When a celebrity has a little damage control to do, the late night comedy program is the forum of choice. |
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He bought the Pearl Mountain plantation which will be marketed under celebrity chef Brian Turner's food label. |
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During Super Bowl week, celebrity chasers and groupies flock to the site city and are a huge temptation on the club scene. |
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The celebrity guests even seemed happy to be insulted, leered at or satirised by the pair of potty-mouthed puppets. |
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If I want to include a dead celebrity as a character in a short story or novel what is stopping me from doing so? |
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Such is his celebrity that taxi drivers discuss, not the weather, but natural history with him. |
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A famous television celebrity and a distinguished theatrical impresario were there on my recommendation and loved it. |
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Each week she invites a celebrity guest to conjure up their fantasy dinner party. |
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I secretly find this more compelling and ogle-worthy than the exxy, front-of-book celebrity shoot! |
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He has numerous houses in several countries and embraces a coterie of celebrity friends. |
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During the course of the story Smith has a lot to say about the emptiness of celebrity and stardom and what it means. |
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I have rarely encountered a celebrity who has so voraciously invaded her own privacy. |
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What keeps us glued to the TV set, besides natural disasters, unwinnable wars, terrorist plots, missing white women and celebrity court trials? |
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Celebrity campaigning is a logical extension of celebrity charity work, as Princess Diana showed when she took up landmines. |
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The camera flashbulbs glowed, and the crowd which were waiting patiently for the celebrity from Australia to arrive, went berserk. |
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The trick is to monetize this buzz, to make liberal use of her celebrity pixie dust to undo the damage her legal woes did to her company. |
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But it's Thornley's fast and loose definition of celebrity that makes his boneyard Baedeker such a quirky read. |
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The oversized celebrity has been in 30 films since 1970, grossing hundreds of millions of dollars. |
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The danger is that a public stupefied by celebrity and trivia will be ill-informed and disinclined to engage in the democratic process. |
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A pair of celebrity glamour couples were seen double-dating in Miami this weekend. |
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In the accompanying photographs, the celebrity can be seen drinking her alcopop with a straw out of a glass. |
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We have had no major philanderers, dirty financial dealers, international playboys and worst of all, no celebrity candidates! |
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Instead of devoting his time to his celebrity status, he spends hour after hour, week after week, working for the little guys... and loving it. |
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These have overtaken Top of the Pops in the ratings by revealing how pop stardom and celebrity is manufactured. |
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We can't get news bureaus to come to a press conference if we can't get a celebrity there. |
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In addition, there will be a celebrity spelling bee and live entertainment. |
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Magazines and newspapers have caught on to the idea of celebrity like never before. |
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The newspapers love abuse stories, and they love the mixture of celebrity and populism that marries so easily in the culture now. |
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It was the public's unquenchable thirst for celebrity gossip, argues Ken, that led the paparazzi to hound her to her death. |
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It's aim to show the artificiality of celebrity was short-circuited by the slickness of its design. |
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He also appears to have lost the support of some of his most high-profile celebrity friends. |
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There was this unclean desire toward celebrity and media that still rages within us like the shakes in an alcoholic. |
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Keep reading as we try to find more interesting celebrity cock-ups from around the world. |
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Here the night will be boogied away by an A-list celebrity smorgasbord of movie stars, moguls, sports personalities and billionaires. |
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While the tintype served the mass-portraiture market, wet-plate lent itself to landscapes, cityscapes, and mass-reproduced celebrity portraits. |
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In the lobby of the gallery, he was represented by four large oils clumsily portraying celebrity lairs. |
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But by creating the interest, by putting their private life up for auction in this way, doesn't the celebrity also commoditise themselves? |
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It could be that it's part of a deal she has with a Japanese car maker for whom she is the celebrity endorser. |
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Keep your look fresh and simple when it comes to your hair, says celebrity hairstylist Oscar James, who advocates braids and twists. |
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They have gulled municipalities around the world into letting them stage their pranks, and the result is celebrity and riches. |
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Whilst Mark has chosen celebrity mania as a context for the story, he is not totally disparaging of its role in society. |
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It is happening on some celebrity talk shows and it could be doomsday for channels in the long run. |
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Even at their worst, the celebrity panel made for a thousand eye-rolling moments. |
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A move to the relative anonymity of Los Angeles, where AA meetings turn into celebrity hang-outs, became inevitable. |
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Around the time of his death, he was reported to be paranoid, dictatorial, obsessed with his celebrity and his physique. |
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He will be remembered for starring in a series of urban myths fuelled by celebrity fawners which painted him as some anarchic anti-hero. |
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Such reticence, of course, is a cardinal sin in a media world that worships the gods of celebrity and fame. |
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A celebrity football match helped a school head towards its fund raising goal. |
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Both plays were very well received and she enjoyed some celebrity in theatrical circles. |
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She was chosen from thousands of entries in the Woodies DIY colouring competition to be a celebrity for a day. |
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The business of growing up may be difficult enough but even when it is over, life as a sports celebrity does not get any easier. |
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He is certainly not the first celebrity chef to traipse over the border to celebrate the glories of Scottish food. |
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The casting directors all like to boast that they have a very sensitive radar for people who just want the celebrity of it. |
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Nor do Shaolin's American adherents seem bothered by Yan Ming's celebrity cachet. |
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She is quite unique as an A-list celebrity without too many skeletons in her closet. |
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Next week will be a big one for the celebrity magazines which have come to dominate the news-stands. |
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Besides copious amounts of available cash, celebrity politicians have the name recognition that the regular shlubs are hustling for. |
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At least celebrity is something the rest of us might willingly concede we don't possess. |
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Our back pages are dominated by celebrity drivel spun by agents acting for a handful of English superstars. |
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The modern taste for celebrity politics is now such that these things pass almost unremarked. |
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The unadulterated tripe about food, the rise of the celebrity chef, cooking and all the pretentious cant that goes with it, is beyond me. |
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The loos have been supplied by Paton Plant, a Hamilton-based company which supplies luxury portable toilets to celebrity events. |
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California founded the celebrity culture, and as publicity stunts go, running for governor is on the cheap and easy side of the spectrum. |
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Interactive City II will have panels, masterclasses, seminars and celebrity interviews. |
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Could you picture someone like Kathy Griffin begging off a celebrity show because of mosquitoes? |
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With his death the true loss to mourn is not that of the celebrity designer, but of the outstanding theatrical costumier of his age. |
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Voter interest was sparked by both the unexpected calling of the election and a bevy of celebrity candidates. |
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Launching ceremonies, including celebrity christeners, remained of personal interest to the public throughout the war. |
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The resort's seclusion attracted him more than the chance to see any celebrity personalities. |
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I suppose I was questioning the whole idea of what a celebrity or a personality is. |
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I think they belong in the same kind of timeless, truthless realm as celebrity gossip. |
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I jest about my celebrity crushes, and having 'fessed up, I think it's bloggable subject, but I don't take them too seriously. |
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Zidane's iconicity is not just about economic fetishism that marks the celebrity stature of most sporting icons of Western capitalist countries. |
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The stellar shindig featured various celebrity types, some free snacks and drinks, and lots of great atmosphere. |
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His first picture was published in the Evening Times and kicked off a career that encompasses both photojournalism and celebrity portraiture. |
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I find the following in an interview with a fave celebrity crush to be a turn-on. |
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The unposed, rather awkward-looking, front-on shots remind us that fashion is not all about celebrity and stylists. |
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He's the biggest small-town celebrity interviewer that Butte, Montana has ever had to offer. |
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Again, like today's, its doings were chronicled by an irreverent, iconoclastic press eager for celebrity gossip and social scandal. |
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Sprinkled with star performances and exotic themes, celebrity weddings are outdoing each other on extravagance. |
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Our celebrity driven news is presented by people who gave up being journalists and instead became careerists. |
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Why should a celebrity and pop culture site be the best place to go for up-to-date current affairs news? |
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Not only did he get a lot of publicity in the media, but he also started the trend of using himself in his ads, measuring his celebrity clients. |
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Maybe you have a product or service to sell, an organization or cause to promote, or a celebrity or politician to publicize. |
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The publishing industry needs awards to bring sparkle and a sense of celebrity into writing. |
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She has claimed in court that she was running a legitimate escort agency, and has refused to reveal the names of her celebrity clients. |
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Her status as a celebrity will make many undiscriminating or unknowing people buy the book and take her arguments at face value. |
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So the celebrity face simply provides a bit of innocuous eye candy to package the merchandise within. |
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I know this current crop of stories are the talk of the steamie, but I don't think I can cope with any more celebrity dirty laundry. |
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Wired has an entertaining celebrity tattler piece on how Hollywood's big names behave when they're in the Apple store. |
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The shows consisted of skits, sketches and musical items, and featured visiting celebrity guest stars. |
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She's a celebrity in a parallel world that passes under the radar for most of us. |
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It's part of our culture to have telethons and celebrity appeals and things like that. |
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They effectively harness the familiarity of well-know ditties to send up celebrity culture. |
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During waking hours she's fielding phone calls every weekend, eager to feed the greedy maw of celebrity gossip. |
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Elvis Presley has now been a dead celebrity longer than he was a living one. |
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The Party eagerly grasped the opportunity to use his celebrity status to raise its public profile. |
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Would you watch a reality television show based around a celebrity footballer? |
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The use of a celebrity to give a brand name to a book, or series of books, is therefore a smart move. |
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It's even less fair to airbrush a 60-year-old celebrity and present her as someone who's managed to avoid the ravages of time. |
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A re-opening will take place on Saturday, June 25 with a mystery celebrity guest. |
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You're in a unique position in that you're a celebrity but one who's most famous for trashing her fallow celebrates. |
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The uncrowned prince of British menswear, John Richmond, managed to dazzle a celebrity studded audience with an eclectic show. |
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The show will also feature a very special celebrity Sports Day with some very famous names. |
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We have yet another surprising celebrity couple split-up to tell you about tonight. |
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A burlesque dancer called Lily does a striptease and a celebrity hunt fails to find Sir Sean Connery. |
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Ten rounds of general knowledge questions will be asked on-air by celebrity question master and weekday morning presenter, Judi Spiers. |
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The panel of celebrity judges selected the bands which will perform this weekend. |
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Or is she, as some are starting to suspect, a shallow, third-rate self-publicist who has crested to celebrity on a wave of violence and hype? |
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Joy then introduced the guest celebrity in the person of yours truly, this humble correspondent! |
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However, the chief appeal of celebrity is neither money nor luxury but recognition. |
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Prince Andrew has been invited to attend the ceremony and there will also be a surprise celebrity guest. |
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It's comforting to think that if we just have enough walkathons and celebrity fund-raisers, we'll cure everything. |
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While reluctant to jump on the celebrity bandwagon, Mansfield has been active in pursuing other ways to move his company forward. |
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Maybe he's doing a celebrity endorsement or something in an attempt to bring them back. |
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In the years after he passed away, we'd get all sorts of celebrity chefs breezing through our kitchen. |
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Along the way the film manages to say a lot about the nature of class, celebrity and capitalism in America. |
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Once these two celebrity hair wunderkinds agreed to follow their jointly shared visions for a salon, there was no stopping them. |
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The courtyard is beautiful but if you're not a baller or celebrity you are dog Doo Doo. |
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To celebrate the occasion, the BBC plans to screen a celebrity boat race with Steve Redgrave and Mathew Pinsent enlisted to train the teams. |
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In this modern age of cynicism and celebrity the road from pariah to popularity is a short one. |
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The celebrity author, 52, cannot be prised away from buffet lunches and milling admirers. |
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I learnt young that if you wanted someone to give you something, celebrity worked wonders. |
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By then his celebrity was well established and he wore a dark suit of shiny mohair in a modish cut. |
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The celebrity and fundraiser took time out to officially launch a new boat for disabled people at the Sailing Club at the weekend. |
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If a modern celebrity were to support something of this nature it would be trumpeted constantly in the press. |
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The basement is where the celebrity pianists go to pick out a Steinway for their recording sessions, concerts, TV shows. |
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Now, they worry about damage to the celebrity profiles that make their careers so lucrative. |
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He did, of course, come with a family history and a degree of celebrity that meant he was already a public face. |
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Also, if you do have any celebrity memorabilia that you've collected sell it quick before the market collapses. |
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Cash will be the vital ingredient as celebrity chefs cook up a special fundraising treat for charity. |
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Organisers hope a celebrity guest will be present for the day, which was a huge success last year. |
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An actor, musician and songwriter of considerable talent, he shuns the celebrity lifestyle to relax with his family in suburban Dublin. |
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He plays an egomaniacal celebrity author living with his glamorous second wife and his shy grown-up daughter from his first marriage. |
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Yet in the news pages, entertainment columns and social diaries of the same publications, the celebrity cycle continues to turn. |
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Wrapped in an expansive plaid jacket, lidded with page-boy haircut, she looks like a celebrity teapot. |
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The celebrity chef Gordon Ramsay was the target of a pungent protest against eating horse meat yesterday. |
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I'm not like some of those big-head celebrity hounds who are too good for people or who get into movies for free. |
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It's certainly true that the siren song skirling out from all that heather and tartan has proven irresistible to punter and celebrity alike. |
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But maybe we shouldn't be too surprised at the contestants' failure to develop celebrity personalities. |
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By the end of his life he was an international celebrity and was regarded by his admirers as a kind of art guru. |
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There is a really ugly underbelly to the cult of the celebrity yummy mummy. |
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And next, we're going to go live to California for the very latest on the wildfires that are threatening celebrity mansions. |
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Her contribution included compiling a cookery book after pestering celebrity chefs for recipes. |
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The dapper, silver-haired Frenchman had a celebrity status akin to a rock star among followers the world over. |
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He is capable of engaging human interest and celebrity interviews without resorting to sycophantic schmoozing or excruciating empathy. |
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Through a combination of cynicism and self-flattery, we put their accomplishments on a par with the banalities of contemporary celebrity culture. |
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Well the blond bombshell is one celebrity who's come out of the closet about her illness. |
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Lopez is the first celebrity to take the stand in the trial, and prosecutors say he will not be the last. |
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The show changes casts frequently, with a new female celebrity taking the lead in every new city. |
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His manipulation of press photographs and focus on celebrity anticipated Pop Art. |
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Renowned as a haven of peace and tranquillity, its mystique is increased by its exclusivity, high prices and celebrity clientele. |
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I would of course win, and embark on an exciting and glamorous career as a celebrity re-mixer and general global god of Dance music. |
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As a cross-dressing, serially pierced, tattoo-laden celebrity athlete, he has set an X-Men-level standard for cultural mutation. |
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With witty repartee like that, it's a mystery why the woman hasn't already made a successful career for herself as a celebrity chef. |
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The awards will be presented by a surprise celebrity and other stars will attend the event. |
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However famous a celebrity may be stateside, you can unearth a commercial they filmed for some rando foreign product on the sly. |
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A different celebrity might present merits of each of the 16 or so rival schemes which would contend for the prize. |
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For many of her type and generation, prevention from celebrity is a kind of jail. |
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All you have to do to win is a scribble out a haiku about a celebrity of our choice. |
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The celebrity lecturer this year is a well-known plantswoman and former chairman of the Hardy Plant Society. |
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It must be very reassuring for women with dress sizes over six to have a celebrity they can identify with. |
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Writing on film is already trashy enough, already skewed by celebrity suck-up values and movie star hagiolatry. |
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At the end of the night the celebrity was about to be taken off by his minders. |
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As Paul and Heather prepare to do battle, another celebrity is apparently kissing and making up. |
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The popularity of the game has been fueled by the airing of tournaments and celebrity games on American television. |
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Some might say that these tales of celebrity heroism might be the product of hyper-imaginative publicists. |
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This popularity not only confers celebrity status on gardeners but shows the garden owner as a person of refined taste, the minister said. |
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Few well-known executives who achieved celebrity during the boom years of the Nineties are now safe from shareholder retribution. |
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In 1961 being a folk singer was not a ticket to writing celebrity gardening columns. |
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For the novice celebrity Scientologist like me, there are more enticements on offer. |
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Who wants to go to a tacky West End celebrity hang-out, when celebrity is ten a penny and likely to comprise only noddies? |
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Any more of this and she'll be getting a reputation as a celebrity stalker. |
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But Long Thompson's idea of a visiting celebrity is former Indiana senator Birch Bayh, who toured the district with her Wednesday. |
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The ball park has become an advertising venue and celebrity scene instead of a home away from home for rooters. |
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In addition to being a scaredy-cat, I am also a celebrity gossip fan, so I am reproducing several of the more eye-catching ones here for you. |
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By calling him a celebrity you almost make us feel that we need to do wrong in order to be recognised. |
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Of course everyone secretly hopes they might find a celebrity connection, figures of power and influence or even blue blood. |
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Each celebrity will be taking three penalties and a trophy will be presented to the winning side. |
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My whirlwind trip started at the Wafi Shopping Centre, the most upmarket mall, which oozes celebrity fashion and eye-watering price tags. |
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She may be a B-list celebrity in Hollywood but on a tennis court, the former world No.1 is an under-prepared accident waiting to happen. |
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Add star quality to your morning tea with over 40 delicious and healthy recipes from celebrity chefs. |
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He's mamboing with Chita Rivera, the first Hispanic to receive the Kennedy Center Honors and a beloved celebrity in his native Puerto Rico. |
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The commentaries do more than provide interesting tidbits of academic celebrity gossip. |
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With the priciest product at just 5.99, you don't have to earn a celebrity salary to look like an A-lister this summer. |
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And again, like you said, these are not mega-stars whose celebrity and otherness is intimidating. |
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It's just one in a range well-tested celebrity responses to the scandalmongers, from the Dignified Evasion to the Snotty Putdown. |
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As actor-singer-director, Spacey hogs every scene and makes Darin's short-lived celebrity the occasion for an ego-tripping star turn. |
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I'd managed to get an A-list celebrity angry enough with me to take a pot shot at me. |
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The contest is open to all performers who have not had a contract as a celebrity impersonator in the past 12 months. |
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Cheat your way to a celebrity body with clever lingerie and this season's body con bandage dresses. |
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The possibility of a celebrity guest is not the only change on the cards for this year's festival. |
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Her supporters said she was unfairly singled out because of her celebrity and because of bias against female executives. |
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He cultivated his role as a celebrity with all the assiduity common to our media stars today. |
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Despite our growing celebrity status we had no sophistication or sense of style. |
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Perhaps they can stage another celebrity boxing match between the two of them. |
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This was when the millionaire celebrity author at last acquired the moral force for which he is still recognised. |
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But mountain biking is an obscure cousin in the celebrity sports family of World Cup soccer and Olympic track. |
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By the luck of the draw, or maybe the opposite, she has been assigned another celebrity mash-up. |
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The six celebrity housemates have been on trial in the court of public popularity all week. |
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What the Democrats do have is a mother lode of celebrity kibitzers, hangers-on, wannabes, kingmakers, cause-stars and flirts. |
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They saw magazine executives under oath in a celebrity trial copping to fraudulent circulation figures. |
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I was seated in the celebrity box with my family and I knew half the audience in the hall there. |
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Given this me-too drive to imitate and adore, why are celebrity flame-outs and meltdowns so fascinating? |
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News of one or another celebrity suing a tabloid always elicits praise from me. |
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Some papers are now part of the showbiz industry and for many, celebrity rather than religion is now the opium of the people. |
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It's no wonder Brad Paisley's new satire song celebrity is getting a lot of mileage. |
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A celebrity in a search of a fast buck can do a lot worse than lend their name to a range of scoff. |
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There are songs here that would never see daylight were it not for their celebrity provenance. |
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Whether they admit it or not, no celebrity is immune to the orange-peel effect we call cellulite. |
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If your career is on the way down, panto is a celebrity safety net, one last greasepaint refuge where you can still revel in audience adulation. |
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Throughout their careers, the volatile brothers have courted controversy and rarely been out of the celebrity gossip pages. |
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Fancy having the name of your favourite celebrity totty spelled out in naked people? |
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Although Hirschberg is famous for turning celebrity profiles into celebrity vivisections, her portrait of Seinfeld was basically a Valentine. |
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Adults have celebrity mags and glossies, but kids don't care about big names. |
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They certainly seem focused on the needs and aspirations of a real customer, rather than jockeying for celebrity endorsements. |
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She became a national celebrity after defeating the greatest tenpin bowler of his day. |
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Stuck in limbo for 37 years, the album has finally been unveiled to adoring acolytes, frothing critics and celebrity fans by its creator. |
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I almost wouldn't mind going back to listening to Carly's random ramblings about celebrity hairlines and winning online auction strategies. |
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Baker's stint, which begins at 7pm and ends at 9.30 pm, is thought to be the first time the BBC has used a celebrity as a continuity announcer. |
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A woman in a lairy teeshirt shoves a half-pack of love hearts at me with an ad for the next round of celebrity reality tv. |
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After 90 minutes waiting for the celebrity cook to whip his spatula out, the lure of onion bhajis proved irresistible. |
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Pop music, celebrity magazines and Jaffa cakes are pretty low on my list of favourite things. |
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The self-indulgent lifestyle of the celebrity nouveau riches is as far from her experience as it is from any wage slave in a tedious job. |
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Chattering about tabloid trivia or television celebrity shows, he can barely conceal his lack of interest. |
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His second career was in journalism, a field in which he achieved overnight celebrity as a war correspondent. |
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It featured a sporting clay shoot, guided hunts for pheasant and quail and a celebrity dinner with live and silent auctions. |
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Before earning his celebrity status Koons supported his art by working as a Wall Street commodities broker. |
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Membership of the academy confers instant celebrity status, with academicians appearing on television chat shows and in popular magazines. |
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Anne has developed the reputation of being one of the best landladies in the business and is a celebrity cook, no less. |
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He returned home to a hero's welcome and fleeting celebrity in the best Orcadian seafaring tradition. |
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A savvy lawyer knows how to use a client's brand of celebrity to his advantage. |
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As eager journalists told and retold the story of their naval valor, lieutenant Hobson's celebrity grew. |
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Teaming up with celebrity stylist Louise O'Connor, Rita promises her clients the escapism of a modern day Zen retreat. |
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The February event includes masterclasses in traditional music, singing and set dancing along with a celebrity concert. |
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While cameras rolled, the celebrity hair colorist masterfully painted light baby-blonde highlights onto Jessica's honey blonde base strands. |
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No, you keep yourself aloof from the free designer clothes and parties with royalty of the celebrity culture. |
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Her ambitions are patterned on images absorbed from old movies and gleaned from her favourite reading matter, celebrity autobiographies. |
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If there is one profession where the celebrity children seem to be joining in droves it's the Bollywood biz. |
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Despite origins far more humble than his relatives, Sir Alec achieved international celebrity and staggering wealth. |
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The family moved opposite to me in a modest semi-detached, and they soon became the closest thing to celebrity in our neck of the woods. |
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Rather than an indicator of the quality of British food, the popular appeal of celebrity chefs on British TV is precisely because its direness. |
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Last Days, by comparison, is simply small, plumbing the shallow depths of half-baked notions about celebrity and art and depression. |
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It looks like a celebrity judge might actually be getting involved, and she's not taking any lip. |
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The godfather of JFK celebrity conspiracy theorists is director Oliver Stone. |
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Covered in an array of glitzy strands, they look like a celebrity DIY project gone horribly awry. |
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A visa for the U.S., appearances at glittery celebrity galas, and a series of host families soon followed. |
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Some may or may not agree with his right-wing views, but they will wince at serious London politics treated by the Tory leadership as a celebrity Eton wall game. |
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From a notoriously thin-skinned TV celebrity to an ageing novelist of the club generation, the pastiches are as transparent as they are hilarious. |
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In the temple of the fashion designer who here in Italy is considered a celebrity and the arbiter elegantiarum, or master of taste, you would expect a stylish set up. |
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The spread in Us Weekly with some other minor-league celebrity on the beaches of St. Tropez? |
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Because of the role celebrities play in our society, the creative appropriation of celebrity images can also be an important avenue for individual expression. |
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Are you worried about raising your two young daughters in a culture that is so fixated on celebrity and low culture? |
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For one weekend in February, celebrity chefs from all over the country gather in South Beach to fete the world of wine and food. |
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The English-born owner tells us his riad is regularly booked for fashion shoots, and has also been rented by celebrity A-listers for private parties. |
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The five-year-old has become a celebrity since her rescue from a Ukrainian orphanage, her zest for life and beaming smile winning her many friends. |
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The whole cult of celebrity is so boring but the snobbery is just as bad. |
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We extol celebrity at a time when it has never seemed more fleeting or meaningless. |
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Stephen Colbert was back on the airwaves Monday and wasted no time sharing details from his latest celebrity encounter. |
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This will no doubt be a case of another celebrity beating the rap. |
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And carnival queens from Tiptree, Burnham, Braintree, Witham and Wickford were given the celebrity treatment, riding in style in the back of luxury stretch limos. |
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No other city in America covets celebrity as much as New York. |
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When he returned to challenge James in 2006, he was a celebrity with a chip on his shoulder. |
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As far as celebrity doppelgangers go, no one can top comic actor Will Ferrell and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer chad Smith. |
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The greatest of celebrity musicians will do fine under any system, while those who are currently waiting on tables or driving a cab to support themselves have nothing to lose. |
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Her first celebrity beef began when Snoop Dogg started Instagramming some pretty vile things about her, seemingly unprovoked. |
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Who else belongs to this mysterious group of celebrity whackers? |
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How do you go about matching the appropriate celebrity with the clients? |
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And when it comes to celebrity endorsements, Kerry seems to have the edge. |
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But there's a difference between transparency about addiction and a reality show about b-list celebrity addicts. |
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Why do politicians and policy-makers need the benediction of celebrity to do their jobs? |
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To do so is to deify a celebrity for being what we need them to be, while willfully ignoring who they really are. |
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Speaking of bamboozled, every Halloween you hear a horror story of a celebrity in blackface costume. |
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The auctioneer talks about knowing and employing royalty, and celebrity big spenders. |
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Ryan Totka, a celebrity booking agent and founder of sports marketing company athlete Promotions, agrees. |
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Cumberbatch and Hunter have assiduously avoided being identified as celebrity couple until now. |
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In the Vanity Fair piece, Lawrence defended her celebrity status and said that that did not entitle people to her body. |
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The celebrity juggernaut becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. |
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Last year Ellen Page made waves by elevating the celebrity video game cameo to an art form. |
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A genuine show of celebrity rudeness, followed by an insincere PR performance? |
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From Janay Rice to Christy Mack to Rihanna, our obsession with celebrity victims has reached an all-time high. |
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Anyone who has put up with the fake rigors of celebrity has got to find a kindred spirit here. |
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And then there are those celebrity babies with jokey names who grew up to change them. |
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Closer, the celebrity women's weekly from the team behind Heat, seems to have found the magic circulation formula that has eluded more traditional women's titles. |
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The Bling Ring is visceral, elegantly shot, and acerbic, as it probes the dark side of celebrity obsession. |
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While criticism of his on-field performances have been rare, there are those who believe his megastar celebrity status detract from his footballing abilities. |
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In an interview with Total Politics, the celebrity bird man tells an interviewer that the royals should be put in a museum. |
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It is the same in all the broadcasting groups and in many newspapers, where hard news long ago lost the battle with celebrity gossip and vapid opinionising. |
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If nothing else, the Kardashian Empire shows us just how much celebrity culture has changed since the golden age of Hollywood. |
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When they are real the tape offers a chance to see a celebrity in a vulnerably raw position. |
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So much so they had no problem selling out the Olympia Theatre last night with screaming fans and even a number of celebrity faces in the heaving crowd. |
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Having played mostly female and trans characters has made him somewhat of a celebrity among the disenfranchised. |
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The treatment of the face in this 1975 portfolio of ten screen-printed portraits of African Americans contrasts sharply with the celebrity faces discussed above. |
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The one sticking point was, of course, that my D-list viral celebrity as a Jeopardy! |
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So pausing only to wonder at this weird form of celebrity inflation, in which the words rise and interest disappears with a popping yawn, here is a final thought. |
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A celebrity said to have a stomachache or fever probably in fact has a stomachache or a fever. |
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Mothers-to-be covet it like a Birkin bag, and celebrity moms are known to splurge on it. |
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Would Stiles be able to handle the same A-list celebrity he now has? |
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There was a whole bunch of uncredited celebrity cameos in that one. |
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He was with 10 friends who were all eyeing a succession of naked lovelies when one girl approached the celebrity and suggested they drink some shots together. |
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