to stop looking at it for my own well-being.


You mentioned being resistant to signing up for the show because of the “celebrity” tag, but you were also resistant to being diagnosed as a love addict.
Yeah, I thought it was ridiculous.


Do you still think so?
No! Not at all. I’m the biggest proponent of love addiction. I’ll be at dinner in a restaurant talking about love addiction with the people I’m sitting with and diagnosing all of them [laughs]. I was critical of it at first, just like everybody else. But it is a real condition. I want to help bring awareness to it. I think there are a lot of unhappy people out there that if they realized there’s a label to what they’re going through and their behavior and their patterns and that they can fix it, I think I can help a lot of people get on the path to being happy.


Was there an, “A-ha!” moment when you went from a skeptic to a believer?
There were times in my one-on-ones with Drew, where I’d be talking about what came naturally to me, and he’d say, “Yeah, Rahel, that’s intensity. That’s not love.” He’d understand what I was doing and say, “But that’s what this is.” I was astonished that somebody could understand me. I thought it was just a character flaw and Drew would say, “No, that’s what love addicts do.” And then he gave me this book by Pia Melody called Facing Love Addiction. I started reading it and within the first two pages, I realized that was me. By the end of Rehab, everyone was given that book because everyone experiences some degree of a love-addiction issue or co-dependency or something along those lines.


On the show, we saw you uninvited from The Celebrity Apprentice. Did that disappoint you, and does it still?
At the time, I was really disappointed. I was really hurt that Donald Trump said the things he did to the media. He made some comment like, “Rachel Uchitel, who’s that? She’s not a celebrity.” Well, he’s the one who called me and asked me to be on this show. I argued about the fact that I was a celebrity. If I was on the outside, I would have judged me just as everyone else in America did, without knowing the facts or the truth. I get it, but it was hurtful for him to come at me like that and have that be national news. But I’m so proud of myself that I made the decision to be part of Celebrity Rehab. Everybody in my world told me not to and I know I did the right thing. My life is completely different.


When you say “everybody,” are you referring to agents and managers?
No, no, no. I didn’t have managers. I didn’t have all that stuff. I had my family and friends. I was the only one on the show that didn’t have visitors come. Nobody would stand by me. What people didn’t see on this week’s episodes is that part of why I blew up, or actually the straw that broke the camel’s back is that a producer had come in and said, “Rachel, I’ve reached out to the list of family and friends that you gave me, and no one will come stand by you.” They didn’t want to be part of the show. They found this whole thing to be an embarrassment and they found me to be an embarrassment. I was so hurt and angry by that. I felt like I had no one. I felt like I had no one supporting me. I felt so misunderstood…and then I got into a fight with Drew. But honestly, watching that fight I had with him, I don’t think I was wrong. And I don’t think I was wrong with what I said to Bob, either.


So you contend that Janice was acting out for the cameras and that Drew was turning a blind eye?
Yeah.


Are you on bad terms with Janice now?
I’m not on bad terms with her. She didn’t change after the show. Listen, she said a lot of bad things about me on the show, not on the show, whatever. I made an effort to be her friend, but I hold my friends in high esteem. Especially after what’s happened to me in the past year, I pick them very wisely. She’s not capable of being my friend right now. When she’s capable of being a friend to me and letting me be a friend to her, I’d love to have a relationship with her.


So, do you think that Drew was lying? He had a big problem with that.
No, I wasn’t accusing him of lying. I wasn’t accusing him of anything, actually. I was suggesting that I was having a very hard time in treatment and he was acting like he didn’t know what I was talking about. That frustrated me. For the first time, I sat there and thought, “Have I been duped? Am I just on a reality show or are we in treatment?” I thought we were in treatment at that point, and there just happened to be cameras there. I felt like Janice’s acting out was distracting and Drew didn’t see it and settle it down for the people that really were trying to get through treatment. I had a real problem with that. The fact that he said he hadn’t seen it, I found inappropriate. If he’s the doctor, he should be seeing this stuff. It was so evident and so distracting and it was affecting me and the rest of the people in rehab. I don’t regret what I said to him. I think it took up to that point for them to realize what was going on in the unit and the effect it was having.


Is this what you were alluding to when you were packing to leave and you said that you’d reveal why if the cameras were turned off?
Yeah, that I was confused about whether we were on a show or in rehab. I just felt left out to dry. I felt like I had no one on the outside world standing by me, and then on the inside world, I felt duped. I wasn’t accustomed to any of this, and I wondered if I was just naïve. It was like, am I on a show and I didn’t know it this whole time? Is everyone else acting? Am I supposed to be acting and I didn’t get the memo?


Did you come around to seeing the value of the treatment you were being offered?
I always did. The entire time.


When you left, the group rallied around you, maybe with the exception of Janice. Was that surprising?
I wasn’t surprised about Janice, but when I watched the show, I was really moved by everyone’s reactions to me leaving. I remember sitting on the floor of my hotel room, listening to the voice mail they left me. Leif and Jason Wahler had also talked on the voice mail. I wanted to come back. I needed to hear that from them. I needed to hear from them that they cared about me and they wanted me back .


Drew suggested that you were testing everybody.
I thought that was very intuitive. I never would have put my finger on that, but it was very accurate. It’s part of a pattern I’ve had for a very long time. No one had eloquently articulated that before, so it took me a moment to be like, “Oh. OK, that’s what this is about.”


While I was in it, no.


Watching it now?
Yeah. It was a real honor to watch how when I left, it affected everyone, again. I feel kind of proud of myself, watching the show. I see things I didn’t remember. I’m happy that I made the effort help Jason Davis so much and not talk about him behind his back. I defended him and Leif and Frankie. I don’t remember that stuff, because it’s kind of a blur, but I’m happy to see I had that much of an affect on people. In my own head, I felt out of place there. I didn’t feel like enough of a celebrity or an addict. I didn’t feel like I understood what a lot of them were talking about. Like when I was asking Leif about heroin. I’m not an addict like that. I’m a love addict and I cope with prescription pills. That was me genuinely asking. I’m so close to Leif and those guys right now, and it’s because I took an interest in them. I never asked questions to challenge them, I asked them because I genuinely wanted to know. Maybe they’ve gone their whole lives without someone asking questions that deep. People think they know celebrities, but these are people who probably feel the loneliest. People know their persona as portrayed by the media or that’s portrayed by whatever it is that they do, but that’s now who they are on the inside. They feel really lonely and really misunderstood. And I can identify with that.


Besides Janice, are you still tight with everyone?
Yeah. I haven’t spoken to Frankie in a couple of weeks, because she changed phone numbers, but yeah, I love Frankie. She’s great. She’s really funny.


Did your family ever end up coming around regarding your participation in the show?
No.


Really? It remains a source of contention?
Yeah. I guess so. I don’t know how to answer that for them. But again, I didn’t have any visitors there for that reason. Now that it’s visible that people’s opinions about me are changing after seeing me on this show, now they’re coming around to not be so embarrassed by me, let’s say. But that’s not OK with me. The point is that family and your close friends should be there for you when you’re going through the hardest time and not judge you. A lot of their reaction was very selfish in my opinion. I’m working on forgiving people for that. I went through a lot, and I went through it alone. That’s reminiscent of my life, in general. I’m not OK with that.


When you talk about the changing public perception, was that part of your objective in doing this show, or is it a byproduct?
I wasn’t aiming to change the perception. I was not OK with sitting back and letting people see the media’s version of me. I wanted to show me, and if people wanted to hate me, it was totally fair game. They can say whatever they want, because I’m choosing to put myself out there. I’m choosing to make decisions and fall on my face in front of them. That’s fair game, because it’s all from my mouth. That’s why I chose to do the show. The upside is that in the three or four weeks that the show has been airing, the reaction that I’ve gotten from strangers on the street to people on Twitter to people on Facebook has been overwhelming. People saying things like, “I’m your biggest fan,” to, “I’m sorry I judged the media’s version of you”…all that kind of stuff. It humbles me every time I see something like that. People are rooting for me. People identify with me and I’m not this scary, threatening person I’ve been made out to be.


Are you happy?
I’m totally happy. I mean, It’s something you work on, on a daily basis. But I’m so happy right now with the way things are going, with my life. I’m still trying to figure it out, but I’m in the space of being 100 percent happy with the direction I’m going in. And I’m making all my own decisions, I’m not stuck in making decisions based on what I want people’s reactions to be. I’m happy because I’m able to surround myself with people who are helping me get through it, like Drew, like Bob Forrest, like the people on the show. I’m in the driver’s seat, and I genuinely like that.

Myammee Opens Up Her Hair Spa


Myammee has used her I Love Money 2 money to open up Myammee's Hair Spa. She recently had the grand opening of her new shop  which takes place in North Miami Beach. It's a place to get your hair done without the chaotic mess. When she won I Love Money 2 she said she wanted to use the money to open up a shop. I guess she achieved her goal. Congrats!

Thursday, December 16, 2010

VH1's The X Life Airs Jan 10th, Cast Revealed

Pierre Luc Gagnon and Denise Russo



Jermey "Twitch" Stenburg and Suzie Stenberg



Cory "Nasty" Nastazio and Nicole Panattoni




The cast has been revealed for VH1's newest show The X life which airs Jan 10th at 10PM right after You're Cut Off 2. The show is about three male skaters and their wives/girlfriends.


Shaq Dumps Hoopz and Repossessed Her Ring


Well this is shocker... not!  Months ago it was announced that Shay and Flavor Of love/I Love Money winner Hoopz were engaged. Well now it seems like they won't get married after all.  Both of them call it quits. Sources say Shaq got upset at her and repossessed her ring.

VH1 Interviews You're Cut Off Life Coach Laura Baron


VH1 interview You're Cut Off life coach Laura Baron who is back for season 2 of You're Cut Off which airs Monday January 10th at 9:PM. She talks the new girls and she also says that season 2 will be MORE intense than the 1st.





Basically, I want to know in general how the season was for you. Was it more intense than the first? Less intense? Compare and contrast, if you would.

From a team perspective, it was more intense in that the entire production team understood – and I experience this in my daily world — but we all understood the kind of impact we can make on these girls’ lives. In the beginning, we believed it. After the first season, we saw it. It’s hard for me to say because I believe that the success of this show is steeped in our Season 1 girls being able to give like they did. So it’s very difficult for me to compare because the Season 1 girls gave us the platform for this. That said, the Season 2 girls gave on a level and came in on a level that did have a different intensity. They allowed us in much sooner, and as a result, it felt more intense.




Is it possible to compare and contrast the two groups of girls?
I think Season 2 was much more individualized. It is very clear that each girl brought their own separate bucket of challenges. The girls were responsive and reacted to each other, but there was definitely an understanding that individually they really wanted to own this process and that they really understood from a very individual and personal journey what this was going to mean. In Season 1 that definitely happened for them, but I think you felt more of the group moving and growing, whereas here, you saw sparks of each individual moving and growing at very different times.




I assume that at least some of them have been aware of the show or at least seen the first season.
Well, yes. The first day that I walked in, I was very aware that these girls had the potential of understanding what this program was about. And if they hadn’t seen the program, it didn’t take them long to understand how intense it actually was. And every girl that I had talked to since has admitted that in the beginning as Season 1 girls didn’t take it seriously, they didn’t feel like they were going to be cut off, and yet there was a moment. And they each had different moments. Their timing was very different and I think that is really the key difference between the two seasons. It really is that Season 1 had more a group thing to it and you saw a different dynamic. You saw growth with people in different times and different ways. Here it’s all individual.




Is that to say that there is a lot of discord between the group? Is there a lot of cattiness or fighting, even?
Because it’s such an individual process for them, I think the girls are challenged to make a stand in the house and have their voice heard. They don’t have their natural tools to distract them.




I know that you’re obviously, extremely invested in the process, and I also know that you watch this show very avidly. Is there any kind of cognitive dissonance in your appreciation of this show? So much of the entertainment value comes from watching these women act out and seeing the entitled princess get her comeuppance.


I not only recognize but appreciate their bold personalities. I love their sense of humor, I love the flavor that they bring and I appreciate that. I don’t mind when somebody comes back at me. I don’t mind when somebody comes back at somebody else. What that means is that they are moving forward, that they are thinking this through, that they are growing on some level. It’s not always in the direction that I want, but you often have to take a step back to move forward. And I love the humor that they bring with it. If you can’t have humor in your own journey, there’s very little value to it because you’re not going to stick with it. So as a TV show, I’m grateful that these girls do have such a way of expressing themselves. I also think it’s helpful for the audience. We can all relate to what these girls are saying. We might not want to say it in the same way, but that’s what makes them beautiful. They’re willing to be bold and they’re willing to be raw. Watching these girls is cathartic. And that’s the truth for the girls too: the girls see themselves and it’s a really phenomenal opportunity for them to reevaluate how they’re communicating.




Obviously part of the reason that they’re cast on the show is because of their difficult personalities. I know you came up against some direct insults in Season 1, particularly from Chrissy. Does that ever offend you personally, regardless of your expectations?
I am not superhuman and I would never claim to be. I don’t know if I would say that it’s offensive, because I know it’s a defense mechanism and I know they are stopping and impeding their own growth and their own process. What saddens me is that there’s only so much that I am willing to take and there is only so much that the group should have to take. Because in the end, it’s not gonna do anybody good. And if they’re not willing to own their stuff, I’m not gonna do their work for them, and that’s really the bottom line. If they’re not willing to work it, and they’re not willing to be respectful of the process, then I’m not going to allow one girl’s drama to kill the potential. And P.S. - more than anything personal, because I don’t take it personal, I don’t value that communication. I expect better, period. I think that’s what a lot of these girls are missing: strong expectations in their lives.




I wondered if we could go through the new girls and have you give me your first impressions of them. Aimee comes first alphabetically.


I think she is quintessential hard-shell, soft-heart.




How about Hana?
When I first got her, she was really guarded but excessively determined.




How about Jenn?
Let’s say fiery? That’s fun. And she gets it. She’s savvy, that’s what it is.




How about Jessica?
She is deeper than she gives you upfront. I knew that from the start.




What about Lauren?
She feels ready to launch. It seems as though she’s self-confined. She held back, she felt like she was behind a wall but she was ready. You could tell that she was.




Marcy is next.
She was such an interesting combination. I think she was self-assured yet vulnerable.




Nadia.
I already used vulnerable with Marcy…Nadia was brave but ironically delicate, yeah.




And finally Shakyra.
Limited is not the word but she was unreachable.




Is there anything else you can offer by way of a preview? Just what people should expect overall from the season?
I think that these girls really show that you can’t judge anybody by your first impression and that everybody deserves an opportunity to show who they really are. I think the greatest part about this season is that when you set expectations and you set boundaries, people rise to the occasion. It’s not always an easy task, but there’s always a reward.

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