Robert Pattinson: Edward Is a Murderous Weirdo

Apparently, the fangirls have a death wish.

According to Robert Pattinson, there's not much to love about his Twilight saga character,


Edward Cullen. In fact, the heartthrob thinks the vamp is more like a serial killer than a dreamboat.

"With virtually anyone, the nice guys always seem to finish last," he told British OK! "You always get weirdos like Edward who seem to attract women for some reason. If Edward wasn't a fictional character and you met him in reality, he is like one of those guys who would probably be an axe murderer or something."

Yikes. Team Jacob is starting to sound better by the minute.
"People just project their idea of my character on to me and they just seem to assume that I'm the same, when, in reality, I'm not," he said.

Phew! When he puts it that way, we'll take that as a good thing.

Uk.Eonline.com

Jessica and Tony's Relationship: What Went Wrong?

Two weeks ago, when PEOPLE asked Tony Romo what he had planned for girlfriend Jessica Simpson's birthday, he said, "It's a secret." As it turned out, Simpson's birthday surprise turned out to be a shocker: Although Romo had insisted that things between them were "going good," the Dallas Cowboys quarterback ended their year-and-a-half relationship on July 9 – the night before the singer turned 29. "She is heartbroken," says a source. "She loves Tony. But it's been difficult lately. He's busy with his career and she's getting ready to shoot her show (The Price of Beauty). They decided to part ways." But nobody would say that the pair didn't give their relationship a good shot – weathering many a storm and breakup rumors before.

Early Romance

After Simpson and her family went to see Romo play for the first time in November 2007, things moved pretty quickly – he even kissed her on their first date! "The fact that this guy, on our first date, in the first 10 minutes of dinner, wanted to lean over the table and say, 'This is my girl and I want to kiss her' – our first kiss in front of everybody – was awesome," Simpson said at the time. Days later, they shared Thanksgiving together in Texas – but their first bump in the road came quickly. In December, after Romo played his worst game ever while his new girlfriend looked on from the stands, some fans blamed Simpson for distracting Romo and causing the team to lose. Still, the couple rebounded with a Mexican getaway, a romantic Valentine's Day dinner and a public PDA session on his birthday (complete with a frosting fight) in April.

United Front

By May, rumors began to swirl that the couple was heading for a split and that Simpson was devastated to learn her ex-boyfriend, John Mayer, had started dating Jennifer Aniston. But her rep denied talk of a breakup, and Romo escorted Simpson to her sister Ashlee's wedding that same month. The summer seemed blissful for the couple: Simpson went home with her man to Wisconsin where they had dinner with his parents. Later, she dedicated her song, "You're My Sunday," to Romo during a concert tour for her country album and even gushed to PEOPLE that he was "the love of my life." At the beginning of 2009, Romo stood by Simpson when she was slammed on blogs for looking heavier, even taking her out for a romantic night out in New York. "I've never dated a guy that was more simple," she swooned in the May issue of Vanity Fair. "I'm always there for him ... And he knows he has me to come home to."

Quick Split

In recent weeks, however, the couple have been spending time apart. A source tells PEOPLE: "They've been having a lot of problems lately in general." Their last public appearance together was July 1 when she sang the National Anthem at the National Golf Tournament in Bethesda, Md., and Romo played a practice round with Tiger Woods. On July 2, Simpson still seemed upbeat and excited for her upcoming birthday. She posted a message on Twitter to her friend Emmy Rossum about her upcoming party: "Can't wait to see your costume on the 10th! Birthday evite coming soon. You are always the best dressed!!!" But just nine days later, Simpson ended up celebrating her birthday quietly "with family and close friends," according to a source close to Simpson. Meanwhile, Romo was spotted out with a group of friends at L.A. hotspot MyHouse. According to a source, Romo was out with the guys to "lift his spirits." Adds the source: "His friends wanted him to have some fun before football training camp starts." On Sunday, Simpson again took to Twitter to write this reflective post: "Everyone needs to know that hope floats ... grab the strings and pull it back to you. Falling asleep with my mom and the dogs. Please lord give all of my beautiful fans, friends, enemies, and family rest. Bring all of us peace." Says the source close to Simpson: "[Jessica and Tony] were good together for along time. But I guess it wasn't meant to be."

People.com

Inside Michael Jackson's Memorial: (See photos of family and friends celebrating the life of the King of Pop)

Family Gathering
Family and friends gathered in Encino, Calif., early Tuesday morning as they prepared to leave for Jackson's funeral at Forest Lawn Cemetery in L.A. Last night, family also gathered at Forest Lawn Memorial Park for a private viewing. The Processional
A processional of cars departed Katherine Jackson's Encino, Calif., mansion, Hayvenhurst, to go to the private funeral. A dozen-car police motorcade was also spotted inside the Forest Lawn Memorial Park around 7 a.m. PST, a witness told Us. Security checked each car that was admitted into the cemetery. His Sister Mourns
LaToya Jackson, Michael's sister, sat in a car that was part of the line of vehicles that arrived at the funeral shortly after 8 a.m. PST. Her father, Joe Jackson, was in the first car of the processional, which included six Bentleys and Rolls Royces, eight Land Rovers, two limo buses and 19 California Highway Police motorcycle cops. The Stage Was Set
Before the memorial began on Tuesday, Los Angeles police officers checked the stage of the Staples Center, which was the same venue where Jackson rehearsed for his London concert tour just two days before he died on June 25. Below the stage, the front row was surrounded by large bouquets of multicolored flowers. His Rose-Filled Hearse
After the short, 30-minute service, Jackson's casket -- covered in a giant arrangement of red roses -- was loaded into the hearse at Forest Lawn Memorial Park and made its way to the Staples Center, which was 10 miles away.
The Public Memorial
Fans gathered outside L.A.'s Staples Center the day of Jackson's public memorial. More than 1.6 million people registered online for a chance to attend the ceremony, and only 8,750 names were chosen. Those with a ticket were given a free 14-page souvenir program with personalized notes from family and loved ones as they entered. Fans who brought gifts were asked to leave their offerings at a special table inside.
Loyal Fans
Outside the Staples Center, fans paid tribute to the late King of Pop, including an impersonator who posed in Jackson's '80s era, classic white glove. Many fans danced to Jackson's biggest hits and showed off some of his signature moves, including his moonwalk and the infamous crotch-grabbing routine.
Paying Tribute
Vendors took the opportunity to sell T-shirts -- that said "R.I.P. August 29, 1958 - June 25, 2009" -- and other memorabilia outside the Staples Center.
Final Messages
Fans signed a large black-and-white poster of Michael Jackson outside the Staples Center.
UsMagazine

Movie Review : Public Enemies (2009)

(B-)By Lisa Schwarzbaum

The massive financial rip-off masterminded by Bernard Madoff, an extended crime spree that harmed thousands, is proof enough that public enemies still walk among us. But Madoff the man is as dull a figure as his crimes are vivid. Not so John Dillinger, the brazen Depression-era bank robber. His fabled career busting into Midwestern banks and out of jails was brief — he was 31 years old when he was shot to death by FBI agents led by steely G-man Melvin Purvis in Chicago in 1934. But during Dillinger's reign, the outlaw designated by FBI chief J. Edgar Hoover as Public Enemy Number One played his part with aplomb, happy to fill the bill as a tommy-gun-toting folk hero for a public who saw him as a defiant celebrity suitable for down-and-out times. As filmmaker Michael Mann takes pains to emphasize in his handsome, underheated gangster drama Public Enemies, the gent may have been murderous, but he had style.


In case there's any doubt, the gangster-in-chief is played by Johnny Depp, one of the most effortlessly elegant, intriguingly self-contained American movie stars on screen today. But that mystery comes with a price. By the end of this arm's-length study, Depp's Dillinger comes across as an interesting cat, but never a knowable man — he's a pop cultural phenomenon because the movie asserts he is, not because we believe it. We don't feel the bank robber's heartbeat the way we felt the agonies of Russell Crowe's whistle-blower at the end of The Insider — 
or even grooved on the rhythms of cops Sonny Crockett and Rico Tubbs on Mann's stylish Miami Vice.


Dillinger the gun-waving daredevil is first seen finessing a prison break with his henchmen — one of the director's famously crisp, complex, assertive males-in-extremis transactions. Shooting in HD, Mann's frequent collaborator, cinematographer Dante Spinotti, conveys the sense that the flat location landscape signifies both limitless opportunity — and the impossibility of escape. Later, the wanted man dines, dances, and romances his lady love Billie Frechette (Marion Cotillard, the French Oscar winner from La Vie en Rose, working studiously in newly acquired English) when not busy taking the (bank's) money and running. Throughout, Depp talks softly, making the most of those refined feminine features that once looked great in eyeliner as a pirate of the Caribbean, and now look swell framed by hats. He projects seriousness — and also telegraphs a hint of delight, as if Dillinger is tickled by what he's getting away with, hooked on the romance
 of outlaw stardom.


Mann, meanwhile, suggests that every character in this very masculine story is similarly beholden to individual obsessions; his upscale gangster pic is intent on making intellectual connections, sacrificing depth of character in the process. Purvis, played with a buttoned-down agent's tight jaw by Christian Bale, is obsessed with an efficient, clean pursuit of justice, and as he and his team hunt Dillinger and his accomplices, the lawman is distressed to realize that purity of purpose isn't easy to maintain in the new, modern
 Federal Bureau of Investigation. In contrast, FBI head J. Edgar Hoover, played with terrific bursts of ornate, egotistical menace by Billy Crudup, is shown to be hooked on — well, on something slightly rotten and certainly ruthless, something Purvis can't quite understand and eventually can't condone.


With its measured, team-produced screenplay by Mann, Ronan Bennett, and Ann Biderman, Public Enemies makes heavy business of the notion that Hoover ushered in
 an era of ethically elastic law-enforcement procedures still recognizable today. Purvis is the existentially anxious 20th-century man caught in the middle of change he doesn't like. Dillinger represents the end of a desperate golden era when poor people cheered for robbers who gallantly called female hostages ''sister.'' But as a murderess and a jailhouse matron sing in the musical Chicago — another study of celebrity criminals — ''What ever happened to class?'' Throughout his own
 heinous career, Bernard Madoff wore only gray suits. John Dillinger wouldn't have been caught dead in a costume so drab. Public Enemies re-creates clothes, but doesn't fully fashion the man who wore them. B-
Posted Jun 30, 2009
Ew.com

Hot Shots!

David and Victoria Beckham strip down to get up close and personal with each other in their latest sexy ads for Emporio Armani.Ok-Magazine

Watch Michael Jackson's Last Performance


UsMagazine

Debbie Rowe to Seek Custody of Jackson Kids

A fierce custody battle is brewing over two of Michael Jackson's children, with their mother relaying word Thursday that she plans to fight for them in court, and the Jackson family signaling they will fight right back.
Debbie Rowe, the mother of Prince, 12, and Paris, 11, spoke to her former attorney Iris Finsilver, who says, "She is going to be pursuing custody of the children."

"Frankly, she won't have to fight for them," Finsilver tells PEOPLE. "She is the children's biological mother. She loves her children."

The kids, along with a third child, Prince Michael II (Blanket), 7, whose mother is unknown, are in the temporary court-ordered care of Jackson family matriarch Katherine Jackson, 79, whom the singer named as guardian in his 2002 will. (Diana Ross was also named, in the event that Katherine was no longer living.)

A source close to the Jackson family says they intend to seek permanent custody. "They will fight," says the source.

Rowe earlier made her position clear July 2 in an interview with a Los Angeles television station, saying, "I want my children."

"I am stepping up," she told a reporter for Los Angeles station NBC 4 in a 90-minute phone conversation. "I have to."

Rowe also said she'd be willing to take custody of Blanket to keep the three children together, and she may seek a restraining order to keep her former father-in-law, Joe Jackson, away from her children.
People.com

Meet the Real Most Interesting Man in the World

He's called the Most Interesting Man in the World, the debonair Renaissance man in those Dos Equis radio and TV ads with the outrageous one-liners: His enemies list him as their emergency contact number; he doesn't stick with just flour or corn, but switches freely between the two; he's the only man to have aced the Rorschach test. But who is he, really? In an exclusive interview, PEOPLE got to know the man behind the beard. His name is Jonathan Goldsmith, he's an actor and businessman originally from New York City, and while the Spanish accent is fake, he really is very interesting. Here are five things to know about him: He lives on a 47-foot boat in Marina Del Rey, Calif.: "It's like sitting in a beautiful French shop in England. It's like a fine furniture shop or antique shop," says Goldsmith. In his long career as a TV actor, he was often killed onscreen: "Electrocuted, shot, chopped, hung, machine-gunned and actually ground by somebody impersonating a nun," he says. "I was either killing people or being killed." In 1991, he started a marketing company and taught people how to achieve their dreams: He retired in 1998 from his multimillion-dollar business and returned to Hollywood. "When I was up making these pitches on the stages, I would practice my projection, imagining I was back on stage. And promising myself that one day I would return to that which I love. And I did." He was good friends with Fernando Lamas: Goldsmith cites the actor as the main influence for his Dos Equis character. Their passion for sailing bonded their friendship, and "I eventually scattered his ashes from my sailboat," he says. He does have a favorite tortilla: Unlike his character who doesn't choose between flour and corn, Goldsmith says, "I prefer flour over corn. I get that all the time."
People.com

Ne-Yo Is Prepped for New Orleans Concert – And the Gumbo

After spending the last four months in Prague where he was shooting the upcoming Tuskegee Airmen drama Red Tails alongside actors Terrence Howard and Cuba Gooding Jr., singer-songwriter Ne-Yo is ready to let loose and head down South. Hitting the stage at the Essence Music Festival in New Orleans on Friday, Ne-Yo tells PEOPLE he's been prepping his moves. "I'm a little rusty right now; I can admit that! ... But it will not show by the time ya'll see me at Essence! Don't worry!" he assures his fans. Also on the Essence bill: Beyoncé, John Legend and Maxwell. The star, who recently started rehearsals for his month-long European tour, added: "I've been off the radar while I was shooting [the film], but I'm getting my tour legs back. Performing music is in my blood. It's not like I’ll ever forget how to do it, but anything that you stop doing for a long enough period of time, you get a little rusty."

And once Ne-Yo wraps up his Big Easy performance, he'll be ready for a night on the town. "I love New Orleans – it's a party town! I grew up in in Las Vegas, so I know what it is!" he says with a laugh. But before hitting the scene, he plans to get his fill of some traditional New Orleans-style cuisine. "Gumbo is a must! I won't get on the stage until I get a proper bowl of gumbo," he jokes.

People.com

Twilighters Attend Summer School & Prom at Edward & Bella's High School

Ever wonder what it's like inside the halls where Twilight vampire Edward met his mortal love Bella? Well, some dedicated Twilighters got the chance to do so last weekend at Summer School in Forks: A Twilight Symposium. The fan event, which took place in the small town of Forks, Wash. (population 3,000) – where author Stephenie Meyer set her romantic saga – gave lovers of all things Twilight the opportunity to attend classes about the novel at Forks High, tour the town and party at a real-life prom – just like Edward and Bella! "The town was having some major economic issues, because their major export was logging – and then Twilight came along," popular Twlight blogger Kaleb Nation told MTV News. "And if you look at Forks now, Stephenie has transformed this town into a Twilight tourism economy. It's crazy."

Here were some highlights from the eventful weekend, where two Twilighters could attend for $300:• Forks Tour: The town has transformed into a mecca for Twilighters, with signs that read, "Edward Cullen Slept Here" and meals dubbed a "Twilight Dinner" (served by waitresses with Alice pixie cuts!) Cutouts of Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart linger in store fronts selling Twilight gear, while Forks High features lockers reserved just for Edward and Bella. • Forks High Prom:The prom on Saturday was set in the Forks High Gym featuring performances by popular Twilight acts, Bella Cullen Project, Bella Rocks and the Mitch Hansen Band. Two fans were also crowned the Summer School in Forks Prom King and Queen! • Summer Graduation:Attendees of the Summer School even received diplomas at a graduation ceremony set in the school's cafeteria on Sunday. Writer Larry Carroll of MTV's "Twilight Tuesdays" column delivered the keynote address. "As the line between fiction and fact continued to blur," Carroll said of the event, "The Twilighters exchanged hugs and phone numbers, taking home the memories of a lifetime along with their diplomas."














People.com

Michael's Legacy of Unreleased Recordings

When he died a week ago, Michael Jackson was sitting on so much unreleased music, that fans could see more new material from him now that he's gone than in recent years.
"There are dozens and dozens of songs that did not end up on his albums," Tommy Mottola, who from 1998 to 2003 was chairman and CEO of Sony Music, which owns the distribution rights to Jackson's music, tells the Associated Press. "People will be hearing a lot of that unreleased material for the first time ever. There's just some genius and brilliance in there."
Included in those recordings are unused tracks from sessions Michael held for some of his best and most famous albums, as well as recent songs with Akon and will.i.am.
So exactly how much music are we talking? Tommy says the album releases to be made "could go on for years and years – even more than Elvis." Tommy went on to explain that for every album Michael made, several tracks were recorded that never made it onto the records.
The Jackson family hasn't revealed what will happen to Michael's song catalog and unreleased concert footage. A 2002 will of the late King of Pop was just filed yesterday, leaving everything to the family trust. It's also still unclear who exactly owns what rights to which recordings, between Sony and MJ himself.
Akon tells the AP they only completed one song, "Hold My Hand," which leaked last year, and that they talked on the phone all the time about ideas for finishing the album after the London tour.
He adds that he'll keep those bits of songs "locked up in the vault" until the Jacksons decide what to do with his legacy.
"It was all positive records – songs to uplift people, songs to make people think about the problems in life," Akon told the AP. "It was all about bringing people together."

OkMagazine

First Look! Kendra Wilkinson's Official Wedding Photos

When Kendra Wilkinson walked down the aisle last Saturday, "she looked so beautiful, I couldn't take my eyes off her," groom Hank Baskett tells the new issue of Us Weekly, on stands today.
The bride -- who is three months pregnant with the couple's first child -- donned a $20,000 duchesse-silk gown consisting of 55 yards of fabric covered in 1,200 crystals codesgined by herself and R-Mine Bridal's Armine Ohanessian.

Of her civil ceremony held at the Playboy mansion and attended by 300 guests, Kendra -- who will take the name Baskett -- tells Us: "Everything looked so beautiful around me -- it was surreal."


Even Hugh Hefner -- who split from Kendra last October -- got a little teary eyed, Girl Next Door and bridesmaid Bridget Marquardt tells Us.
"It was a spectacular day, filled with emotion," Hef tells Us. "Her first dance was with the groom; the second, with
me."
UsMagazine