Check out our amazing exclusive thanks to our friends at Summit: the first Remember Me TV spot, which will debut later this week! We can't wait for this movie, which comes out March 12, but we're here to help you get in on all the action at the big premiere. Don't forget to enter our contest to win a trip to the Remember Me premiere, where you will be a red carpet correspondent and interview the whole cast including Rob, Emilie, and more! Watch the new exclusive clip below for the latest taste of sexy Rob!
Yesterday we ruminated over how insidery and confusing the man-tackles-mom pro-life commercial is, and now the Washington Post dug up the ad that didn't air. The one that makes semisense. While it also shies away from saying abortion and is still completely cryptic, it does not distract with ridiculous antics, making it less WTF? and more heartwarming.
CBS has a ban on advocacy ads, so the group paying for the ad, Focus on the Family, pretty much had to make it as passive as possible to get it through. Throwing in a tackle probably made it a lot less partisan and, unfortunately, a lot more incomprehensible.
Imagine you are on your way to a fabulous resort in paradise with your significant other and a group of friends – at a group rate, no less! What could be better, right? Vince Vaughn leads an all-star cast in the laugh-out-loud comedy about eight friends whose vacation in paradise is one they’ll never forget. Their group-rate vacation comes at a price when they discover that participation in the resort's unconventional couples' therapy activities is anything but optional. Costarring Jason Bateman, Jon Favreau, Faizon Love, Kristin Davis, Kristen Bell, and Malin Akerman, Couples Retreat is a hilarious party in paradise, loaded with laughter and fun!
Tell us your best vacation mishaps and you could win! Two grand prize winners will receive a Blu-ray player and a copy Couples Retreat on Blu-ray Hi-Def. Four other lucky winners will get Couples Retreaton DVD. Leave us a comment in the comment section for your chance to win!
"Sex addicts don't pick out a single young employee to go after who has to worry about her career if she says anything. Steve's not a sex addict. The only thing he's ever been addicted to is feeding his own ego."
— Brooke Hundley, the 24-year-old former mistress of ESPN analyst Steve Phillips, took to her Facebook page to say he's not a sex addict. After making headlines for cheating on his wife with co-worker Hundley, who then began to allegedly harass his family, Phillips checked into the sex rehab clinic when Tiger Woods is reportedly seeking treatment. Phillips went on the Today Show yesterday to talk about his addiction. Back when the story broke, most of you said Phillips was more of jerk than an addict. Still agree?
To hear Steve's side of the story from yesterday's interview, read more
Here in San Francisco, we have a grocery store we call "Singles Safeway" or "DateWay." Located in the singles-populated Marina district, this store has a reputation as one of the city's best pickup spots. A friend of mine swears the cereal aisle is happening, while the feminine products area — not so much. On the weekend it can turn into yuppies gone wild, and if nothing else, you will get checked out by a bunch of guys buying beer for a football game.
A store in Beijing, China got the same idea, but just like any reasonable establishment in a capitalist communist country, they're charging for the service. For a $3 registration fee, you can shop at the love store, which asks customers for their names, ages, income, occupations, and pictures. The store says it's matched 50 couples since it opened for business last November.
Looking for love at a grocery store comes with perks: if you're a vegetarian, you can rule out someone stocking up on steaks. If you're a foodie, you can go straight for the men who appear to buy only seasonal produce. Plus, it's easy to strike up a conversation — if you're in the wine area, you can ask the prospect next to you if he has a recommendation. Have you ever met someone at the grocery store?
After years of using the pill, condoms, or whatever else to prevent pregnancy, many women in their late 30s, 40s, and 50s presume that their bodies will take over the contraceptive duties. But statistics in UK show that the infertility message has "gone too far" because women mistakenly think they cannot get pregnant and stop using contraception. The proof? Women aged 40 to 44 get abortions at the same rate as girls younger than 16.
Just as with teen pregnancy, the government is aiming an educational campaign at older women. It's called "Conceivable?" and it reminds women to use contraception until menopause. This all sounds like another reason to show the vasectomy some more love. At least women in committed relationships not looking for children should be able to pass on the contraception burden to their partners!
Does it shock you that women rely on their decreasing fertility as a birth control?