Lee Grant: there are no words.

Lee Grant: there are no words.

I know Lee Grant best from her hilarious role as Felicia Karpf in Shampoo. She was an attractive looking woman, but much later I learned she had plastic surgery already at a very early age. Since then, it seems, she’s become a PS addict and the results are horrible. The woman is 88 and now looks like this:

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One of the earliest photos I could find of Lee was already from after a/several ps procedure(s):
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Lee in Shampoo with my old decrepit hunk in his prime:
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Hugh Grant has ‘third secret love child’ with Swedish TV producer

Hugh Grant has ‘third secret love child’ with Swedish TV producer

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HUGH Grant has reportedly fathered a third secret love child.



The actor was in a relationship with Swedish TV producer Anna Elisabet Eberstein, which led to the birth of baby boy in September 2024, The Sun is reporting.


The Notting Hill star has also fathered two children with secret girlfriend Tinglan Hong. Hong gave birth to his first child, daughter Tabitha Xaio Xi Hong Grant, in September 2024. A boy, Felix, was then born in December 2024. If the reports are correct, this means the third child arrived three months before the birth of Felix.


"They were pregnant with Hugh’s children at the same time. It’s an unusual arrangement", a source told the paper.


The third child is said to have remained a secret until now as Grant’s **** was initially left off of the birth certificate, until it was re-registered in December 2024.


"Anna is being supported by Hugh all the way," the source told The Sun. "She lives in a very comfortable property and knows that Hugh is there for her. Anna’s parents in Sweden know all about the relationship and she has their blessing."


It is unknown if Hong and Eberstein were aware that they were both expecting a child with the actor at the same time.


The 53-year-old admitted fatherhood was a shock in an interview with Ellen DeGeneres last April: "I can’t pretend it wasn’t a little bit of a surprise. But it’s a very nice surprise. In fact, the baby’s **** in Chinese – because the mother is Chinese – means ‘happy surprise’".
Hugh Grant has ‘third secret love child’ with Swedish TV producer | News.com.au

Diets are obsessing the modern male – Hugh Grant, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ryan Reynolds

Diets are obsessing the modern maleHugh Grant, Benedict Cumberbatch, Ryan Reynolds

It’s an attention grabbing headline. Who knows if these actors are actually obsessed?
It is their instrument, they should keep themselves fit. And the article is too long.

Diets are obsessing the modern male – and the weight loss industry is rubbing its hands in glee

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Chris Hill doesn’t eat bread, biscuits, crisps or chocolate. When he drinks alcohol, which is rarely, he orders vodka, lime and soda, never beer. Cakes and pastries are similarly avoided, as are pasta and cereal.

Instead, for breakfast, the 26-year-old procurement manager has a pork chop or piece of fish, usually salmon, with eggs and vegetables. Lunch is a chicken salad, and dinner is meat or fish with more vegetables.

Hill has been eating this way since April 2024, when he embarked on a low-carbohydrate diet to lose weight. Back then, he weighed 18 stone which, at 5ft 10in, gave him a **** mass index (BMI) of 36.1 kg/m2, well past the obesity threshold of 30.

"I was self-conscious," he says now. "People would make remarks. If I went to the beach, I’d wear a vest."

His slimming regime of choice was the Paleo diet. Named after the pre-historic palaeolithic era, its premise is: if they didn’t eat it 15,000 years ago, we shouldn’t now. The reasoning – that our digestive systems haven’t evolved as quickly as methods of food production – is secondary to the result, which involves a diet rich in meat, fish and eggs which promises to shed pounds, fast. Championed by the American nutritionist Dr Loren Cordain, it was Google’s most searched-for diet of 2024.

Like many diets, its healthfulness is controversial; the British Diatetic Association warns that cutting out grains "raises the potential for nutritional deficiencies".

Nevertheless, it worked. Today, Hill is a muscular 12 stone and has a healthy BMI of 24.1. He still follows the diet – with the occasional treat – and works out at the gym, a mix of weight-lifting and rowing, for 45 minutes a day, four days a week.
"It has inspired me," he says. "At first it was strange, but I’m used to it now. I’m much fitter and happier."

According to the retail analyst Mintel, 29 million Brits tried to slim down last year. Some 66.6 per cent of men and 57.2 per cent of women are overweight. But if Hill is one in 29 million, he represents something else, too: the increasingly ubiquitous male weight-watcher. Slimming may never have been the exclusive preserve of women – Lord Byron practised the ‘vinegar and water diet’, consisting of water, apple-cider vinegar and little else, and Elvis would undergo sedation for days at a time to avoid eating – but it has long been our turf.

No longer. That same Mintel report found that 44 per cent of men tried to lose weight in 2024. That’s up from 42 per cent the year before and 24.8 per cent 10 years ago.
Over coffee recently, a male pal regaled me with details of his strict ‘no carbs’ regime. He won’t eat bread, potatoes or fruit. Another practically lives off low-calorie meal-replacement bars, bulk-bought from Boots and kept in his desk drawer at work. And then there’s the manager I talk to who breakfasts each day on salad from Pret A Manger because "porridge is quite a lot of calories, really".

Where once weight loss might have been done on the sly for fear of appearing ‘unmasculine’, today male celebrities share diet tips in interviews. The actor Ryan Reynolds reportedly won’t eat carbohydrates after 8pm. Hugh Grant has done the low-sugar ‘Clean and Lean’ diet. Benedict Cumberbatch follows the 5:2 plan – five days of eating whatever you want, two of eating fewer than 600 calories. Actually, everyone appears to have done the 5:2 – from George Osborne to Alex Salmond, Phillip Schofield to Jude Law. May this year saw the launch of Man v Fat, a new digital magazine aimed at men who want to lose weight.

What’s going on? It has been more than five years since the Government’s Change4Life campaign was launched, encouraging us all to make long-lasting changes to the way we eat. Is the public-health message finally getting through? Perhaps. But, as anyone who’s found themselves weighing out portions two weeks before a beach holiday knows, dieting’s often not about long-term health.

Women have long complained of the pressure they feel, subjected to relentless images of perfection by the media, advertising and entertainment industries. Now blokes appear to be feeling the heat. A recent survey claimed that 64 per cent of men felt ashamed of their stomach. More than half worry their friends have more appealing physiques. Did any man worry about his ‘moobs’ (‘man boobs’) until the term appeared in newspapers, circa 2024? Gossip websites revel in the imperfections of male stars. Actors Christian Bale, Colin Farrell and Leonardo DiCaprio are three whose supposed beer bellies have attracted attention recently.

Men’s Health magazine – with its promises of "lean muscle fast" and "sculpted abs" – is the most successful paid-for men’s magazine in the country. Every month, more than 210,000 copies fly off the ****ves, each bearing a picture of a perfectly-chiselled cover star.

"It’s always in your face," agrees Matthew Briggs. The 32-year-old from York weighed more than 31 stone when he joined a local branch of Slimming World. He now weighs around 16 stone. "There’s that Bond film with Daniel Craig on the beach. You look at it and think, ‘Well I don’t look like that’."

Something else is changing, too: the diet industry. It is already worth a reported £2bn, and the male dieter presents a lucrative prospect. There are more overweight men than women in the UK; Public Health England predicts that by 2050, 60 per cent of men will be obese. Capture the market, and the profits could be huge.

And so, after decades of campaigns featuring women frolicking in swimsuits, the calorie-counting giants have upped their game. Weight Watchers is trialling a men-only diet group; it recently featured MasterChef judge Gregg Wallace as one of its ‘celebrity ambassadors’. Slimming World runs eight men-only clubs.

But it’s not just the traditional titans of weight-loss who’ve woken up to the business of shrinking men’s waistlines. One of the most eye-catching trends in recent dieting history has been the explosion of new man-friendly regimes, which make money by selling books and branded products to those desperate to shed the pounds.
The apparent popularity of the 5:2 diet with men is, one recent devotee tells me, partly because it can be framed as a kind of extreme sport. "Another guy at work was doing it," says the fortysomething software manager. "We’d be like, ‘How many calories have you had so far?’ Is it macho? Yes."

Hugh Grant has done the low-sugar ‘Clean and Lean’ diet
Men’s health consultant, Peter Baker, isn’t surprised. "Men often need a different approach," he says. "Conventional ‘dieting’ tends to put them off. They prefer things framed as a challenge."

There’s a similar machismo surrounding the low-carbohydrate Atkins regime, which eschews dainty low-fat nibbles in favour of meat, butter, cheese and mayonnaise. And then, of course, there’s Paleo – the most self-consciously macho diet of them all, and not just because it’s also known as the ‘caveman diet’.

Like Hill, Martyn Rowe lost weight rapidly after "going Paleo" a year ago. In two months, the 42-year-old business manager had shed a stone and banished his "mid-life gut". Part of the diet’s appeal was its focus on ‘manly’ food.

"If I turned up with a SlimFast shake, I would get the piss taken out of me. Now other guys see me eating steak and eggs and they’re like, ‘Hey, that’s not bad’.”

Aiding the new breed of macho dieter in his quest to slim down is a growing range of macho diet snacks. Sales of diet food increased by 7 per cent between 2024 and 2024 to £1.8bn. PepsiCo and Coca-Cola have already launched Pepsi Max and Coke Zero to appeal to male consumers who felt Diet Pepsi and Diet Coke were too feminine. Now image-conscious male dieters can buy low-sugar Caveman ******s, 65 calories each, Rebel Kitchen Mylk, flavoured imitation milk with approximately 50 calories per pack, and Thermo Detonator fat-burning supplements.

Online, dozens of web forums have been established by followers of these regimes. Patrick Vlaskovits, a 37-year-old Californian entrepreneur and author of several business books, set up the forum PaleoHacks in 2024 after a year on the diet. The site receives a million monthly visitors. Membership is free; revenue is generated by advertising.

This virtual community offers a support network male dieters might previously have lacked. Says Vlaskovits: "Members not only share worries and get their fears allayed, but also form real friendships".

Of course, there’s comfort in community, but there’s also a whiff of collective neurosis. Take this recent exchange, posted by one male member under the headline, ‘Rooibos tea: Paleo or poison?’. The popular herbal tea, says the post’s author, is rich in antioxidants and organic compounds. He worries that, as cavemen, we wouldn’t have had access to sufficient vegetation to consume these.

But then, that’s the thing about dieting. It tends to come with a hefty portion of angst. "When I pick up something to eat, the first thing I look at is the information on the pack," says Ian Ward, who joined Weight Watchers five years ago, weighing 24 stone 7lbs.

The 47-year-old father of two from Derbyshire has lost almost 10 stone – but he will be counting calories for the rest of his life: "I’ve put back items because they’ve got 20 grams of fat".

Speaking at the parliamentary enquiry on **** image in 2024, psychotherapist Susie Orbach, author of Fat is a Feminist Issue, described this as the lifelong straitjacket into which weight-loss programmes bind followers. Either you stick to the rules religiously, or you’re left in a painful cycle of completing the diet, gaining weight, and starting all over again.

The flip-side to this growing weight-consciousness is that there will, inevitably, be those who care too much. Eating disorders among men are not a new thing – but they’re increasingly common. University College London reported a 24 per cent rise in the number of men diagnosed with an eating disorder between 2000 and 2024.
Ravi Meah, a slight, 5ft 2in, 27-year-old production editor has spent a decade controlling his weight. He’s tried meal-replacement shakes, calorie counting and the Atkins diet.

"The image of the ideal man – someone who has a V-shaped torso, six-pack stomach, and a chiselled jaw – has become so ingrained in our psyche that most men feel like complete failures if they don’t look like it," he says.

The legacy of his obsession is a wildly distorted relationship with food: "Now I yo-yo. I go through two months when I don’t go to the gym and eat all kinds of foods, then I work out intensively and go into Atkins mode." His weight fluctuates between eight and 10 stone – either at the low-end of the healthy BMI range, or just above it.

Ten years ago, the BBC ran a story in which various overweight men lamented the lack of diet options available. Slimming groups were too women-oriented, they said, and they felt inhibited by a prevailing social view that ‘real men don’t diet’. Rather like the ideas that ‘real men’ don’t cry, do housework, or need parental leave, such notions are of course sexist rubbish which do no one any favours.

If men feel liberated to take an interest in weight management then that, surely, is a good thing. Another good thing is the promise of British men becoming leaner, fitter and healthier. Obesity-related conditions cost the NHS £5bn a year.

However, as Meah’s experience shows, it’s not always that simple. Because the fact is, men may have been getting fatter, without any recourse to do anything about it – but women have been getting fatter too, all while we’ve had Diets coming out of our ears.
Repeated studies have shown that dieters are prone to regaining weight. And many women, of all sizes, live in a state of perpetual anxiety about their food consumption. Does the same fate await Britain’s men?

Orbach, for one, believes so. "The results will be the same," she tells me. "Men induced into the bingeing and dieting pattern and disordered eating. The winners are the commercial companies."

Let’s hope she’s wrong. Perhaps men will fare better. Perhaps they will resist the pressure to strive for **** perfection and fork out hundreds on dietary quick-fixes. Perhaps they will avoid the cycle of boom and bust that characterises so many women’s relationship with the scale. But then again, perhaps not.

This pic is not related to the article, I just liked it. Hugh and Damien Lewis were out playing golf (with Bill Murray too) and though Hughie isn’t GR cool – he is and forever will be my "I still would".

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Diets are obsessing the modern male – and the weight loss industry is rubbing its hands in glee – Features – Food + Drink – The Independent

RCT – Lee Surrenders to Grant, 1865

RCT – Lee Surrenders to Grant, 1865

reading comprehension
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Lee Surrenders to Grant, 1865

Two Viewpoints of the Same Event:
Lee Surrenders to Grant, 1865
What General Lee’s feelings were I do not
know. As he was a man of much dignity, with
an impassible face, it was impossible to say
whether he felt inwardly glad that the end
had fi nally come, or felt sad over the result,
and was too manly to show it. Whatever his
feelings, they were entirely concealed from
my observation; but my own feelings, which
had been quite jubilant on the receipt of his
letter, were sad and depressed. I felt like
anything rather than rejoicing at the downfall
of a foe who had fought so long and valiantly,
and had suffered so much for a cause, though
that cause was, I believe, one of the worst for
which a people ever fought, and one for which
there was the least excuse. I do not question,
however, the sincerity of the great mass of
those who were opposed to us.
General Lee was dressed in a full uniform
which was entirely new, and was wearing a
sword of considerable value, very likely the
sword which had been presented by the State
of Virginia; at all events, it was an entirely
different sword from the one that would
ordinarily be worn in the fi eld. In my rough
traveling suit, the uniform of a private with
the straps of a lieutenant-general, I must
have contrasted very strangely with a man
so handsomely dressed, six feet high and of
faultless form. But this was not a matter that
I thought of until afterwards.
We soon fell into a conversation about old
army times. He remarked that he remembered
me very well in the old army; and I told
him that as a matter of course I remembered
him perfectly, but from the difference in our
rank and years (there being about sixteen
years’ difference in our ages), I had thought
it very likely that I had not attracted his
attention suffi ciently to be remembered by
him after such a long interval. Our conversation
grew so pleasant that I almost forgot the
object of our meeting. After the conversation
had run on in this style for some time, General
Lee called my attention to the object of our
meeting, and said that he had asked for this
interview for the purpose of getting from me
the terms I proposed to give his army.
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Sophia Loren tells all about Cary Grant, Clark Gable, Peter Sellers & more

Sophia Loren tells all about Cary Grant, Clark Gable, Peter Sellers & more

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Why she learned English: Carlo Ponti told her “you have to learn English, because movies are in English.”

Her friend Cary Grant: “ He was special person, a great actor, absolutely incredible as a person, as a man.”

Peter Sellers: “very melancholic person. He would light up only when the director said action.”

Clark Gable: “did his job, I liked him a lot. But he had a watch and it rang every evening at 5. When it rang, he would leave without saying goodbye.”

A story about Marlon Brando & Charlie Chaplin: When asked about Marlon Brando, she said, “Eh” with an expressive shrug …she admitted that initially the two didn’t get along. She recalled an incident when Charlie Chaplin and she were kept waiting by Brando on the set of “A Countess in Hong Kong.” She said Chaplin took Brando to task for the delay. “Marlon Brando didn’t have a very good voice, very small,” she said, and after being berated by Chaplin, “it went away.” Loren herself was famous for being on set early, Marshall said, but the actress said since it irritated people she’s modulated her arrival.

Marcello Mastrioanni: “Marcello was great, he was a funny actor, dramatic actor. Twenty years we did films together. He was a simple man. He loved to eat. All morning he talked about lunch and then the rest of the day about dinner.”

Being told to get a nose job in her early days: “I always tried not to listen to these people. They were saying that my nose was too long and my mouth was too big. It didn’t hurt me at all because when I believe in something, it’s like war. It’s a battle. But even Carlo said, “You know the cameramen, they say that your nose is too long. Maybe you have to touch it a little bit.” And I said, “Listen, I don’t want to touch nothing on my face because I like my face. If I have to change my nose, I am going back to Pozzuoli.” At that time, they used to do noses like a French nose with a little tip at the end — they liked that. Can you imagine me with a nose like that?

She struggled with fertility for a long time: “But then at the end, it happened … for a woman to be a mother, it’s the most beautiful thing in the world.”

Why she didn’t marry Cary Grant (he proposed to her when she was 19): Loren had a relationship with co-star and Hollywood heartthrob Cary Grant, who asked her to marry him. She chose Ponti, who was more than 20 years her senior, and remained married to him until his death in 2024. Because Loren had grown up poor and without a father, Ponti represented security, she said. “We trusted each other immensely, and we loved each other. And also … I never had a father. And for me, Carlo was also my father. So he was everything for me.”

[From ABC News, THR, Variety]

Cele|bitchy | Sophia Loren tells all about Cary Grant, Clark Gable, Peter Sellers & more