Showing posts with label Entertainment News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Entertainment News. Show all posts

Friday, September 6, 2013

Alyssa Milano Sex Tape

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Actress Alyssa Milano has created a pretend 'sex tape' that serves to propagandize for associate attack on Syria.

The PR stunt, designed to "inform" folks regarding the situation in Syria, just regurgitates the official narrative regarding Assad being behind last month's chemical weapons attack that violated Barack Obama's "red line".

It makes no mention of the opposite facet of the controversy, together with the UN's acknowledgment that the FSA rebels used chemical weapons back in March or last week's report by Associated Press correspndent valley Gavlak that contained interviews with rebels who admitted being responsible for the chemical weapons incident in Ghouta.




Alyssa Milano released a sex tape that has been leaked on the web. The "tape" but, is just a playing that Milano created as a joke.

Milano's sex tape isn't a romantic affair recorded in boldness and zest, as several celebrity tapes tend to be. Instead, Milano's tape is of classier intentions.

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Alyssa Milano Sex Tape
Alyssa Milano Sex Tape
"Cabo, 2013!" Milano and her wooer Nick Corirossi shout within the tape. Coirossi, WHO was additionally a author, director and editor of the playing, compliments Milano, 40, before the 2 interact during a shameful affair.

In Funny or Die vogue, the camera is flipped over right before Milano and her partner begin doing what such a lot of celebrities and non-celebrities have regretfully recorded themselves doing.

ust like several sex tapes in today's day, the footage created its thanks to the planet wide internet, on the Funny Or Die official data processor, to be precise. Considering, however, that Funny Or Die is attributable as government producer of the footage, revenge on Associate in Nursing ex-lover is maybe not the motive. (Money and subject matter, on the hand, should be an element.)

The sexual adventures stay unseen to viewers WHO instead watch a rather dreary news concerning this scenario in Asian country browse by actor Steve Tom for the bulk of the video.

The two-minute-long video options Charles Ingram as author, director and editor, Brian Lane as displaced person, Ally Hord as producer and BoTown Sound to blame of sound effects.


Alyssa Milano sets the scene: Vacation in Cabo. Hunky guy in bed. Rose petals strewn concerning. Candles lit.

And she has got on some horny underthings. Woo. Things have gotten muggy.

And then, in her Funny or Die video (hint, hint), even as the thespian props the camera up, she knocks it over, going it centered squarely on the evening news.

While a mirror shows snippets of blankets and that we hear some groans from the bed, ultimately we tend to land up observance data concerning the Asian country scenario.

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

AEG expert: Michael Jackson was a drug addict

By Alan Duke, on CNN
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • NEW: Expert saw no evidence Jackson ever sought or used illegal drugs
  • NEW: No evidence Jackson used more painkillers than doctors prescribed, expert testifies
  • Jackson's mom and children contend AEG Live is liable in the singer's death
  • AEG Live argues it could not have known about Jackson's propofol use
Los Angeles (CNN) -- A drug addiction expert who testified that Michael Jackson suffered a "quite extensive" drug addiction acknowledged there was no evidence the singer used more painkillers than medically necessary.
Dr. Petros Levounis testified Tuesday and Wednesday for AEG Live in its defense of the wrongful death lawsuit filed by Jackson's mother and children.
Lawyers for the concert promoter want to convince jurors that the singer was a secretive addict responsible for his own death from an overdose of the surgical anesthetic propofol. Their executives had no way of knowing the singer was in danger when he was preparing for his comeback concerts in 2009, they contend.
Jackson lawyers contend AEG Live executives are liable because they negligently hired, retained or supervised the doctor who used propofol to treat Jackson's insomnia as he prepared for his comeback concerts during the last two months of his life.
The conclusion that Jackson was dependent on painkillers was not a revelation, considering Jackson himself announced it when he cut his "Dangerous" tour short to enter a rehab program in 1993.
"If he announced it to the world it's not very private, is it?" Jackson lawyer Michael Koskoff asked Levounis.
"At that moment, he was not secretive," Levounis replied.
Jackson's drugs of choice were opioids, painkillers given to him by doctors repairing scalp injuries suffered in a fire and during cosmetic procedures to make him look younger, Levounis testified.
Labeling Jackson an addict could tarnish the singer's image among jurors, but its relevance to AEG Live's liability is questionable. Opioids played no role in Jackson's death, according to the Los Angeles County coroner. His June 25, 2009, death was ruled a result of an overdose of propofol.
Dr. Conrad Murray told investigators he infused the singer with propofol for 60 consecutive nights to treat his insomnia so he could rest for rehearsals. The judge would not allow Levounis to testify if he thought Jackson was addicted to propofol.
Levounis said addiction happens when a chemical "hijacks the pleasure-reward pathways" in your brain. "You remain addicted for the rest of your life," Levounis testified.
"Michael Jackson's addiction was quite extensive and I have very little doubt that his pleasure-reward pathways had been hijacked and he suffered from addiction," he said.
Levounis conceded he saw no evidence that Jackson used painkillers after he left rehab in 1993 until 2001 or between July 2003 and late 2008.
He said it is not inconsistent for an addiction to go into remission.
Under cross examination Wednesday morning, Levounis conceded that he never saw evidence that Jackson injected himself with narcotics, ever sought or used illegal drugs such as cocaine, meth or heroin, or abused drugs to produce euphoria or get high.
There was also no evidence Jackson used more painkillers than doctors prescribed, he said.
Jackson lawyers have never disputed the singer's drug dependence. In fact, they contend that AEG Live executives, including one who was Jackson's tour manager when he entered rehab, were negligent for paying a doctor $150,000 a month just to treat Jackson. The high salary created a conflict for the debt-ridden Murray, making it difficult for him to say no to Jackson's demands for drugs.
Paul Gongaware, the AEG Live co-CEO who was in charge of Jackson's 2009 "This Is It" tour, was also tour manager for his "Dangerous" tour in 1993. Levounis acknowledged in testimony Wednesday that there was evidence that Gongaware knew about Jackson's painkiller addiction 15 years before his death.
Levounis' testimony about the dangers of a doctor being too friendly with an addicted patient, which he said Murray was, could help the Jacksons' case.
"A very close friendship between an addicted patient and a doctor is problematic," Levounis testified. "It makes it much easier for a patient to ask for drugs and it makes it more difficult for a provider to resist."
The medical records of Murray's treatment of Jackson between 2006 and 2008 -- when the singer lived in Las Vegas -- showed no painkillers prescribed during seven visits. Murray's notes did show he treated Jackson's complaints of insomnia with a sedative in 2008.
Wednesday was the 76th day of testimony in the trial, which is expected to conclude near the end of September.