Miley Cyrus Says, "Wake Up America"
Miley's recently released album, "Breakout," breaks the sugar mold with the synthesized call to environmental action, "Wake up America." The song is an eco-anthem ode to mother earth.
Miley's recently released album, "Breakout," breaks the sugar mold with the synthesized call to environmental action, "Wake up America." The song is an eco-anthem ode to mother earth.
Whether influential, intriguing or simply offensive, these celebrities, politicians and pop culture icons have caught my eye for helping the planet, saving money on gas and looking sweet atop the seat.
I know how Miley feels. I too was a little embarrassed by my recent topless "scandal" and the subsequent parodies, but I am an adult woman.
Every time I read something about the latest Lolita scandal in Hollywood I wonder: "What the heck are they thinking?" No, not the Vanessa Hudgenses and Miley Cyruses of this world -- I mean the adults who run their lives.
As a natural nudist, who comes from a family of natural nudists, the Miley Cyrus flap astounds me. What is this nonsense? Well, it's an occasion for another apology.
I'm always fascinated when "Parade" magazine publishes its annual "what people earn" report, and this week's issue was very interesting. Business mag...
There's no way Miley's parents didn't know that Vanity Fair had taken semi-nude photos of their 15-year-old!
This is a major wake-up call to American parents. I have to ask, where are Miley's parents in all this? Have they not seen what happened to Britney Spears?
Yesterday I got into a discussion with a good friend who said he believes Miley's parents are in on the "artistic prostituting" of their daughter. That conversation got me thinking back to the 1980's.
The naked woman was on her back, cupping a breast in each hand, with her legs crossed and bent at the knees. Next to her was an iced bucket of twinkling long neck beers grazing her thigh.
Cyrusgate could just be a massive publicity stunt. There's nothing like a controversy to drive sales. But, I don't think anyone in marketing at Vanity Fair is that smart. So what is this really about?
If they're famous, shouldn't I have heard of them? Maybe not be thoroughly familiar with their work, but as a fellow member of the "show biz community" shouldn't I have at least in passing, caught mention of their names?
We're so afraid of having to go into the "naughtiness" of sexual detail that we're missing the simplicity of what our daughters need most: our blessing of their sexuality as normal and healthy.
What the news media is selling is dangerous: Wright, Obama and Clinton, Iraq and health insurance and Hannah Montana all get stirred into the same idiotic, phony pot.
Q: Will Zoey, the character Jamie Lynn plays on TV, get pregnant, too? A: No. Nickelodeon is owned by an angry old man named Sumner Redstone who doesn't let people get pregnant.
So You Think You Can Dance is the underdog but odds-on-favorite in the race to be America's Next Top Reality Show. But though I have been glued to the box since it's first season, I have seen no previous winners of the show anywhere after.
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this nick jones fella is riding high
They're kids -let 'em be.
They're just kids, whats the big deal..I might have done the same thing if Youtube was around when I was young..does any of this really matter?
Like the Cyrus photos by Annie Leibovitz and the mock "outrage", this is all about publicity for all parties involved.
This video is months old and Ms. Gomez took it in stride.
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