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Kreayshawn Said WHAT? Racist Tweets Circle The Internet

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Oakland-based rapper Kreayshawn claims she awoke to quite a surprise on Thursday morning.

On Wednesday night, Twitter exploded with racist retweets, allegedly sourced from the Gucci Gucci rapper's account.

The tweets included jaw-dropping statements, like "Sometimes I wish slavery was still goin' on," "I don't need black fans anyway. Y'all don't buy albums" and "Looks like a fucking Popeye's just opened up in my mentions. You monkeys got your taxes back already?"

Unsurprisingly, the retweets quickly poured across the Internet, and were trending within hours.

In the morning, an equally questionable apology made the rounds: "Gm guys, last nite hacked my page, i am sorry, i love FRIED CHICKEN! Forgive me."

Kreayshawn quickly denounced the retweets, claiming they were all fake. While her account is usually private, the rapper unlocked it to issue the following statement:

just woke up. I would never say some wack ass shit like that.. their fake retweets. THEIR FAKE RETWEETS.

I really hate twitter that's why I blocked my tweets. Damn near bout to give my account up to my record label and have them tweet for me.

But is the damage control too little, too late? Fellow tweeters wasted no time attacking the rapper with tweets like "Let's pour out liquor for Kreayshawn's career" and "Kreayshawn is really Rush Limbaugh in drag."

The incident is sadly only the latest Twitter misstep for Kreayshawn. In August, the young rapper expressed outrage when someone hacked her account and leaked nude photos of her -- photos that Kreayshawn claimed were taken when she was a minor. "Real nice guys! Spreading child-porno that's cute," she fumed. Sounds like Kreayshawn's Twitter swag is turning into a bad romance.

Think this spells the end for Kreayshawn? Let us know what you think in the comments section.


Lori Fradkin: Ryan Gosling Proves The Beard Study Is Bogus

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When the Daily Mail reported the latest in scientific research this morning -- the finding that women don't find beards attractive -- my immediate response was skepticism. It's not that I am a big facial-hair fan (in general, I am not), but a conclusion based on a few hundred women evaluating 19 men with and without beards just didn't seem worth that much attention. It took only a few hours before my decision to disregard this study was validated: Buzzfeed pulled together a special post in honor of International Women's Day with what turned out to be evidence. Women don't like men with beards? Oh, really?

Elisabeth Moss Finally Opens Up About Divorce From Fred Armisen

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Elisabeth Moss has remained tight-lipped on her divorce from from "Saturday Night Live" comedian Fred Armisen, which was finalized in May 2011.

But almost a year after their split, the "Mad Men" star is finally opening up about what it was like to be married to the funny man, best known for his impersonations of Barack Obama, Muammar Gaddafi, and "The View" host Joy Behar.

"One of the greatest things I heard someone say about him is, 'He's so great at doing impersonations. But the greatest impersonation he does is that of a normal person,'" the 29-year-old actress admitted to The New York Post‘s Page Six magazine recently. "To me, that sums it up."

"I've never told anyone that," Moss revealed. "And I don't want to waste any more of my life talking about it." According to Moss, the pair no longer speak.

The actress added that although she eventually wants to find "someone to grow old with," at the moment, she's happy being single and enjoying her youth. "It's fun to go out at night and not know what's going to happen," she said. "I'm addicted to and obsessed with my freedom in that sense. I'm having fun!"

The former couple married in October 2009 and split in May 2010. Less than a week after their split, Armisen was reportedly dating SNL co-star Abby Elliott . His relationship with Elliott ended in September 2011 and four months later, Armisen told The New Yorker that he tended to treat "romantic relationships in a cold way."

PHOTOS: Iconic 'Home Alone' House Sold

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The iconic suburban Chicago home that played a pivotal role in the 1990 John Hughes blockbuster "Home Alone" has sold after nearly a year on the market.

The Chicago Tribune reports that the 4,250-square-foot, three-story Winnetka, Ill., home sold for $1.585 million -- a relative bargain when compared to its original listing price of $2.4 million -- on Thursday. The house was most recently listed for $1.95 million.

The Coldwell Banker-listed house, located at 671 Lincoln, was previously owned by John and Cynthia Abendshien, who had only owned the home for a short time before the Hughes production team came into their home and transformed it into the battleground where Kevin McAllister (played, of course, by Macaulay Culkin) took on two burglars. The new owners have not been publicly identified, according to the Chicago Sun-Times.

The red-brick, Georgian-style home was built in the 1920s and features "four en suite bedrooms, including the 'attic bedroom – a dormered and finished retreat with numerous nooks and crannies – and two grand suites," according to Coldwell Banker. It also includes a four-room master suite, which spans the entire west wing of the home.

Another high-profile Chicago-area property came off the market this week after talk show host Rosie O'Donnell found a buyer for her 6,000-square-foot Lakeview house, which she bought for $2.25 million last fall, one day after the property was listed at $2.5 million.

Take a look inside here, and watch a video interview with the former homeowners. All photos courtesy of Coldwell Banker.

Lisa Steinberg: Reality TV Wars

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There is a reality TV war that is going on and our televisions have been besieged -- the new onslaught of reality TV programs revolving around storage lockers, parking places and tickets, cargo boxes, shipping items, and more! You're either a junkie for these programs or you find them the lowest on the food chain. For me, I can't get enough of these addicting shows that pit competitor against competitor, citizen against government employee or time or acts of nature against driver.

What starts with one show quickly doubles because these shows are packed with adrenaline and quirky characters. What makes programs like Storage Wars or Storage Wars: Texas so addicting is the fact that these are Average Joe's who find miraculous treasures in what may seem like rubble. In some instances these individuals can pay a couple of hundred dollars for a locker full of what looks like garbage or junk, and dig out thousands of dollars worth of treasures doubling, tripling, or even quadrupling their investments. Programs like Parking Wars capture viewers attention with the hairy situations that arise from citizens doing battle with government employees over parking ticket violations. While the employees work on car booting there is a race to get the boot on the car before an angry citizen comes to move the car or throw a fit! Shipping Wars pits drivers in a heated race against time in order to get their items delivered on time and intact! These skilled road warriors face challenges that pop up left and right that may be blind-sided by wind, rain, other vehicles, or even police officers! While these drivers may be in a hurry, they still have to abide by the rules of the road!

Why do we spend hours upon end mindlessly watching these programs? The reality voyeurism that allows us to be a fly on the wall, or sometimes car dashboard, that gives viewers the feeling they are in the heat of the battle. What's also great about these shows is the unknown. You never know what is going be unearthed in a storage container, or hearing the back story of the newly found item that may very well lead to a big bounty, or even who will flip out after having to wait in line to pay the fines on their vehicle, or if something will get damaged on the drive to its destination. It's also exciting when something does break or the car breaks down because viewers get to see drivers work on the fly in order to try and keep their product in-tact and their time on track. With no real tools in their possession, drivers have to think on their feet and keep costs down in order to make a decent profit. Even when bidders go toe to toe with others, you never know if a slugfest will break out and fists will fly over a purchase. Bidding wars and tempers flaring can make it a true fight to the finish! Relationships and friendships become tested when it becomes a war of words or dollars.

The almighty dollar can torture many the soul whether it's paying up for a hefty parking ticket, having to pay for a locker you got suckered into or shucking out for gas when your tank goes empty suddenly. When it comes to war, are there really any rules of etiquette? The famous quote, "All is fair in love and war" truly says everything.

PHOTOS: The Rock Nabs Miami Dolphin's $3.4 Million Mansion

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You may not be able to smell what Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson is cooking, but you can see the gleaming backyard grill where it's about to go down.

After unloading multiple South Florida properties last year, the movie star and WWE legend just bought a massive 13,353-square foot mansion just north of Miami from another former University of Miami football player, Miami Dolphins tackle Vernon Carey.

[VIEW A SLIDESHOW OF THE HOME BELOW.]

Though the two didn't overlap on the UM practice field, clearly some guys don't just bleed orange and green but buy it, too. South Florida Business Journal reports The Rock paid $3.4 million for Carey's grandiose gated estate, which features six bedrooms, six and a half baths, a pool, 14-seat home theatre, and a lush, sprawling footprint in the midst of Southwest Ranches' much sought-after Landmark Ranch Estates.

(Perhaps The Rock can organize block parties with the Dolphins' Karlos Dansby, who lives across the street, and new neighbor Udonis Haslem of the Miami Heat.)

Not only did the Johnson and Carey keep it in the U family, but the sale was made by Campins Company agent Octavia McDougle, who is married to former Dolphins tackle Stockar McDougle and the sister-in-law of former UM defensive end Jerome McDougle.

"Campins Company congratulates one of our own, Octavia McDougle, on keeping it all in the family with this recent sale," said celebrity and sports real estate mogul Katrina Campins. "There is strength in unity, and The 'U' continues to prevail and stick together...champion blood pumping, with swag. Once again, it all starts at home. We grow and we give. We learn and we teach. As the legacy continues, forever, for always and no matter what."

Check out photos of The Rock's splashy new South Florida digs, with images courtesy The Campins Company.

Will Kris Humphries Represent Himself In Divorce Court?

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Will Kris Humphries act as his own lawyer when he goes head to head with ex Kim Kardashian in divorce court?

An initial report from TMZ early Friday morning alleged that Humphries had filed the necessary legal documents to represent himself in the divorce case.

The reason? Humphries had originally wanted his Minnesota business attorney Lee Hutton to represent him, but in order to proceed with the case, Hutton needed assistance from local counsel -- a requirement for out-of-state lawyers mandated by California law. When the L.A. lawyer hired to sponsor Hutton backed out of the case, Humphries decided to go at it alone, according to TMZ.

But according to unnamed sources reportedly close to Humphries, it's simply not true. A source later told TMZ that the basketball player had no intention of representing himself and that his Minnesota attorney would be looking for another sponsor. Rumor Fix also reported that Humphries would not represent himself, and an unnamed source told the site that Humphries is “taking this [divorce] very seriously."

It seems that Karadashian is, too. The reality star -- who filed to divorce Humphries in October 2011, just 72 days after her estimated $10 million wedding -- retained celebrity divorce lawyer Laura Wasser, who in the past has represented Angelina Jolie, Britney Spears, and Kiefer Sutherland, among others, in their divorce cases.

Below, five other celebrity divorce lawyers who could give Wasser a run for her money in court:

Lisa Belkin: Friends With Kids -- In Real Life

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I watched the new film "Friends With Kids" hoping for an UNhappy ending. Or what Hollywood generally thinks of as unhappy. Specifically, I hoped the boy wouldn't end up with the girl, but rather they would end up with other people. Alone would be fine with me, too. And I hoped that this non-happy ending would send viewers out of the theater smiling, because it really wouldn't be unhappy at all.

Let me back up for a moment. "Friends With Kids," which you can find in theaters starting this weekend, is crammed full of actors you have loved in other things (many of them, including Kristen Wiig, Maya Rudolph, Jon Hamm and Chris O'Dowd, were together in "Bridesmaids.") Its director, actor and star is Jennifer Westfeldt, who has been half of a couple with Hamm for 15 years. The two have no children, but watching the ways that kids changed their friends' lives led to this exploration of how relationships bend, and sometimes break, when lovers become parents. The solution, the two best friends in Westfeldt's film decide, is to have a child and raise him platonically.

When I first saw the trailer, I thought, "Why not?" After all, it's not as though the "normal" way to do this -- mom and dad fall in love, get married, have 2.2 children, and live happily ever after -- is actually the norm. If you are a mother under the age of 30 giving birth this year, you are more likely to be unmarried than married. Just over two-thirds (67 percent) of American children younger than 18 lived with two married parents according to the latest Census, which means that one-third of children do not. Add in same-sex parents, along with all varieties of biological links (surrogacy, gamete donorship) that have become possible between parents and children, then take into account the fact that our mobile, scattered way of life means we turn our friends into relatives. The result is a concept of family that has been de- and reconstructed in recent decades.

And a small but envelope-stretching subset of this transformation is of the type shown in the film -- friends who are literally becoming family. I'm betting you have flirted with your own idea of a platonic partnership at some point in your life. I certainly have. That conversation with a pal about how you will marry each other if you are both single at 40? That joking with mom friends about how a group of "sister wives" is actually appealing -- wouldn't it be practical to be a group of women raising a group of children? The vague plan to gather a knot of friends together in old age to live in commune-like retirement?

There are real people doing all these things. You can find them by the handfuls at websites like modamily.com, where singles advertise themselves as looking to find a platonic partner with whom to raise a child. And they periodically pop up in profiles like the one in The New York Times last Father's Day about Carol Einhorn, her old friend George Russell, and his partner, David Nimmons, who are all cobbling a way to parent Griffin, the 3-year-old conceived through invitro fertilization using Mr. Russell as the sperm donor.

"More people seem to be deciding that the contours of the traditional nuclear family do not work for them," reporter N.R. Kleinfeld wrote, "spawning a profusion of cobbled-together networks in need of nomenclature. Unrelated parents living together, sharing chores and child-rearing. Friends who occupy separate homes but rely on each other for holidays, health care proxies, financial support."

The response from readers was harsh -- less because of what readers thought of the arrangement in theory, but because they really seemed to dislike the three "parents" as portrayed in the story. But peppered amid the comments saying "I find this whole mess confusing and grotesque..." and "poor child" were stories from others who are rejiggering the family jigsaw.

"I have a rare and very workable living arrangement," wrote one. "My husband and I share a duplex with a connecting door. For the most part, we do our own housework, shopping, laundry, and cooking. I think we spend about as much time together as most couples, maybe more, since we both work at home. We are childless seniors, so this is fairly easy. I did know one couple who managed a similar situation with kids, though."



Hollywood flirts with the idea of nontraditional parents, but in the end they just can't help themselves and they veer toward the traditional and romantic in the third act. "Knocked Up" starts with two strangers with nothing in common, but by the end they have fallen in love. In "Life As We Know It," two relative strangers who loathe each other accept custody of a baby whose parents have died and, you guessed it, fall in love. Isn't it time for another depiction of Happily Ever After?

I won't ruin the ending by telling you whether "Friends With Kids" is that new version. But I will ask why the ongoing disconnect between how we really live -- messily, imperfectly, improvisationally -- and how we think "real" families live. Why has it taken so long, in art and in life, to warm to the reality that a variety of villages can happily raise a child?

PHOTOS: Scenes From 'Friends With Kids'


Flashback: Matt Damon At His First Oscars

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Before Matt Damon and Ben Affleck won the Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay for "Good Will Hunting," Damon was just an Oscar hopeful, shocked by the sheer idea of a nomination. But the duo were much more than just a professional success, they've stuck by each other as best friends since the beginning.

Before his big win, Damon was baffled by the tremendous honor of being nominated for the prestigious award and admitted that his mom had no competition when it came to choosing her as his date at the 1998 Academy Awards.

Watch the now iconic actor, just before his huge win, in the video above.

'Celebrity Apprentice' Contestant Aubrey O'Day On Strategies, Bullying

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Aubrey O'Day may be sporting red hair these days, but she can't seem to shake the "dumb blonde" stereotype. The former Danity Kane singer and "All About Aubrey" star is kicking some serious butt on Donald Trump's "Celebrity Apprentice" this season, but not everyone is expecting her to go very far in the competition.

"I literally have been underestimated my entire career," she told The Huffington Post. "I think ‘Celebrity Apprentice' has roles they want to fit people in and I was the sexy Playboy bunny role. A lot of people were surprised that I would be more than that and they had to restructure what to do with the show because of that."

To crush the bombshell stereotype right from the start, O'Day asked the "Apprentice" producers to not make her 2009 Playboy spread her calling card on the reality competition.

"I didn't want Playboy to be my biggest achievement in life," she said. "I asked them to use my two platinum albums … I don't regret doing Playboy. I loved doing Playboy as much as I loved [doing] Broadway. I just don't want it to be all anyone talks about."

So what's her strategy for success on the cutthroat reality show? Fellow "Apprentice" contestant Penn Jillette, the comedian who is one half of Penn & Teller, recently tweeted that O'Day is simply good at having successful reality TV runs.

O'Day called Jillette's allegation absurd.

"I never really have a strategy," she said. " I'm not really good at reality TV. I am just doing me and not worrying about anyone else. When you have a strategy on reality TV you fall on your ass."

Sometimes strategies work on "Celebrity Apprentice," and sometimes they don't, but it's the nasty boardroom battles that can make or break someone in the competition -- and that lead to some great TV.

"I saw cliques getting started and cliques making up rumors about and saying things that weren't true and joining to conspire against me," O'Day said. "I never entertained it because I figured it doesn't matter what these people think about me. None of these people know me and we will see what happens in the circle. At the end of the day, I am the most efficient business person there."

The rumors, the cliques and the bullying reminded O'Day of what she went through in junior high and high school, where she says she had a rough time trying to fit in.

"I had to switch schools two or three times," she said. "I got beat up. I had to run from the cool people. I still don't feel cool."

Those tough teenage years are what inspired O'Day to compete on "Celebrity Apprentice" to benefit the anti-bullying organization GLSEN (Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network).

"I still don't feel like [one of] the "It girls" who run around and do nothing and get paid obscene amounts of money. I still feel like an outsider," O'Day said. "But that doesn't mean I can't beat those other guys in the boardroom."

WATCH: Jon Hamm Used To Get Around LA On Rollerblades

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It's hard to believe it now, but before Jon Hamm was a "Mad" success, he was just another hot mess.

In a Thursday interview on "Conan," the actor revealed that when he came to Los Angeles in 1995, he was driving a beat up, 1986 Toyota Corolla.

The first three years of his life in Los Angeles didn't net him any acting jobs, and eventually he had collected so many parking tickets that they were worth more than his car. "Parking tickets -- they're so colorful!" the actor said. "Unfortunately, they also come with fines," said Hamm, which is why the City of Los Angeles ended up taking the car away.

Even though he had no money and no car, he still continued to audition for commercial roles and bit parts by getting around LA on the city's extensive bus system. Also, rollerblades.

"I don't know if you know this, but the City of Los Angeles has a wonderful public transportation system," Hamm said with a cheesy smile. "I rode the bus, and then when I would get near to where I needed to go, I would roller blade."

Hamm continued to poke fun at his past, admitting, "there is not a worse look in the world than a dude skating down Highland Avenue to an audition to try and sell soap.... Rolling in sweaty and stinky, skates on. 'I'm here!' "

Eventually, a friend took pity on Hamm and gave him their old 1981 Volkswagen Rabbit. "I was regressing," Hamm said glumly.

Nowadays, Hamm couldn't be further from where he started. He's played the lead role of AMC's immensely successful "Mad Men" series since 2007, won a Golden Globe for the role and been featured in hit films like "The Town" and "Bridesmaids." He also does the voiceover for Mercedez-Benz commercials, which probably means there are no more Volkswagen Rabbits in his life.

Kathy Bates: I'm Not Retiring & Harry's Law Isn't Canceled

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Kathy Bates stopped by "Live! With Kelly" (weekdays on ABC) to address a few rumors she's been reading about herself on the Internet lately. First, she clarified recent reports that she was considering retiring. Then, she reassured fans of her legal drama "Harry's Law" that despite the show's 6-week hiatus, it has not been canceled by NBC.

Addressing the retirement rumors that cropped up after she told Star Magazine that she'd like to focus on writing, painting and traveling whenever "Harry's Law" wraps up its run, Bates insisted that her interview had been taken out of context. "When I read that on the Internet, I went, 'Oh my god!' I think it was one of those questions, 'What would you do if?' ... but when they wrote about it they made it sound like I was doing it tomorrow. So no, no, I've gotta make a living," she said.

The conversation then turned to the status of "Harry's Law," which appears to be on the bubble after NBC left the show off its midseason schedule until March. But Bates insisted all was well. "We've been on hiatus for about the last 6 weeks, everybody thinks we're canceled. We're not canceled, I'm just telling everybody that right now ... And, just to say to all of those naysayers on the internet, we're the highest [rated] scripted show on NBC!"

Some might say that last statement is damning with faint praise, but it's a good reminder that "Harry's Law" still has a sizable, loyal audience.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Band Rages Against Limbaugh

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Tom Morello, guitarist of Rage Against The Machine, some rather harsh words for Rush Limbaugh on Thursday.

Morello told Rolling Stone magazine that he heard his band's song "Sleep Now in the Fire" on Limbaugh's radio program earlier that day. "Our response," he told the Rolling Stone, "Hey Jackass, stop using our music on your racist, misogynist, right wing clown show." He later tweeted the sentiment.

Morello is not the first musician to publicly speak out against Limbaugh for using music on air since he sparked outrage by making a series of incendiary statements about Georgetown University law student, Sandra Fluke. Last week, Peter Gabriel also moved to remove his work from Limbaugh's program, after he learned that his song "Sledgehammer" was played as Limbaugh launched his attack on Fluke by calling her a "slut" and "prostitute."

Limbaugh, whose attack on Fluke ran the course of three days, has since apologized to Fluke. Despite his apology, nearly 50 advertisers have pulled their content from his program, and two radio stations have dropped his show. Limbaugh has taken considerable time this week to defend himself and assure his audience that his show is doing well.

(H/T Rolling Stone).

EXCLUSIVE: Watch Julia Roberts Get Sassy In New 'Mirror Mirror' Clip

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How manipulative is Julia Roberts' Evil Queen in "Mirror Mirror"? If this new clip from the upcoming film is any indication, very manipulative!

In "Mirror Mirror," Roberts plays a mean enchantress attempting to defeat Snow White (Lily Collins) and take control of her realm. In the meantime, she tries to woo the charming Prince Andrew Alcott (Armie Hammer). However, things get complicated when the Queen discovers the Prince is attracted to her enemy.

As you can see in the video above, this bit of information does not sit well with Roberts. (Also, something else you can learn from this clip: Eating dinner with the Evil Queen is not a pleasant experience.)

You can see more of Roberts' sass when the Snow White adaptation "Mirror Mirror," starring Collins, Hammer and Nathan Lane, hits theaters on March 30.

Rachel Bilson Rocks Short Shorts

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Rachel Bilson keeps it cute in a pair of short shorts as she steps out on Thursday night (March 8) in Hollywood.


WATCH: Remembering Biggie 15 Years Later

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March 9, 1997 marked a tragic day in the world of hip hop with the passing of Christopher "The Notorious B.I.G." Wallace. Gunned down at the age of 24 in a Los Angeles drive-by shooting, Biggie (as he is also known as) not only influenced his fellow rap peers with his clever word play and delivery, he also managed to showcase his unique style through various music videos.

To commemorate the 15th anniversary of the Brooklyn MC’s death we take a retrospective look at 10 of our favorite B.I.G. videos.

We may have omitted a few, but let us know your favorites in the comments section.

WATCH:



We've also rounded up tweets from around the world remembering B.I.G.

Courtney Stodden Launches Website, Spells Own Name Wrong

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Oops! Teen bride Courtney Stodden launched a personal website Thursday, consisting mostly of half-naked provocative photos of herself. Unfortunately, Stodden spelled her own name wrong in the title bar, leaving out the second "d" in her last name.

The misspelling has since been corrected, but BuzzFeed has a screenshot of it here.

Watch the video above!

Coolio's Son Arrested For Bizarre Robbery

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Coolio's oldest son -- who appeared on the family reality show "Coolio's Rules" --is locked up in a Nevada jail ... after allegedly teaming up with a Vegas hooker to rob some dude at gunpoint.

Your Turn: Parades

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We live on the park in New York, where there seems to be a parade at least a few times a month, for every nationality that there is. Have you ever marched in a parade? Tell me about it in the comment section below!



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Ben Harvey: LISTEN: Melissa Rauch Of 'The Big Bang Theory' Reveals Her Nerdy Google Problem To 'The Six Pack'

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2011-12-16-Screenshot20111214at10.25.00PM.pngThe Six Pack is a new-school, cutting-edge radio show hosted by DJ Ben Harvey and comedian Dave Rubin. Distributed online and on SiriusXM, the show gives you a weekly dose of hot topics, celebrity guests, and brand new music, all packaged in six convenient parts. Ben and Dave take you on a journey through what's trending now, from news to views to dudes. Previous guests include Joy Behar, Andy Cohen, Fran Drescher, Steve-O, Congressman Barney Frank and many more.

Currently in its third year, The Six Pack is one of the top comedy podcasts on iTunes, with listenership in over 70 countries. Huffington Post Gay Voices will regularly feature episodes of The Six Pack.

Episode #90: "Show Me That Smile Again"

LISTEN:


2012-03-10-MelissaRauch.jpgWe're bringing The Six Pack to you this week live from Hollywood! Hear all about our red carpet shenanigans and behind-the-scenes magic from our coverage of 8, the play, for SiriusXM. (You can see plenty of pics with the gay and gay-friendly celebs here!) Plus, listen in as we sit down with Big Bang Theory star Melissa Rauch, who gives us her own insight into what it's like to travel down the red carpet while starring in the number-one show in America.

Melissa plays Bernadette, a nerdy-sexy librarian type, and given that this is the number-one show in America, many people now search her name on Google. She pokes fun at her newfound sex appeal amongst the geek and nerd crowd: "Maybe there is something attainable about Bernadette... I think that's what it is. The nerds are like, 'All right, well, I can get that. I might as well look up her bra size; I could get something like that.'"

She also shared what it's like working with famed sitcom star Mayim Bialik, best known as Blossom. "It took me a month to stop calling her Blossom, and I have to say, whenever we do photo shoots together, I slowly go back-to-back with her to try and get a Blossom and Six shot, and she's luckily a good sport about it."

Also don't miss our special advice for Kirk Cameron (at the 15:00 mark). All this and more in this week's episode of The Six Pack!

Catch The Six Pack Saturdays on SiriusXM OutQ channel 108 from 1 to 3 p.m. EST and as a weekly podcast on iTunes, sixpackradio.com, and now... Huffington Post Gay Voices! Listen to the entire podcast episode here.

Follow The Six Pack on Twitter: www.twitter.com/sixpackradio

Follow Dave Rubin on Twitter: www.twitter.com/rubinreport

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