Monday, November 26, 2007

Whatever happened to none of your business?

It works for all those people clamoring to know what exactly caused the death of Kanye West's mom, Donda. It works for everyone demanding to know the sexual orientation of this singer or that one. And it works for everyone who wanted to push Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera to announce their pregnancies before they were ready.

No matter how much the tabloid press and the celebrity gossip shows want, things haven't changed that much. Journalists have the right to ask anything they want. Celebrities have the right not to answer.
The idea that celebrities (and, especially, their families) forfeit the right to any privacy the moment they first seek out publicity is ridiculous. Even crazier, though, is the notion that there is no such thing as bad publicity. Actually, there is.

Amy Winehouse, for example, has become a tabloid star, even though most people haven't heard any of her music - aside from the snippets from "Rehab" that play whenever her stints in rehab are discussed. Never mind that her "Back to Black" album is one of the year's best or that she is one of pop music's brightest new talents, the Winehouse story became one of boozy failure even before she received the success due her.

What happened to Lopez's album "Brave," however, was even stranger.

Released last month, "Brave" debuted at No. 12, with 53,000 copies sold, making it the first of Lopez's seven albums not to reach the Top 10. Even her Spanish-language album, "Como Ama Una Mujer" from earlier this year, fared better. ("Brave" has already fallen to No. 80 after only a month on the charts.)

Though it's hard to pinpoint exactly what went wrong, it wasn't from a lack of publicity. Lopez was seemingly everywhere the week her album came out, with a high-profile appearance at Madison Square Garden and a Times Square concert for "Good Morning America."

The problem is that very few people were talking about the catchy single "Do It Well" and the stylish video that came with it. Nearly all people were concerned about was whether or not Lopez was pregnant and why she refused to confirm it.

The result was that almost everyone knew that she was pregnant, which she has since confirmed, but relatively few knew that she had a new album out. Some have even ventured to say that Lopez angered her fans by not sharing the pregnancy news with them immediately and that they responded by not buying her album - which sounds a bit far-fetched.

"It would have been different if she had an album with songs about wanting to be pregnant," says one industry insider. "In her case, like a lot of megastars, the music almost doesn't matter. It almost has more to do with what people think about her and her persona at any given time."

That puts Lopez and other stars like her in a lose-lose situation. Aside from the fact that the decision on when to announce a pregnancy is a personal one for all women, especially those who are a little older, Lopez was stuck no matter what she did - accused of using her pregnancy to drum up publicity for her new album if she announced it and, as it turned out, accused of trying to hide something from her fans if she didn't.

Given the lukewarm response to the album's second single "Hold It, Don't Drop It," it seems likely that her record company, Epic Records, will simply move on and stop trying to promote it further, even though it's actually her strongest album in years.

Count "Brave" as another artistic casualty in the crazed pursuit of celebrity news - a list sure to grow until "None of your business" becomes a mantra and fans get weaned from the idea that they have the right to know whatever they want whenever they want to know it.

news source : http://www.newsday.com/news/

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Christina Aguilera, Jennifer Lopez Have Us Wondering: Whose Business Is A Baby Bump?

If a picture says a thousand words, try to imagine how many words a picture of a celeb's possible "baby bump" generates — it's enough to drive newsstand sales of a half-dozen weekly tabloid mags and drive the star crazy at the same time.

No wonder Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera kept mum, so to speak, for so long: Why bother to announce a pregnancy when their bodies (and friends like Roberto Cavalli and Paris Hilton) can do it for them? So when Lopez finally acknowledged, at a concert in Miami on Wednesday, what her fans have long suspected, and Aguilera did so in the new issue of Glamour UK, out Thursday, it raised a few questions — not the least of which was "Why now?"

"We didn't say, 'Christina, are you pregnant?' " Glamour UK editor Jo Elvin said. "The question that was posed, near the end of the interview, was, 'What's your New Year's resolution?' She ... whispered, 'That'll be about the time I enter into mommyhood.' That was her way of giving it up. We weren't expecting that quote from her."

Perhaps the singer finally felt comfortable, after all the speculation, to come clean. But usually when celebrities announce their pregnancies, they're not quite so far along that confirmation isn't really necessary anymore. Halle Berry announced hers when she was at three months. Nicole Richie announced hers when she was at the four-month mark. Gwen Stefani confirmed hers when she was also at four months. And the most public of them all, Katie Holmes wasn't even out of her first trimester when she and Tom Cruise announced they were expecting. With that level of disclosure, have we come to expect the expecting to tell us as soon as there's a bump at all?

"Is it their responsibility to tell people? I don't think so," said TMZ supervising producer Gillian Sheldon. "It's a question that people debate — if to tell, when to tell, how to tell — especially if it's a first-time pregnancy, and then people are a little more protective. Who knows what could go wrong? So you don't make grand announcements, because it's almost bad luck. But the alternative is to be holed up in your house for nine months."

"They have the right to do whatever the hell they want," said publicist Ken Sunshine, who's worked with Justin Timberlake, Leonardo DiCaprio, John Mayer and others. "If they want to share what is obviously something personal with the world, it's their business. And if they don't, that's their business too."

Especially because it might impact their business. In the new issue of Vanity Fair, Julia Roberts describes disclosing her pregnancy while shooting the upcoming film "Charlie Wilson's War." "I was like, 'Here I am, finally going to put on a bathing suit in a movie, and I'm almost four months pregnant,' " she told the magazine. "And people didn't know. I thought, 'I'm really going to be screwed here.' I wasn't showing that much. I just looked like I had a five-pound paunch, but you don't want to be in a movie in a bikini looking like that." So the day before they shot the scene, Roberts told director Mike Nichols she was pregnant, and then asked, "So, that bikini scene tomorrow. Can we not do that?"

Luckily, the filmmakers were able to work with Roberts — and her stomach cooperated with her by being the flattest it had been in three months, she said. But when pregnant stars are trying to get the role in the first place, or trying to stage a concert tour, the timing of a pregnancy announcement could affect casting and ticket sales — or so they worry.

"People would say, 'J. Lo's not going to deliver as much of a show,' because she's a dancer, she's a physical artist," Sheldon said. "But I saw her in L.A., and the girl was working it. She was terrific, pregnant or no. But putting her on the cover and saying she's pregnant, her career could be harmed."

"It could affect ticket sales," said In Touch senior news editor Ashley Dillahunty. "But I would think, if anything, it could help it. If someone's performing that you love like Jennifer Lopez, you're going to want to see her in person anyway, and if you know she's pregnant, that would be amazing, to see her glow like that."

In Touch broke the news of Lopez's pregnancy in September, before the singer kicked off her concert tour with husband Marc Anthony, but it wasn't until the first picture backed it up that "there was proof," Dillahunty said. "She's dressed all in blue onstage in concert, and her blouse flew up. We don't base everything on the picture, because not every celebrity is automatically pregnant. It could just be the shirt they're wearing or they had a big lunch. But there was lots of speculation about her being pregnant, probably more than any other celebrity, and inside sources backed it up."

And then there was Roberto Cavalli, who designed the loose-fitting outfits for Lopez's tour, and who confirmed the pregnancy to People magazine shortly afterward. "She requests something very special because she is waiting for the baby," he told the magazine. "It is so complicated because every week she is getting bigger."

"There are those like Jennifer Lopez who don't confirm the things in their lives, marriages, pregnancies, and are really private," said People special correspondent Julie Jordan. "Roberto Cavalli was comfortable enough to come to the magazine and share J. Lo's good news, and do for her what she wouldn't do for herself."

Like Escada announcing the news for Naomi Watts in February, or Paris Hilton for Christina Aguilera in September when she told her, in front of a crowd of VMA pre-partyers, "Congratulations to the most beautiful pregnant woman in the world. You're gorgeous."

"They're just well-wishing, but sometimes, the celebrity doesn't want them to," Dillahunty said. "Most of them do want to control when they announce it, because they're basically letting the whole world know, just like they want to have control over who has the first pictures of the baby. Because from the moment they announce it, there's a ton of other questions: 'How far along is it?' 'Is it a boy or girl?' 'Is it twins?' 'What's the nursery like?' And the list goes on."

What if the perceived bump isn't a baby bump at all? "It's the ultimate faux pas to ask someone, 'Omigosh, when are you due?!' and have them turn out not to be pregnant," Sheldon noted. And beyond being just plain rude, it can be damaging. Reese Witherspoon sued Star magazine last year for libel when the tab put her on the cover and said she was expecting her third child, claiming that she had been wearing empire-waist dresses and baggy clothing to hide it. "If someone's up for a movie role, and she's got to be in a bathing suit, they're going to think that they can't cast her," Sunshine pointed out.

Sometimes, the "proof" in the photos is just a bad angle or unflattering lighting, and sometimes, the rumors are just plain wrong. As Pink joked, "I've been pregnant for three years. I've had the longest pregnancy in the history of mankind."

"And what about guys, when they gain weight?" Sunshine said. "I was at a lunch with Ben Affleck, and we ate like there was no tomorrow, and no one was looking at Ben's and my 'bumps' afterwards."

Yes, men escape some of the scrutiny that comes with the baby-bump watch — which could just be normal (or embarrassing) weight gain. But the watch continues nonetheless, because "weddings, pregnancies and babies are big sellers," Jordan said. Part of the media's incentive is that pregnancy is a predictable news cycle. And the more predictable the celebs — especially those celebs dating other celebs, which lends themselves to cute monikers such as TomKat, Bennifer and Brangelina — the easier it is to follow the narrative.

"It's the world's longest-running, most engaging soap opera," Elvin said. "It's like a souped-up 'Days of Our Lives,' and this kind of gossip fills a void, in an artificial way, as we become more disconnected with each other. We don't even know our own neighbors, and the victims are the celebrities. The more famous people are, the more it's a sport for the public and media."

news source : http://www.mtv.com/news/

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Are Curvier Women Smarter?

(CBS) New research finds an apparent, direct correlation between women's body fat and intelligence. As CBS News correspondent Susan McGinnis reported on The Early Show Tuesday, the study shows women with fuller, "hourglass" figures seem to be smarter, and give birth to brighter children. The research, published this week in the journal "Evolution and Human Behavior," indicates hips don't lie. In effect, says the study of some 16,000 women, the smaller your waist and bigger your hips, the smarter you are.
And, McGinnis points out, there's a formula: Divide waist circumference by hip circumference. The lower the result, the better. For instance, notes McGinnis, Jennifer Lopez's waist measures 26 inches, her hips, 39 -- for a waist-to-hip ratio of .66. The less curvy Keira Knightley's waist is 25 inches, and her hips, 33, for a ratio of .76. The researchers say it has to do with omega-3 fatty acids, which gather around fuller hips and thighs, and are important for the growth of the brain during pregnancy. The curvier the hips, the higher the level of omega-3s. It may also explain other studies that show men prefer women with a low waist-to-hip ratio. Not only that but, according to the research, women with smaller waists and larger hips live longer!


news source : http://www.cbsnews.com/

Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Designer Says Jennifer Lopez is Pregnant


(EZ-Tracks) - Well, the word is unofficially out: Jenifer Lopez’s fashion designer has inadvertently confirmed rumors that the pop diva is pregnant. Asked what types of clothing he designs for celebrities, Roberto Cavalli told People magazine: "Well Jennifer Lopez, at this moment, she requests something very special because she is waiting for the baby."


The fashion designer, who is known for creating attention grabbing get-ups with free-flowing designs, posted his confession on the People Web site. “It is so complicated because every week she is getting bigger," he said. Lopez is currently on tour with husband Mark Anthony. Cavalli’s comments came after weeks of speculation, fueled by tabloid photos of Lopez’s ever so slightly enlarged belly. Lopez, 39, has declined comment, as has her publicist.

"The thing about Jennifer Lopez, she is a singer, she is a dancer," Cavalli said on the People site. "Most of the time when I prepare something for the tour, the performer, they want something very soft so they can dance and so they can move free." Lopez and Anthony’s En Concierto tour started in New Jersey on September 29.

source from : http://www.ez-tracks.com/news/Music_News-Article-979.html