It’s not easy being John McEnroe’s son

It’s not easy being John McEnroe’s son

Surviving the nightmare of being a McEnroe: First-ever interview with tennis star’s son, whose mother was a heroin addict and grandad was a ‘monster’

  • John McEnroe’s son Kevin, 28, was arrested for attempting to buy cocaine
  • Nine months on, Kevin is clean of drugs after rehab and has written a novel
  • Writer says his arrest was the ‘best thing that could have happened’ to him

By CAROLINE GRAHAM IN NEW YORK FOR THE MAIL ON SUNDAY
PUBLISHED: 22:26, 2 May2020 | UPDATED: 01:19, 3 May2020


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Kevin McEnroe, the eldest son of John McEnroe

His father was the enfant terrible of the tennis circuit whose formidable sporting prowess transformed him into the darling of American society.
His mother, too, was precocious – an Oscar-winning child actress whose adult life was played out in the gossip columns.
So when, just a few months ago, Kevin McEnroe, the eldest son of three-time Wimbledon winner John McEnroe, and Paper Moon star Tatum O’Neal, was arrested for attempting to buy cocaine, there were plenty who felt that it was only to be expected.
After all, he was the product of a troubled marriage, and grandson of the volatile actor Ryan O’Neal and the beautiful Joanna Moore, an actress with well-********ed drink problems, so it seemed that Kevin’s dalliance with drugs was but another predictable chapter in the tumultuous lives of the O’Neal/McEnroe dynasty.
‘They were the longest 20 hours of my life,’ Kevin says shaking his head, recalling the day he awoke curled up on the concrete floor of a cell after his arrest.
‘I was in there with drunks, drug addicts, pimps and other trash from the streets of New York. My head was pounding with the worst hangover ever. Then I leave jail and the first thing I see is the front page of the newspaper saying: ‘McEnroe and Tatum’s kid in drug bust.’
‘I knew I’d hit rock bottom.’
Ultimately police dropped charges against him when it was discovered that the ‘cocaine’ he had bought was, instead, harmless baking soda.
‘You see,’ he says wryly. ‘I couldn’t even buy drugs right.’
Today, McEnroe junior, 28, has turned a corner. Nine months on, Kevin is clean of drugs after a two-month stint in rehab – and has written a novel which will be published next week.
Today, speaking for the first time about his turbulent early years when he was shunted between his warring, celebrity parents, he talks candidly of his battle for the approval of his tough, perfectionist father and his relationships with his heroin-addict mother and grandfather, from whom he is estranged.
He tells, too, of his own struggle with drugs and of how he has ‘never felt worthy’ of the McEnroe name.
For Kevin, the publication of his book, called Our Town, means he feels he has finally made his famous family proud of him.
‘Looking back, my arrest was the best thing that could have happened to me,’ he concedes. ‘It made me realise I needed to get serious about my life, about my writing. I truly believe it saved me.
‘Going to jail was a positive thing. It was a real turning point.’

Ironically, his arrest came on the day he signed the deal to have his novel published. ‘I thought, “Let’s celebrate.”
‘I made a series of stupid decisions and the next thing I know it’s midnight and I’m getting busted on a street corner buying cocaine. It went from being the best day to the worst day of my life.
‘It was freezing in jail. I couldn’t sleep. I used two miniature Corn Flakes packets as a pillow. I lay there thinking ‘my book sold this morning and now I’m in jail. How f****d up is that?’
Was there, also, a confrontation with his emotionally detached and authoritarian father to come?
‘Dad isn’t a lovey-dovey guy,’ he says, raising his eyebrows. ‘He’s disciplined, tough. As a kid, I was short and chubby [he’s 6ft 3in now]. He was tough on me. He wanted an athletic boy.
‘I did play tennis. Dad wanted us to know how to play. It was hard because when I played high school tennis people would see the name on the board and expect an incredible player. But I was only pretty good.
‘I also played basketball and Dad would come to the games. He would sit there and he wouldn’t clap or anything. When I walked off, if he nodded, it meant I did good. If he didn’t nod it meant I didn’t play well enough.
‘I mean, my whole life, I’ve been waiting for that nod and I’m not sure I’ve got it yet.’
Charting his troubled childhood, Kevin speaks with touching honesty about how he and his siblings were torn between warring parents.
John McEnroe and Tatum O’Neal married in 1986 and Kevin was born shortly afterwards, followed by his younger brother Sean, now 26 and an aspiring photographer, and Emily, 23, who works in the fashion industry and lives in Los Angeles with her mother.

Tatum O’Neal with her son Kevin McEnroe back in 2024

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Tough love: Kevin being carried by father John in 1992. Kevin said his father was tough on him and isn’t a ‘lovey-dovey guy’

The couple were ill-suited from the start, an incompatibility worsened by their drug use – hers chronic, his occasional. McEnroe has admitted using cocaine recreationally as his tennis career waned and the couple’s marriage imploded in divorce after eight years in 1994.
A bitter and increasingly acrimonious custody battle followed which culminated in McEnroe being given sole custody because of his ex-wife’s drug addiction.
Kevin recalls: ‘My mother met this younger guy, a musician, and started doing heroin. There was one year when she gave up on us kids and went to LA leaving us in New York with Dad.
‘The next time I saw her she weighed less than six stone,’ he says, as he sips tea in the sun dappled garden of his modest Brooklyn town house. It is a far cry from the luxurious, multi-million-pound mansion blocks of Manhattan’s Upper West side where he was raised.
For many years he supported himself doing bar work. He now scratches a living on his writer’s salary: ‘I don’t have a trust fund,’ he says. ‘Money is tight.’

Looking back, my arrest was the best thing that could have happened to me. It made me realise I needed to get serious about my life, about my writing. I truly believe it saved me

He lives with girlfriend Lindsey, a vivacious young woman who works in the fashion industry. They met when both were night owls on the New York party scene.
Though he clearly idolises his father, he paints a troubling portrait of a son unable to live up to his expectations – whether real or perceived.
It is clear his parents, especially McEnroe, loom large in his life. Above the fireplace hangs a picture of a twentysomething John McEnroe in front of the Brooklyn Bridge. And there is a poignant portrait of himself as a golden-haired child with brother Sean and Tatum on the beach in Malibu. ‘When Mum is not on drugs, she’s great,’ Kevin says simply. ‘I love her very much.
‘At the moment she’s in a very good place. But when she’s on drugs it’s a nightmare.’
Both parents, he said, had been ‘disappointed but supportive’ following his drugs bust. The McEnroe name is huge in America, and he felt he had brought it shame.
There is also a framed picture of his grandmother Joanna during her early acting days (she met Ryan O’Neal on the set of a TV soap) before the ravages of her hedonistic lifestyle led to her death at just 63 in 1997.
As Kevin speaks about his childhood it seems he is still seeking the love and approval of his father, a man who was famously driven to achieve perfection on the tennis court by his own father – an ex-military man – and who has spoken often about his relentless quest to be the best at everything.
‘I was talking to Dad the other day and he told me that not only did he want to win, he wanted to win his way,’ Kevin says. ‘I feel the same way. I am satisfied that my novel is the way I want it to be. I had offers to cash in and write about my family but I never wanted to do that.’
However, his book is a thinly veiled fictionalistion of his family’s story, using different names.
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How Kevin’s arrest for attempting to buy cocaine was reported. He said: ‘Going to jail was a positive thing. It was a real turning point’

It charts
the life of his grandmother, who endured a brutal marriage to Love Story star O’Neal before succumbing to drug and alcohol addiction.
In the novel, Joanna’s character ‘Dorothy’ (his grandmother’s real middle name) is head butted in the face by her husband ‘Dale’ for talking to another man. It is a horrifying act of violence which Kevin insists actually happened.
‘The book is a mix of fact and fiction,’ he admits.
‘Like any first-time novelist, I write about what I know. And in my case it is my dysfunctional family.’
And the McEnroe/O’Neal clan is certainly fertile ground.
Outwardly, Kevin’s life was one of luxury and privilege. After McEnroe won custody of the children, they lived with him and second wife, singer Patty Smyth and their two daughters. By contrast, Tatum’s life was nomadic.
Though Kevin attended a £28,000-a-year private school, he struggled. ‘There are positives about having the last name McEnroe but the negatives are very hard,’ he says.

I feel so lucky that I’ve been given a chance to be a better man. I’ve got a novel I’m proud of and I am finally believing in myself

‘I would never tell anyone who my dad was. As soon as people find out they treat you differently. You get fake friends. They even treated me differently in rehab once they found out.’
His memories of childhood are bleak. ‘My mother was a heroin addict,’ he states starkly. ‘Dad was always there for me but there was this horrible custody battle going on. I was forced into therapy which I hated. The custody fight went on for years and years.’
To ‘fill the holes’ he began doing drugs at 11.
At first it was cannabis. Then, he admits, he ‘drifted’ into cocaine and alcohol at university where he studied for a degree in English and then a Master’s in creative writing. While there, one lecturer encouraged his writing.
‘It was the first time I’d had that kind of encouragement. I went to this private school which was very competitive. Everyone was going to be an investment banker, and if you didn’t go that route you simply didn’t count. When I finally found someone who believed in my writing it was a revelation. It was the first time I felt someone truly believed in me.’
But before long he became engulfed in the New York party scene: ‘When you’re hungover all the time it’s hard to be inspired.
‘I was out until 4am most nights. I hardly wrote. I had no discipline.
‘Cocaine was part of the culture. Drugs take away a lot of your momentum and focus. I did drugs because I wasn’t comfortable in my own skin.
‘I’d go to a club and it was easier to stand in line and go from the bar to the bathroom and do drugs. It gave me something to do other than stand there being uncomfortable.
‘People’s morals and convictions are messed up in that world. The night and the party is the most important thing. It was seeping into me. I couldn’t stand being there without doing drugs. I was tired, it became overwhelming.’
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John McEnroe (pictured) is a three-time Wimbledon winner and still plays tennis with people 25 years younger

It was only after his arrest that Kevin was thrown a lifeline. He was granted bail and his family paid for rehab. ‘I was lucky my family had the resources,’ he admits.
‘I left the jail and the flashbulbs went off. I got home and the paparazzi were there. I felt mortified because I’d let everyone down. It was all about “McEnroe’s son the druggie”.
Luckily, however, the poor publicity didn’t affect his book deal.
‘The publisher called and he said, “Kevin, we love your book and we still want to work with you.”
‘I burst into tears. I knew this was my last chance to sort myself out and become the man I wanted to be, the person to make my parents proud, worthy of the McEnroe name.’
Writing the book has been cathartic, he says. ‘Dale’ is based on O’Neal – the grandfather he describes as ‘an a**hole’, who is now a distant figure.
‘I haven’t seen him since I was 13. He’s abusive to Mum and always has been. When I was 13 we had to go to this Paper Moon anniversary screening and he was horrible to her and she spent the night in tears. That’s when I decided I wanted no part in it.’
When Tatum tried yet another attempt to re-establish a relationship with her father – the pair recently filmed a reality show in which she revealed he hit on her after not recognising her at Farrah Fawcett’s funeral – he didn’t feel he could support her.
‘I don’t want to try to pretend he’s a good guy. Some people are just bad,’ he shrugs.
Several examples of O’Neal’s poor parenting are laid bare in the novel.
In one scene Dale tells his daughter to take cocaine to lose weight.
‘That really happened,’ Kevin sways. ‘He’s a monster.’
Two years ago O’Neal did seek a reconciliation with his grandson.
‘He sent me a letter saying he wanted to connect. And he enclosed a photograph of his face. That says it all. A head shot. I thought about throwing darts at it.’
In yet another true-to-life section of the book there is a poignant moment when Dorothy meets her grandson (Kevin). ‘I only met my grandmother a handful of times because she died when I was ten,’ Kevin says.
‘She was used as a cautionary tale in our family – look what happens when someone drinks and does drugs. But I was young and loved her unconditionally. Certain things in the book, like her chain-smoking while telling me never to smoke, I remember clearly. My book is about a good woman who makes bad choices.’
While Tatum has read the novel ‘and loves it’ and is constantly tweeting about how proud she is of her son, Kevin’s father is more reserved.
‘Dad doesn’t even like to watch sad movies so it was hard for him to read this. He told me he didn’t like the bit in the book where his character takes cocaine the first time he meets his wife. He said, “I didn’t take coke the first time I met your mother.”
‘I think he liked the book, though. He said, “Nice work.” I think that was a half nod.’
While he desperately seeks his father’s approval, he openly admits his affection, too. ‘I love my dad, of course I do, but he’s still the tough guy from Queens. He’s still very disciplined. He plays tennis with guys 25 years younger than him, he’s in great shape.’
And though he dotes upon his mother, their relationship is more complicated. ‘She’s doing awesome at the moment. She wants to get back to work. I dream about buying her a house one day.
‘I love her more than anything. In my novel the character forgives her mother, and I’ve forgiven my mother for everything and it’s changed our relationship entirely.
‘Writing this book made me understand that drugs and lifestyle choices make good people do bad things.
‘I feel so lucky that I’ve been given a chance to be a better man. I’ve got a novel I’m proud of and I am finally believing in myself. For many years I felt like I was in a tunnel and there was a tiny light at the end of it but I would always turn away from it.
‘Now I feel like the light is getting bigger and brighter and I am walking towards it. I never felt like I deserved success before, but now I do.
‘Finally I feel like I have earned the right to use the McEnroe name for something positive.’

Read more: Surviving the nightmare of being a McEnroe: First-ever interview with tennis star’s son, whose mother was a heroin addict and grandad was a ‘monster’ | Daily Mail Online

Tracy Anderson Says Being ‘Hot Is Not Defined by Height or Weight’

Tracy Anderson Says Being ‘Hot Is Not Defined by Height or Weight’

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The fad that’s hurting women: “One hundred percent: It’s called celebrity. We should love their work. But to blow up their importance to the level of obsession takes away from our own beauty and our own gifts. There’s a disease here—the disease is vanity, insecurity and the lengths of unhealthy behaviors people go to to achieve what they think is beautiful. The disease of ‘I’m not worth anything unless I look like that person over there.’”

The change in women’s bodies:
“I think it’s changing, and that excites me. You take a Kim Kardashian, who is a curvaceous, voluptuous, petite woman—and she’s on the cover of Vogue! I like that. I think that’s progress. Lena Dunham, who is a buddy of mine, is on the cover selling magazines with her
beauty and her light.”

She’s not all about giving women the same ****:
“I want to get away from ‘Tracy Anderson is going to make you teeny-tiny.’ I’m not trying to make everyone the same. To me, ‘hot’ is not Defined by a Height or weight or measurement; hot is going to the root of who you are.”

******s with icing:
“It involves Gwyneth. I was so good at designing bodies, including my own, that I could eat a pizza and a tub of ice cream every day and you wouldn’t see it; it was like a free card to eat whatever I wanted. And I was in London, dunking ******s in frosting. And she looked at me and was like, ‘What are you doing?’ And I was like, ‘What do you mean? It’s so good!’ And she’s like, ‘Do you know how toxic that is?’ I said, ‘Yes.’ And she’s like, ‘And you’re still eating it.’ I was like, ‘You know what? She’s so right.’ That was almost nine years ago. That was the last ****** dunked in frosting I ever had.”

Creating her method:
“… It was very apparent to me that Being a ballerina wasn’t going to happen. But I’ve always been, like, ‘Welp, there’s a different purpose for me. There is something else I’m supposed to be doing.’ Then at 21, I gained 60 pounds while pregnant with my son, and that’s when I started creating my method.”

She really hates juice cleanses: “Any**** is going to lose weight if they drink liquid all day long. That’s like lunchtime liposuction or freezing the fat cells off. You don’t own that change. The weight is coming back.”

[From Health]

Cele|bitchy | Tracy Anderson on the ‘fad’ hurting women: ‘The disease is vanity, insecurity’

RHOBH Kim Richards arrested for being drunk and disorderly

RHOBH Kim Richards arrested for being drunk and disorderly

https://www.accesshollywood.com/real-…article_106534

‘Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills’ Star Kim Richards Arrested, Charged With Public Intoxication

APRIL 16,2020 05:24 PM EDT
IMAGE: HTTP://7EE6F1F13D67F93968F3-161C1885…_POST_DARK.PNG


"The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star Kim Richards has been arrested.
The reality star was arrested at the Beverly Hills Hotel during the early hours of Thursday morning, after police were called to the establishment following a report of a disturbance.

According to a press release from the Beverly Hills Police Department, hotel security reported an apparently intoxicated female was causing a disturbance at a hotel restaurant. The woman, who was later identified as Kim Richards, was asked multiple times to leave the property by hotel security.
Security told police that as they escorted her from the premises, Richards requested to use the restroom, and according to the BHPD report, she refused to leave. At that point, they made a private persons arrest and called the police.

BHPD officers responded to the scene around 1:30 AM PT. Officers went into the restroom and took the "RHOBH" star into custody at 2:04 AM. She was described as "displaying symptoms of alcohol intoxication including slurred speech and belligerent insolent behavior cursing at the officers and passively resisted arrest," according to BHPD, during the incident.

At the station, when she was being booked, police claim Richards kicked an officer in the leg, but the officer was not injured.
Richards was charged with Public Intoxication, Trespassing, Resisting an Officer and Battery on a Police Officer. She was released at 10:36 AM and is expected in LAX Superior Court on May 10,2020.

When contacted by Access Hollywood, reps for Bravo and the hotel had no comment. A rep for Richards was not immediately available for comment on the incident.
— Access Hollywood Staf

John Cusack blasts Hollywood for being a "whorehouse"

John Cusack blasts Hollywood for being a "whorehouse"

John Cusack blasts Hollywood as a ‘whorehouse’ that is so obsessed with young female actors ‘it’s almost like kiddie porn’

  • The 48-year-old actor has enjoyed a 25-year career in Hollywood
  • But he claims the industry is ‘ripe with all these frontier crazies’
  • Condemns misogynistic culture and ageism
  • Speaks out in defense of the treatment of women
  • Words come as he promotes film Maps To The Stars, a savage look at LA’s celebrity world

By MIA DE GRAAF FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 23:33, 26 September 2024 | UPDATED: 22:37, 27 September 2024


John Cusack has unleashed an attack on the ageism and misogyny that surrounds today’s Hollywood film industry, speaking out in defense of the treatment of women and a system that ‘eats young actors and spits them out’.
The 48-year-old actor candidly admitted that, as a man, he has ’15, 20 years before they say I’m old’.
But while promoting his latest film Maps To The Stars – a damning account of celebrity culture in LA – Cusack said actresses are considered ‘menopausal at 26’, and that the industry is constantly looking to ‘open up another can of hot 22’ for the sake of cinema capital.
‘It’s becoming almost like kiddie porn. It’s f—ing weird,’ he told The Guardian.
‘It’s a whorehouse and people go mad.

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Scathing: John Cusack, 48, said Hollywood is a ‘whorehouse’ full of ‘crazies’ and ‘you couldn’t make it up’

‘I have actress friends who are being put out to pasture at 29. They just want to open up another can of hot 22.’
When he was starting out at 16 in 1982, Cusack said he was mentored and protected by industry heavyweights such as Al Pacino as he went on to star in films such as High Fidelity and Grosse Point Blank.
‘People would look after you when I was a kid,’ he said.
‘There were good people in the business.

‘Now it’s different.
‘The culture just eats young actors up and spits them out.’
His words come days before Maps To The Stars hits US cinemas.
The satirical drama, directed by David Cronenberg, gives a dark and scathing account of celebrity culture as it follows an archetypal Hollywood dynasty – two former child stars, a psychotherapist father and a pushy momager.
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‘Close to the truth’: He stars as a fad therapist in soon-to-be-released Maps To The Stars (pictured) alongside Julianne Moore who plays a fading actress. Cusack claims the satirical drama is very close to the truth

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Damning: Cusack (pictured in a shot from the movie) said he was mentored and protected by people like Al Pacino but warns young actors today to ****ter from the movie capital which ‘eats you up and spits you out’

Cusack plays a ‘life-coach’ who invented a fad therapy that has become a hit with A-listers, alongside an all-star cast.
Julianne Moore plays his client, an ageing and disturbed forty-something actress desperately vying for a new part, in a performance critics are hailing as a career-best.
Robert Pattinson portrays a limousine driver and aspiring actor, and Mia Wazikowska plays a badly burned pyromaniac.
The characters are a mess of psychological issues.
A 26-year-old woman is described as ‘menopausal’ in the film.
And Cusack claims it is not far from the true demographic of Hollywood inhabitants.
He says the mega-corporation-dominated industry has turned it into an ideal rather than a place, leaving actors lost and confused.
Defending his own role in the movie world, he says he make some commercial films to fund projects he cares about.
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Blockbuster star: Cusack is best known for his role as record shop owner Rob in the 2000 film High Fidelity

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Action movie hit: Grosse Point Blank is a dark and eccentric 1997 comedy about a hit man and his love life

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Star siblings: John’s sister Joan Cusack (right), also an actor, has been just as vocal about her feelings of Hollywood in the past, calling it a ‘terrible world’

‘For women it’s brutal,’ he told The Guardian.
‘Bruce’s thing about if you’re 26, you’re menopausal?
‘It’s only absurd because it’s a little bit further than the truth.’
John’s sister, two-time Oscar-nominee Joan Cusack, has spoken in similar terms in the past on her own take on Hollywood.
The Working Girl star said she would never want her two sons to become actors.
‘If you weren’t manic depressive when you started out as an actor, there’s a strong chance you’d end up that way being surrounded by all the wrong values,’ she told creators.com.
‘The fantasy and illusion of wanting to be a movie star is gruesome.
‘It’s a terrible world, a terrible business, and it takes its toll.’

Read more: John Cusack blasts the ‘whorehouse’ of Hollywood and reveals: ‘it sucks most of the time’Â* | Daily Mail Online

I know he’s promoting his new movie but still.

Bill Murray: ‘I do not like people that complain about being famous’

Bill Murray: ‘I do not like people that complain about being famous’

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On attending Bill Murray Day at TIFF: “The whole thing gets more complicated as it draws closer, and you feel such dread about it. I’m nervous. All I can think is I feel like the Statue of Liberty covered with maggots. I feel like I am going to be assaulted! Why am I doing this?”

His career: “There’s no real plan. I just do what I like. What agents do is try to package you with other people they got. I don’t really require that. If you have an agent, you get a lot of bad ******s. I could probably make better deals. I could probably make more money.”

He won’t campaign for an Oscar, ever again: “I’ve never done that. I know that’s something Harvey (Weinstein) does — he forces you to do these things. I’m not that way. If you want an award so much, it’s like a virus. It’s an illness.”

On losing in 2024 for Lost in Translation: “Six months later, I realized I had taken the virus. I had been infected. people have this post-Oscar blowback. They start thinking, ‘I can’t do a movie unless it’s Oscar-worthy.’ It just seems people have difficulty making the right choices after that.”

Harvey on Bill’s refusal to campaign: “And neither will we, until something happens, like a Golden Globe or a critic’s award. If that happens, he’ll have to get a restraining order against us. We’ll disregard what he told us.”

[From Variety]

Bill also sat down with Howard Stern last week. Bill talks about the “emotional” Alimooney wedding, his dislike for Seinfeld, his love of In-N-Out burger, and how the late Roger Ebert used to bust his chops. Here are some other topics:

On fame: “I do not like people that complain about being famous, but I say to people, ‘Hey, you want to be rich and famous? Try being rich, and see if that doesn’t cover most of it for you.’ You have a bunch of dough, you can be as kind as you want, and you can be invisible. No one has to know you have a bunch of dough, and you can behave any way you want. You can be a secret kind of person.”

On not finding the love of his life: “Well… I do think about that. I do think about that. I’m not sure when I’m getting done here. I have kids–I have children that I’m responsible for–and I enjoy that very much, and that wouldn’t have happened without women. I don’t think I’m lonely. It would be nice to go to some of these things and have a date, have someone to bring along. And to go play golf in Scotland, that would be fun. But there’s a lot that I’m not doing that I need to do–something like working on yourself, self-development, and becoming more connected to myself. I don’t have a problem connecting with people, my problem is connecting with myself. And if I’m not really committing myself really well to that, it’s sort of better that I don’t have another person. I can’t take on another relationship if I’m not taking care of the things I need to take care of the most. What stops us from looking at ourselves is that we’re kind of ugly if we look really hard; we’re not who we think we are, and we’re not as wonderful as we think we are.”

[From HowardStern.com]

Cele|bitchy | Bill Murray: ‘I do not like people that complain about being famous’

Michael Morones, 11, attempts suicide after being bullied over My Little Pony

Michael Morones, 11, attempts suicide after being bullied over My Little Pony

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February 5, 2024 (RALEIGH, N.C.) — An 11-year-old boy is in the hospital after trying to commit suicide — the victim of bullying at school.


Michael Morones remains in WakeMed hospital with a tube down his throat and potentially life-long brain damage. Michael tried to kill himself, apparently because he could no longer take the torrent of bullying he was facing at school.


"He’s the kid that never walks. He dances everywhere," said Michael’s mother, Tiffany Morones-Suttle. "He’s so full of energy. He’s always on the move."


Michael’s parents say he was that way even in the face of daunting bullying at school. Michael likes the cartoon "My Little Pony." It turns out, the cartoon has a growing, and perhaps unlikely fan club — men and boys known as "Bronies." Because of that, Michael was teased so much that ten days ago he decided to do something about it.


"He hung himself off the side of the bunk bed, off the railing," said Morones-Suttle.


His parents got him to the hospital, but the damage had already been done. Oxygen to his brain had been cut off.


"We won’t know for months how much is going to heal," said Morones-Suttle. "It could even be years before we find out what potential for healing he has."


You might think Michael’s parents would be furious with the kids who were bullying their son, but that wouldn’t be in keeping with the show at the center of what they were teasing him about.


"It teaches the most basic moral values to a lot of complex thoughts," said Michael’s stepfather, Shannon Suttle.


Fans of the show, like Michael, try to live the motto that friendship is magic.


"I’ve heard a lot of people say you need to go after bullies and hold them responsible," said Morones-Suttle. "But you know, I don’t think that’s what Mike would want. I would rather teach people how to do right than turn around than punish, because punishment doesn’t always work."


Michael has gotten support from as far away as Ireland, and a lot of money, which is used for Michael’s care, but also to start a nonprofit to help with bullying. As Michael’s father tells it, it’s more than their goal. It’s quickly become their mission.


Incredibly, the bullying hasn’t stopped. Michael’s parents say just Sunday night on a generally supportive ***site, a few people left hurtful comments. They say that just strengthens their resolve to fight bullying, and makes that mission that much more clear.


Bullying prevention expert Nancy Mullin said Michael’s age is right in the prime age for suicides.


"Eleven to 15-year-old boys are very much at risk for thinking about suicide when they’re perceived as being gay," said Mullin.


She credits Michael’s parents with supporting his interest rather than reinforcing shameful feelings.


"The missing piece here is what the school is doing about this," said Mullin.


Mullin says while North Carolina is one of 49 states with bullying prevention laws, not enough is being done to implement programs.


Michael was scheduled to have a tracheotomy Tuesday.

Michael Morones, 11, attempts suicide after being bullied over My Little Pony Bronies fandom | abc7chicago.com

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An 11 Year Old Geek Kid Attempts Suicide Because People Are Terrible

Rupert Everett admits he ‘sabatoged’ his own career by being ‘so difficult’

Rupert Everett admits he ‘sabatoged’ his own career by being ‘so difficult’

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Does he feel misunderstood? “Not exactly. You can only understand the disaster of your own case yourself. You can’t ever expect the world to see everything about yourself in the way that you do — certainly in terms of conducting a career as a homosexual in showbusiness. Not so much now, maybe, because I’m older. It’s not such a threatening problem. But all through my career it was a huge issue.”

He still regrets coming out as an actor:
“There’s a whole side of my business now which clicks its fingers for world peace and equal rights. Movie stars and directors and studios spend a lot of money promoting human rights and being charitable in Africa but, actually, in their own backyard, they really don’t accept that any of these things is happening. So people mostly said to me: ‘Oh, but you’ve been so difficult and you’ve blown everything for yourself, you’ve sabotaged your own career.’ To a certain extent, it’s true, but to a certain extent, it isn’t. There’s only a certain amount of mileage you can make, as a young pretender, as a leading man, as a homosexual. There just isn’t very far you can go.”

On his AIDS fear:
“AIDS in the Eighties was a very, very scary thing. There were people walking around with the disease that looked like the undead. Terrifying. I spent the first six years of my career thinking that any minute now I would probably come out with it. The first 10 years of my career were conducted with this interior hysteria of terror. In one sense, it made everything unpleasant. With every lens, I was wondering if they were going in too tight on what I might be hiding. I was very lucky, considering my very sl-ttish behaviour, never to get HIV. But I always thought I had it. I can look at films I’ve been in and see in my face this sheer terror.”

Fame is “addictive”:
“You get so many things given to you and you take them for granted almost straight away. Getting into restaurants. Having people be nice to you on the bus. You think that’s how everyone is to everyone. One of the great things about mine is that it’s been so cyclical, I’ve always been so up one minute and then so down. I learnt pretty quickly there was no point going on with ‘successful me’ when I was being a failure. I learned how to move into ‘humble me.’”

Is he vain?
“Not so much now. I want to be treated with a certain respect. That’s a vanity. I’m not vain about the way I look, particularly.”

He has facial blood injections every 4 months:
“They put it through a Magimix, turn it into plasma and inject it back in. It’s really good for your skin. Blood is the new thing. What you really want to have, if you’re rich, is someone with your blood group running high up in the mountains all day long and sending you down their blood, deliciously oxygenated, which you can inject in various parts of your ****. I’d advise you to inject the whole of your face with blood — it will make it look radiant. Then I would have a little bit of laser, which is very good for tightening.

[From Telegraph]

https://www.celebitchy.com/374830/rupert_everett_admits_he_sabatoged_his_own_career_ by_being_so_difficult/

Zach Galifianakis: ‘Being a celebrity is sh-t, it’s dumb & I’m not interested in it’

Zach Galifianakis: ‘Being a celebrity is sh-t, it’s dumb & I’m not interested in it’

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Hours before the New York Film Festival’s closing-night premiere, director Alejandro G. Inarritu and the cast of Birdman posed for photos and answered questions after a Saturday afternoon press screening, held at New York City’s AMC Lincoln Square — to the dismay of some of the actors.

“Being a celebrity is sh-t — it’s dumb and I’m not interested in it,” said Zach Galifianakis, noting that he’s not a fan of all the “picture-taking” and that the cast generally feels the same way. “I like to be an actor, and that’s it. The blurred lines are, I think manmade. I think celebrity is a manmade thing, it’s not innate in us, we have people telling us, ‘We should pay attention to these people,” for all the wrong reasons, their personal lives and whatnot. … I’d rather just do my work and go home and watch Lifetime.”

[From THR]

To be fair, he was asked specifically about where to draw the line between “actor” and “celebrity” and Zach was explaining that he likes being an actor but hates this idea of being a celebrity. While he does seem to practice what he preaches (when is the last time Zach got pap’d with a lady friend, you know?), it does seem like… there’s a trade-off. Zach gets to be a comedic leading man and people write down what he says in interviews and press conferences. It seems odd to complain about it while actively participating in the press for one’s film. Then on the NYFF red carpet, THR asked him for clarification and this is what he said:

“It’s confusing to me — all of this is confusing to me. They oversell it like we’re curing cancer, you know what I mean?” he told The Hollywood Reporter at the New York Film Festival’s closing-night premiere on Saturday, held at Lincoln Center’s Alice Tully Hall. “I just think it can be gross sometimes, the way Hollywood congratulates itself all the time.”

“I agree with what this movie says. I read it, and I’m like, ‘Boy, he’s taking swipes at every****, but he’s right.’ So the truth trumps everything else,” he said of the Alejandro G. Inarritu dramedy. “It’s gotten a little out of hand — there’s no culture in it. If people were writing about poets, mathematicians and all that, that would just move us forward quicker.”

[From THR]

Cele|bitchy | Zach Galifianakis: ‘Being a celebrity is sh-t, it’s dumb & I’m not interested in it’

Chris Brown Jailed After Being Thrown Out of Rehab . Again

Chris Brown Jailed After Being Thrown Out of Rehab … Again

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Chris Brown is on his way to jail right now, because he violated a judge’s order by getting booted from the Rehab facility where he’s been living for nearly 4 months … TMZ has learned.

The judge in the Rihanna beating case ordered Chris to live in the Malibu Rehab facility for 90 days to get anger management therapy, and he completed the stint earlier this month. BUT … at the last court hearing, the judge modified things and ordered Chris to stay in the facility while the Washington D.C. assault case ran its course.

The deal was this … if Chris left rehab, he would go directly to jail.

Sources familiar with the situation tell TMZ … Brown was Thrown out of the Rehab facility this morning, for violating "internal rules." We do not know precisely what Chris did, but we’re told it did not involve violence or drugs.

Sources tell TMZ … Chris was caught having "an inappropriate relationship" with a female worker at the beginning of the month, but that is NOT why he was Thrown out today.

As you recall, Chris was previously Thrown out of a different facility for throwing a rock at his mom’s car ********

Chris was picked up by L.A. County Sheriff’s deputies a short time ago and is on his way to jail.

Jennie Garth Flips the Bird After Being Told to Wait in Line at Hollywood Hot Spot

Jennie Garth Flips the Bird After Being Told to Wait in Line at Hollywood Hot Spot

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Jennie Garth
clearly conveyed her emotions last night with one finger.


The actress was photographed flipping the Bird while out with friends in Hollywood Monday night After Being Told to Wait in Line at the popular nightclub DBA, a source tells E! News.


According to an insider, Garth arrived close to 11:30 p.m. with two girlfriends and three men After attending the Recycle Across America at Kiehl’s Since 1851 event in Santa Monica. When the star tried to get into the club without waiting, the bouncer Told Garth that the male members of her party needed to Wait in line.


That didn’t sit well with the blond beauty, who was overheard arguing with the doorman and ultimately opted to just leave the venue and vent her frustrations on social media.


The What I Like About You star took to Twitter and wrote, "DBA 7969 wtf!" (The numbers aren’t some cryptic code, it just refer to the club’s address.)


In a statement to E! News, the Hollywood hot Spot explained, "DBA has a very strict door policy and Ms. Garth and her entire group of friends were asked to Wait in Line for entry along with everyone else. The group chose not to do so and left."


Garth’s rep was not available for comment.

Jennie Garth Flips the Bird After Being Told to Wait in Line at Hollywood Hot Spot | E! Online

Jennie Garth was DENIED at a hot Hollywood club because she was asked to stand with the common folk, and not because her friends were turned away … so claims the photog who took the pic.

The photog tells TMZ … Jennie skipped the Line and walked up to the security team at the front door. He says they Told her they had no power to make exceptions — everyone needed to stand in line. The photog says that’s when Jennie dropped the card, saying, "I’m 40 years old, I have 3 kids, I’ve been in the business for years."

FYI — she’s 42.

The photog says the "90210" star did not stand in line, began crying and one of the men she was with tried shielding her from the cameras. She never stood in Line … she just left.

Jennie’s people Told TMZ … she was accompanied by 3 women and 3 African American men. Jennie claims security was fine with the women coming in but balked at the 3 guys, and she felt it was wrong.

Read more: Jennie Garth Photog — She Played ‘Do You Know Who I Am’ Card | TMZ.com