Monday, May 5, 2008

Paparrazzi For All

"It could be a horrible, invasive thing, like a stalker," Glover told Newsday recently. "But instead he is capturing you as you are."

In a weird twist people actually pay for themselves to be stalked and photographed by paparazzi. Hopefully this means the end of family portraits in studio's with anthroposophical shades of blue as a backdrop. They still haunt me.

Read the full article here.

1 comment:

Tor Lindstrand said...

nosepickingpaparazzi

http://www.ninjadude.com/index.php/hilary-duff-picks-her-nose-at-dinner

for a while now celeb mags are full not only of famous people looking like a million bucks, but more often looking like everyday slapped them in the face. so to be seen is nowadays not only looking your best but equally looking your worst. If you want to have a shot at famedom, sloppy bellies and ill-fitting trainers are what you need to do before breakfast. more on nosepicking and a glimps of the future below:

We've all caught someone at sometime picking their nose. Some try to do it in secret. Others do it openly without embarrassment.
Maybe even you have been caught in the act. Nose-picking is one disgusting habit and is certainly not socially acceptable. So, are these people normal? One would guess that this is not the type of thing researched at our institutions of higher learning. Guess again. The Americans did.

Of course, scientists must give everyday things complicated scientific names. Nose picking is a term for us common folk. Nose-picking should really be referred to as rhinotillexomania (rhino=nose, tillexis=habit of picking at something, mania=obsession with something). So, the next time that you see a person picking their nose, tell them that they are a rhinotillexomaniac.