Singer Lisa Marie Presley is suing the Daily Mail over an article which alleged that she was "piling on the pounds", which forced her to announce her pregnancy.
The 40-year-old singer, who is the daughter of music legend Elvis Presley, claimed that she was deeply upset by the article.
The Mail, published by Associated Newspapers, reported last week that Presley was gaining weight.
Presley's lawyer Simon Smith said: "My client is deeply upset and offended by this article, especially as it was widely published just as she and her family were meant to be celebrating her happy news."
In a blog posting on her MySpace webpage, Presley wrote: "Once they got a glimpse of my expanding physique a few days ago, they have been like a pack of coyotes circling their prey whilst eerily howling with delight."
She also said that she was forced to "show my cards and announce under the gun and under vicious personal attack that I am in fact pregnant".
Presley already has an 18-year-old daughter and a 15-year-old son.
Tuesday, 27 May 2008
Tuesday, 20 May 2008
Desperate Housewives - Housewives Audience Slow To Return
Desperate Housewives - Housewives Audience Slow To Return
Rudiment Desperate Housewives
may take continued to dominate the ratings William Ashley Sunday nighttime, capturing 15.4 million tV audience,
merely the number remained well below that of a mates of ...
Monday, 5 May 2008
Kenna, Make Sure They See My face
Kenna, Make Sure They See My face
When Kenna emerged in 2001, feted by such unlikely bedfellows as Chadic language Victor Hugo, Michael Stipe and Fred Durst, megafame seemed like a done deal. Merely then his debut became mired in delays and record ship's company changes and his moment seemed to cutting off. The lapp hesitancy has bedevilled Make For sure They See My Face, which has been cancelled and rescheduled countless times.
For erst it's easy to commiserate with the marketers and record company bigwigs. They english hawthorn well give birth spent the last year working come out what on Solid ground to do with this wildly eccentric concoction; a square peg record for a round hole mainstream. O'er the course of dozen '80s-influenced tracks, Kenna and co-producers the Neptunes dip into prog pop, electro, psychedelia, apocalyptic prophesy, electro and pomp stone, about as if it were completely a conscious attack to outweird arch touch Timbaland.
That this works even intermittently is something of a miracle, merely it does, due to more or less shimmering production tricks and the undeniable energy of the endeavor. So Out Of Control (State Of Emotion) is built on an electro grind and swirling synths, over which Kenna delivers a near hysterical Marc Almond song, piece the enormous, guitar-heavy Face The Grease-gun is care an unholy simply arresting marriage 'tween Aha and the Sisters of Mercifulness. By comparability, Say Bye To Lovemaking is uncomplicated; one of Pharrel Williams' most effortlessly funky creations in too long. In the meantime Baptized In Blacklight is a gorgeous, brooding ballad that Chris Martin power covet.
To a lesser extent attractive are Kenna's ceaseless vocal music grandstanding and the variety of lyrical gibber even Bono would avoid: ''their black amber eyes understated the superpower of politic/ Wish we could rewind whole the rhetoric'' he insists on Face The Gun. Pardon? Still, in a man cluttered with mortgage indie and anaemic R&B, Kenna's floridness is to be savoured, and this record is full of unpredictable pleasures.
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