Everything posted by Lkjh
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
They probably just ripped-off that bathroom-story from Lainely and added some dirt A lot of his friends admitted to do it, so it could be possible, but I agree with Barbie, he has outspoken himself against drugs a lot, so I don't think he would..
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Great links Barbie Lainey's usual bs: http://laineygossip.com/Articles/Details/2...his-OGs-at-SXSW Forbes on the Mobli-launch http://www.forbes.com/sites/jondube/2012/0...ire-crash-sxsw/
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Yes, I remember that! OMG, how adorable
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
My bad I thought it might have been when he was with Bar, or when they just broke up. But in that case it's way older I always felt like he really loved Kristen, but indeed they were very young.
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
^^ It would explain the marriage comments in some way
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
^^ Really? A lot of his interviews are pretty similar when it comes to commitment and his mom, but if they have indeed 'faked' it, I think that's very shady of them to do His comments about his mom and Kate are cute though
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
WHOLE INTERVIEW: 'Actors are really just clowns for hire' Titanic star Leonardo DiCaprio reveals how his mum kept him grounded Leonardo spends much of his movie fortune on environmental projects, including two donations of £650,000 each to victims of the Haiti earthquake and wildlife conservation. At 37, despite a succession of beautiful model and actress girlfriends, he's still a bachelor living between Los Angeles and New York. He told GARTH PEARCE, on the week of Mother's Day, why his German-born mum is his No1 woman. "MY mom, Irmelin, taught me the value of life. Her own life was saved by my grandmother during World War Two. "When she was a toddler a broken leg had landed her in a German hospital. "Refugees and soldiers were also in the hospital and she ended up contracting several major illnesses and stayed for two and a half years. "My grandmother (Helene, who died in 2008, aged 93) came every day and nursed her back to health — the nurses did not have time. They basically left her for dead. When you see a picture of her, it's heartbreaking. It brings tears to my eyes knowing what she has been through in her life. "I have a picture, her first photograph, with this tiny little skirt. She is emaciated with a big belly. She had a belly full of worms. "After that, she'd make any sacrifice. She spent three hours a day, on the road from our home in Los Angeles, driving me to and from a school called Centre For Enriched Studies. "It was a place which gave me an appreciation for the arts and life. My mom knew that to go to this "magnet school" (top free schools which draw, like a magnet, pupils from a wide area) would help my future. "You do need parental guidance and I was in a great position with both my mum and dad. "They split when I was a baby but even though I stayed with my mom they were both very much involved in my upbringing. "It means I can enjoy wide interests. It made me want to travel, scuba dive, collect art, take classes in art and every place I travel I check out the museums. "I have enjoyed watching wildlife in Africa and South America, far from Hollywood. "My mom also taught me to get everything in perspective. I never got to the point when I was mean and cruel to people. "I realise that I do not change the course of history. I am an actor, I do a movie, that's the end of it. You have to realise we are just clowns for hire. After I had success it was great, at first, not to worry about money. It was on my mind when I was growing up. "Just being able to buy my grandmother some scarves she wanted and not have to think about it was a sign of good times. It sounds corny but it gave me happiness at the time. "My father, George, has also affected the choices in my life regarding films. I like films that take chances or say something different or experiment. Growing up with him, I was surrounded by different artists — not just actors or film-makers but cartoonists, poets, writers. "It was definitely part of the beatnik-hippie generation and I have vivid memories of all kinds of crazy things happening which have had influence over films I've made. "My first love? Boy, I don't even remember. I suppose if I'd found my true love I would be married right now, wouldn't I? "Pretentious women really turn me off. Vindictive women, too. So do opportunistic women. I think what turns me on about a girl is what most men find attractive — which is something genuine about them. Being a good person. "Titanic? I would love to say I predicted it would be one of the biggest hits in film history. I didn't — and wondered whether I should do it at all. "I resisted it for a long time because I had been offered the film Boogie Nights (about the 1970s porn industry, a role finally taken by Mark Wahlberg). The fact that Kate Winslet said "yes" was the final decider. "She was awesome. We were definitely shoulders for each other to lean on. We had to be partners on the film. All the complaining in the world was done between us two, so we did not have to vent it on anyone else. "But I am so glad to be part of that movie. Years from now, people will still be watching that film. "I am part of something historical, in a lot of ways. It gave me so many opportunities, as an actor, to steer the course of my own destiny. "I was able to take both my mother and grandmother to the world premiere of Titanic in London — one of my proudest moments." http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/woman...-interview.html
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
DiCaprio: I'm just clowning around Leonardo DiCaprio has revealed he doesn't take his day job too seriously - and reckons actors are just "clowns for hire". Leonardo DiCaprio says actors are just 'clowns for hire' Leonardo DiCaprio has revealed he doesn't take his day job too seriously - and reckons actors are just "clowns for hire". The J Edgar star, who has been acting since childhood and made his big-screen breakthrough in the 1993 movie This Boy's Life, said he is under no illusions about the importance of his career. He told The Sun: "I realise that I do not change the course of history. I am an actor, I do a movie, that's the end of it. "You have to realise we are just clowns for hire." Leonardo also admitted he had no idea the 1997 blockbuster Titanic would end up being so successful. "I would love to say I predicted it would be one of the biggest hits in film history. I didn't - and wondered whether I should do it at all." He added: "The fact that Kate Winslet said 'Yes' was the final decider. She was awesome. We were definitely shoulders for each other to lean on."
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Leonardo DiCaprio is still looking for love Leonardo DiCaprio hasn't found true love yet. The Hollywood heartthrob is currently dating 22-year-old Victoria's Secret model Erin Heatherton and has previously enjoyed relationships with actress Blake Lively and models Bar Refaeli and Gisele Bundchen, but doesn't think he has met the love of his life yet. Asked about his first love, he said: ''My first love? Boy I don't even remember. I suppose if I'd found my true love I would be married right now wouldn't I? '' Leonardo, 37, has very specific standards about what he wants in a girlfriend and is turned off by ''pretentious'' and ''vindictive'' women. He explained to The Sun newspaper: ''Pretentious women really turn me off. Vindictive women too. So do opportunistic women. I think what turns me on about a girl is what most men find attractive - which is something genuine about them. Being a good person.'' Leonardo also revealed he will always treasure the memories of working on 1997 blockbuster movie 'Titanic' and credits co-star Kate Winslet for making it such a great experience. He said: ''The fact that Kate said 'yes' was the final decider. She was awesome. We were definitely shoulders for each other to lean on. We had to be partners on the film. All the complaining in the world was done between us two, so we did not have to vent on anyone else.''
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Bar Refaeli
Making of collection printemps
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Bar Refaeli
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
I think Leo's uncomfortable promoting anything ^^ But I think that's cute in some way Thanks for the pics, Killabunnies Reposts or not, I never mind seing Leo pics
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Bar Refaeli
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Bar Refaeli
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Q&A | Jo Nesbø He’s been a footballer, stockbroker, pop star and now a bestselling crime writer. Esquire meets “lucky” Jo Nesbø in Norway. In one of Jo Nesbø’s publicity shots, he stares out from the hood of a grey sweatshirt, head tilted back, left eye obscured in shadow, the trace of a smile on his lips, like a wise (and athletic) monk. Which is more or less how he appears in person: a fit-looking 52-year-old in jeans and grey marl again, with a calm, direct manner and a glint in his gaze. We’re in a hotel room in Oslo, Nesbø’s hometown, as well as that of Harry Hole, the terse, haunted detective he created (whose name Nesbø says it’s OK to pronounce the English way; the same goes for his own). So you know who we’re dealing with: Nesbø’s crime thrillers have sold 11 million copies in Europe, or “one every 23 seconds” according to the British posters. Just before Esquire’s visit, it was announced Martin Scorsese had signed up to direct the movie adaptation of The Snowman, Nesbø’s horror-tinged Harry Hole novel which came out in the UK in 2010 and went to number two in The Sunday Times paperback charts. (DiCaprio to play Hole? You wouldn’t bet against it.) The way this story normally goes, the Scorsese news would be the long-awaited approbation for a lifetime as a struggling writer. The trouble is, Nesbø’s been good at things before. A lot of things. First, football: as a teenager he played for top Norwegian side Molde FK until two torn cruciate ligaments put paid to his dream of playing for Spurs. Then, music: in his twenties he started a band, Di Derre, which became one of Norway’s most successful pop acts (you can find a nice sepia-tinted video of them performing their big hit “Jenter som Kommer” on YouTube). Then finance: he balanced pop stardom with a lucrative day job as a stockbroker and lived off his savings while he wrote his first novel, Flaggermusmannen (which translates as The Bat Man, but will be called something else when published in English later this year, for obvious copyright reasons). Naturally, it won the 1997 Riverton Prize, Norway’s most prestigious crime-writing award, and the 1998 Glass Key award for Best Nordic Crime Novel. Nesbø has now written nine Hole novels, most of them also award-winning – his most recent one published here, 2011’s The Leopard, hit number one in The Sunday Times hardback chart – plus a collection of short stories, a novella, a non-fiction book about Norway’s involvement in the Balkan war and three children’s books. A stand-alone crime thriller, Headhunters, was also made into a movie that is now the most successful Norwegian film in history (it is released in the UK on 6 April). Frankly, his success rate is exhausting. Surely, it can’t all have been as plain sailing as it sounds? “Yes,” says Nesbø, without embarrassment. “I’ve been really lucky. I’ve been more or less doing as I like for at least the last 20 years of my life. But when I knew I could make a living as a writer, nothing that’s happened since then can top that.” Phantom is his new Hole instalment and in it Nesbø draws upon some of his past lives. It’s a gritty, pared-back thriller centred on the arrival in Oslo of a new drug, “violin”, several times stronger and more addictive than heroin but without the respiration-restricting side effects. “It’s based on an actual drug,” Nesbø says, “but it’s not a street drug right now — I think it’s probably too expensive to produce.” The police, he says, were “extremely helpful” with the research, though he can’t say more because it’s “kind of sensitive”. But there were also his Di Derre days to revisit. “Obviously bands are traditionally close to drugs,” he says. “I have friends who are heroin addicts, so I didn’t have to go too far.” Even his footballing background gets a nod; the violin dealers in Phantom wear Arsenal shirts. “I have so many friends who are Arsenal fans who called me up and said that was cheap! But it was because they’re red and white and you can spot them easily.” Fine, but we still have our suspicions that the grisly end met by the pusher in the Nicklas Bendtner top was no accident. http://www.esquire.co.uk/2012/03/qa-jo-nesbo/
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Finally! Thanks girls!
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
So Tom Cruise is now considered for a Star is Born Thanks for the news and Erin's tweets
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Oh no, no news again
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Bar Refaeli
My crew is so cool! I love them. Team Matt Jones! How great I really liked their shoot for ELLE, hope this is a repeat!
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Bar Refaeli
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Aww, how sweet! Thanks Sick And thanks for the tweets
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Bar Refaeli
Wow!! Is there more?? ^^
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Leonardo DiCaprio - (Please Read First Post Prior to Posting)
Once again confusing Thanks girls!
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Bar Refaeli
Sneakpeak of the shoot
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Bar Refaeli
Some new Peter Hahn, LoveBarRefaeli http://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.2...mp;l=d6e0a9fc0d