Angelina Jolie - “Hello” Magazine Interview
The Canadian edition of Hello! magazine has a fantastic interview with Angelina Jolie about her children, her relationship with Brad – and those eating-disorder rumors.
How is your newest adopted son, Pax, adjusting to family life? He’s a great kid. When we first met him, we thought he was really shy and really quiet, but about two days at home, we discovered that he is the loudest member of the family! He is very athletic, very bold. Pax and Zee [Zahara] have really connected because they’re closer in age, and Madd and Pax – they’re brothers, so they have moments where they absolutely bond together against everybody else in the family. Then they have moments where they bug each other, but it’s quite normal. It’s nice. I’m really, really proud.
It’s rumored that you’re considering adopting a child from the Czech Republic. Is there any truth to this? No. We’re not considering any more adoptions at the moment. We’re trying to make sure that all of our kids are adjusted first and that they all have individual time. We will have more children, but not right now. We’re always
open to all countries, but there just isn’t any truth to the rumors. Just because [we] adopt and because we travel, people say Brad’s buying a house wherever he goes and I’m adopting a child wherever I go.
Do you and Brad have different parenting styles? We’re very similar and we support each other as parents, so there is no divide of “Daddy’s good with this but Mommy doesn’t like it,” or vice versa. Brad is just as affectionate and loving as I am, and I am just as playful.
Click inside to continue reading Angelina’s interview with Hello!…
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Do you cook? No. Brad would tell you that I am one of the worst cooks in the world, but my first husband said that I pretended to cook badly so I never had to.
How did Brad help you through the loss of your mother? God, it’s funny to give all his secrets away. He’s a really great friend. He really cares. When my mom passed, he sat with me in the [hospital] room and held her hand and helped me go through all the stages that you have to deal with when someone passes, from her ashes to everything. He was just wonderful to my brother [James] as well. [After her funeral] we all went back home and then he just spent the night asking us questions about our mom.
He got us to tell funny stories about her and focus on all the love and all the joy. Brad is extraordinary.
How’s your relationship with his parents? When I first met Brad’s parents, I came in with two adopted children from other countries and that was new for them and their family. I didn’t know how they were going to be, but they’re wonderful, wonderful people. They’re equally loving to all of the children. We’ve left the children with them quite a few times, but I don’t know if we’ll leave them with Pax at the moment [smiling].
Would you say you wear your emotions on your sleeve more than you used to? I suppose, in some way. It’s funny, because I feel like I’m this really emotional person but people have often said to me, about myself or the roles I play, that I seem strong. I’m often surprised that people don’t see me or think of me as an emotional person. Maybe they do more now, but for a long time in my life, it was that I was just tough or something, and that I lacked emotion.
There’s been a lot of speculation about your recent weight loss. The funny thing is when somebody says, “you’re thin,” people say, “thank you.” But to me, it is not a compliment. It’s not something I want to be. I have always been lean, and this year I lost my mom, I have four kids, I finished breastfeeding and it’s been hard to get my nutrition back on track and learn about my body after birth. The disturbing thing is that instead of somebody saying, “Oh, this looks like a person that’s actually dealing with something [emotional],” they say, “does she want to fit into skinny jeans?” When I [read] anything that says I’m too thin, I think “Good, good!” Let it be a criticism. I don’t want to encourage young girls to be too thin.
Where is the reckless Angelina of old, who dived into the hotel pool after winning her Golden Globe? [Laughing] I’m really the same person. I jumped in the pool because somebody dared me to. So it wasn’t anything punk. It was true happiness and fun. Hopefully, I do still have that [quality] and I’ll jump in many pools in the future.








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392 Comments
just jared is flooded with mostly haters and physco pretend angie fans.
I copied this:
I just got back from watching this film at the movie theater that I work at, so I know a thing or two about movies and my god was this AWESOME!!!! Jolie does an excellent job and has a flawless accent. Not only that, she looked good doing it. This film is very intense and can get a little sad at times, but the topics in this movie weren’t meant to make you laugh anyways… So take the advice from a guy who works at a place where films are shown, and WATCH it!!! A lot of talking goes on, but its interesting talk that will make you wish you were in this movie. I hope you all enjoy it and watch it at an AMC theater near you… GREAT MOVIE!!!
S*IT! A lot of nasty people on DListed taking Ted C’s Blind Item as gospel truth that Angie is on heroine. Quite pathetic really.
Tabloid journalists are some of the most vile people on the planet.
GO ANGIE
BYE TROLLS IMBECILES
LOS QUE TENEMOS UNA LIFE OS SALUDAMOS
QUE OS DEN
ADIOS
191 BRAD DEFENDING JEN | 06/22/2007 at 1:13 pm
Pitt says he and Aniston are still close and will likely remain that way. “We’ve been able to keep the love that we have for each other in front [of everything else].”
A self-described “Zen master” at tuning out the intrusions of the tabloid press, Pitt allows his meditative calm to collapse when he talks about the paparazzi’s recent conduct, particularly their treatment of Aniston. “These guys have been incredibly despicable this round,” he says. “They should literally be hung up and flogged. You wouldn’t believe the s— they’ve been saying to Jen. She doesn’t have a nasty bone in her body, and they are yelling horrible things to get a rise out of her so they can get more money for their pictures.”
****************************
NOW YOU KNOW THIS SCHIT IS MADE UP. BRAD WOULD NOT SAY ALL THIS.
JEN’S PEOPLE HAVE SAID SHE AND BRAD HAVE NOT SPOKE TO EACH OTHER IN 2 YEARS.
The talented Mr. Pitt never fails. There is only so much a woman can take, good news she’s taking a year off, time to come to her senses.
A wife’s courage
ANGELINA JOLIE CAPTURES HEART AND DETERMINATION OF MARIANE PEARL
By Bruce Newman
Mercury News
Article Launched: 06/21/2007 03:33:51 PM PDT
The subtitle of Mariane Pearl’s memoir about the kidnapping and murder of her husband - “The Brave Life and Death of My Husband, Danny Pearl” - would surely come as a surprise to anyone who sees only the film adaptation of her book, “A Mighty Heart,” in which Angelina Jolie plays Mariane. Such is the force of Jolie’s performance, and the blinding effect of Hollywood star power, that the mighty heart of the story has been transformed from his to hers.
Jolie wears Mariane’s determination, her fierce French indignation and her cool calculation on the sleeve of her hijab, in full view of a houseful of Pakistani policemen who show up soon after her husband disappears. Daniel Pearl, then the Wall Street Journal’s South Asia bureau chief, had come to Karachi in pursuit of a story about shoe bomber Richard Reid, who had been arrested a month earlier for trying to blow up a passenger jet.
Pearl (played by Dan Futterman) is following a lead from a shadowy informant named Bashir (Alyy Khan) when he goes missing. Like many foreign correspondents, Pearl works the frontier between outrageous risk and reward, so when Mariane - herself a seasoned reporter - sets out to find him, she is told by people who don’t appear to mean a word they’re saying that he will be fine. Don’t worry about a thing.
Most of “A Mighty Heart” is taken up with Mariane’s struggle to keep her husband alive, and for nearly two hours, Jolie does this with a performance at once as subtle and ferocious as any in recent memory. With the year now half over, can it possibly be too early to unblushingly nominate her for an Oscar?
Director Michael Winterbottom has given his film the look, and sense of urgency, of a documentary. This undoubtedly isn’t as easy as Winterbottom makes it seem, because Danny Pearl’s disappearance was followed by five agonizing weeks of waiting. Shooting in what often appears to be available light, and with a handheld camera that he has tamed sufficiently to prevent motion sickness, Winterbottom keeps the picture moving along like a thriller.
He also manages to maintain a degree of suspense about Pearl’s fate, even though the story made headlines around the world in 2002. Daniel Pearl’s abduction and brutal execution by terrorists - a videotape revealed he was beheaded by his captors - marked a turning point in the global drama that was set in motion on Sept. 11, 2001. Mariane Pearl had become pregnant at almost the same time the terrorists struck on Sept. 11, and was nearly six months pregnant when her husband vanished into the slums of the world’s second-most populous city.
Through Jolie, she maintains a steely equanimity during the crisis. Following an interview on CNN in which she talks about her missing husband without obvious emotion, someone observes how well she has “held herself together,” a remark which has about it a faint whiff of disapproval: A more obviously loving wife might have cried.
The investigation is conducted by a newly formed Pakistani counterterrorism unit, led by a taciturn cop called Captain (the Indian star Irrfan Khan). When Mariane later approaches the American embassy for help, it appears for a time that the Pakistanis may be shown up as bumblers. And, in fact, one government official declines to assist in the search because he believes the kidnapping is a plot cooked up by India’s intelligence agency to embarrass Pakistan.
The film uses actual news footage from the event sparingly, and always in ways that not only heighten the feeling that these terrible events did happen, but that they are happening again, right before our eyes.
When the kidnappers send word that Danny Pearl’s treatment will be no better than the terrorist prisoners at Guanta`namo Bay - America’s own Devil’s Island - then-Secretary of State Colin Powell is shown insisting that the detainees at Gitmo are being treated humanely. (Just this month, Powell seemed to have reversed field, and said that the prison should be closed down immediately.)
Winterbottom does a wonderful job of showing the tumult and teem of the Karachi streets, the density of the chaos that any investigator would have to peer through to find the missing American. Like the team that is chasing Danny Pearl, we get only glimpses of him, bound and with a gun to his head. Writer John Orloff uses brief flashbacks of Danny and Mariane to give us some sense of who he was. But as “A Mighty Heart” continues pulsating in real time, Danny begins to feel like a construct more than a person, remaining as elusive on screen as he does in captivity.
This is Mariane’s story, and no matter how hard she tries to hold him close, she can feel her husband slipping away. When Mariane reveals to the Captain that Danny is Jewish, you can see his shoulders slump slightly, and her spine stiffen. The exchange is almost imperceptible, and it passes in an instant, but Jolie and Khan manage to make it say everything about Danny’s chances.
Jolie’s work as an actress often has been a captive of her celebrity, making it difficult to see past her pillowy lips to the craft. Perhaps it took the constraints of docu-drama to uncage her less-obvious gifts, but this is her finest performance, and likely to be the equal of any given by an actress this year. She holds herself back for as long as she must, and then in one great howl of grief and rage, lets us into Mariane’s broken heart. Her mighty heart.
`A Mighty Heart’
Rated R (profanity)
Cast Angelina Jolie, Dan Futterman, Archie Panjabi, Irrfan Khan, Will Patton
Director Michael Winterbottom
Writer John Orloff (based on the book by Mariane Pearl)
Running time 1 hour, 43 minutes
http://www.mercurynews.com/movies/ci_6196615?nclick_check=1
Brad loves Angie/Angie loves Brad |
Actually, Brad DID say this, it was right after they separated. Of course once the VF article came out.. Brad never said anything about her again. Never even mentioned her name. He was being nice and hoped they could remain friends but she blew it.
I love this couple equally. not until the recent mother-in law meeting, I’m sure it was a set-up by the Huvaniston camp. but aside from hating Maniston more. Brad should also held some responsibility, He lived with that manipulative, calculative ***** and her PR guru for almost 7 years. he knew her more than anyone, and definitely knew how does Huvaniston manipulate the press, and yet, he let it happen. I’m sure her mom must have told him. He should have strongly opposed it or advised her. this meeting was so bad taste and unfair to Angelina and her 4 kids. He never utter a word defending Angie , Angie had sacrificed so much for him, make him a father , baby shiloh, slow down her career., taking the flag for the last two yrs. I wish all thing done by Angie is worth it and really wish Brad would take good care of this amazing, selfless, great woman.
S*IT! A lot of nasty people on DListed taking Ted C’s Blind Item as gospel truth that Angie is on heroine. Quite pathetic really.
Tabloid journalists are some of the most vile people on the planet
++++++++++++++++++
Tell them Pitt knows and doesn’t care. Who is the real bad guy? the drug addict or the one who turns the head the other way?
‘HEART’ in the right place
Angelina Jolie masters the part of a pregnant wife facing the unthinkable
By Michael Phillips
Tribune movie critic
Published June 22, 2007
‘A MIGHTY HEART’ ***
We know how “A Mighty Heart” ends. Daniel Pearl, the Wall Street Journal’s South Asia bureau chief, died at the hands of his captors in early 2002, in Karachi, Pakistan. His wife, Mariane Pearl, survived him and later gave birth to their son, Adam.
We know this. Even so, when Angelina Jolie, who plays Mariane in director Michael Winterbottom’s lean and swift account, unleashes her anguish upon learning the news of Danny Pearl’s beheading, the impact is torrential, and Winterbottom’s documentary-style approach pays off. The film isn’t much interested in the usual biopic peaks and valleys, or in hyping the punishing limbo of Mariane’s life in the weeks after the kidnapping, and before confirmation of her husband’s death. But when Jolie cracks open this key moment, it’s really something.
Here’s how Pearl herself (writing with Sarah Crichton in her memoir “A Mighty Heart”) describes that cry of anguish: “I slam the door, and with all my might, I cry out. I have never screamed like this before. I can feel that I’m screaming, but the sound that rips up out of me is alien, as if everything is coming out of me. I sound like an animal caught in a bone-crushing trap.”
Up until this moment, which is handled just right in the film, Jolie’s Mariane has been like a tuning fork, emitting a hum of worry and contained rage. When the news hits her, the resulting emotions are enormous but not indulgent. It feels real and messy.
“A Mighty Heart” is a worthy film on a great, tragic subject. Unlike Winterbottom’s recent film “The Road to Guantanamo,” which dazzled with its technique but left a lot of vagaries hanging in the dusty air, it’s a lucid narrative, revealing another side of terrorist-shadowed life on this planet after Sept. 11, 2001, and after the Bush administration’s decision to invade Iraq.
Screenwriter John Orloff doesn’t go for “scope” or even much context; he’s content to put one foot in front of the other, following Ms. Pearl’s days and weeks after the kidnapping. Meetings with her husband’s Wall Street Journal colleagues, including editor John Bussey (Denis O’Hare), intertwine with Mariane’s wary relationship with Pakistan’s head of counter-terrorism (Irrfan Khan). Dispatches from an earnest if ineffective American diplomatic security agent (Will Patton) are balanced by Mariane’s friendship with the Pearls’ fellow journalist, Asra (Archie Panjabi).
The end is near throughout “A Mighty Heart.” Winterbottom, who is very good at hurtling chaos, has just enough taste to keep his subjects honest and their pain free of melodrama. If there’s a dimension missing from the film, it’s this: Winterbottom is so focused on keeping the narrative trackable and the audience inside Mariane’s plight, he simplifies here and there. The director does not quite achieve what Paul Greengrass did with “United 93,” which was a stunning amalgam of documentary fakery and dramatic intensity. The Pearl film’s concerns require a different, more intimate sense of suffering. Yet I wonder if a longer version of the film wouldn’t have allowed for more detours and blind alleys and truthful emotional ambiguities. The Pearls’ marriage (Dan Futterman plays Danny, largely in flashbacks) has a slightly idealized glow about it.
As it stands, then, “A Mighty Heart” leads inexorably to Jolie’s magnificent scream, which is more — deeper — than a mere Oscar-baiting moment. The film is most vivid and immediate when Jolie, her character’s patience and facade cracking, accesses a full tangle of impulses at once. She is a uniquely intense screen presence. We can only imagine what Mariane’s ordeal was like. Jolie and Winterbottom come closer than most could have in imagining it for us.
MPAA rating: R (for language).
‘A Mighty Heart’ ***
Directed by Michael Winterbottom; screenplay by John Orloff, based on Mariane Pearl’s book with Sarah Crichton; photographed by Marcel Zyskind; edited by Peter Christelis; production design by Mark Digby; produced by Brad Pitt, Dede Gardner and Andrew Eaton. A Paramount Vantage release; opens Friday. Running time: 1:48.
Mariane Pearl … Angelina Jolie
Danny Pearl … Dan Futterman
Asra Nomani … Archie Panjabi
Captain … Irrfan Khan
Randall Bennett … Will Patton
John Bussey … Denis O’Hare
———-
mjphillips@tribune.com
Copyright © 2007, Chicago Tribune
http://www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-0622_heart_jumpjun22,1,6835624.story?coll=chi-entertainmentfront-hed&ctrack=1&cset=true
Neela, great posting on the Newsweek blog. Can we save this somehow and cut and paste everytime somebody makes one of those comments? Seems like Sean Smith answered for all of us when those questions came up. He seemed pretty peeved about the inane questions and he only have to deal with it for one day. We get it all the time here. I’m glad he pointed out the issue about women hating on women.
Women are women’s worst enemies, in business, in professional career, etc. Women’s jealousy is incredible. This is why no matter how capable a woman is, men will still run the world. Sure, we represent 50% of the population, an even though more women are entering colleges, more women are in law school, or are catching to men in fields we were behind, we will not get that respect and power because our own sisters won’t vote for us.
I don’t mind people expressing different opintions, but a lot of their comments are because they are incredibly jealous of her success. They just want to bring her down. Look at the Aniston PR. What is she promoting? Instead, she has to get in the press to remind people that this woman stole her man. Incredibly ridiculous. Remember, there’s nothing to steal if two people are in love and don’t see anything outside of their coupledom.
In Lainey’s previous post, she said Brad Pitt’s rumored to say “misogny of our press.” Well, I was thinking, he sure is aware of it, and why don’t he do something to stop it. Instead, he perpetuates it. He sits aside and let the public feed on Angelina. Anyway, I know there are BP fans here so I’ll stop here. I know you say he’s about action, not words. So I assume he’s not going to say much in his upcoming interviews to promote his film. I’ll just take my cue from Angelina. If she’s happy, then he’s doing something right.
Now back to Sean Smith’s blog. Loved how he responded directly to those questions and just gave it to them. No mister nice guy, no playing with words, no political correctness. Just straight answers. He’s Angelina’s best PR now. Hope that reached a wide audience and stop all the women bashing against Angelina. Shish!
284 NIN | 06/22/2007 at 1:58 pm
S*IT! A lot of nasty people on DListed taking Ted C’s Blind Item as gospel truth that Angie is on heroine. Quite pathetic really.
Tabloid journalists are some of the most vile people on the planet.
=——————————-=
Actually it’s just one moron from D-listed posting over and over again…
Movie review: Jolie gives a powerful performance in the understated ‘A Mighty Heart’
The Associated Press
NEW YORK: When you’re an international superstar — when you’re Julia Roberts or Tom Cruise, for example — it can be difficult for audiences to accept you in challenging roles, difficult for them to dissociate the persona from the performance. Lately this phenomenon also has been true of Angelina Jolie, with her well-documented adventures in adoption and globe-trotting with Brad Pitt.
But in “A Mighty Heart” as Mariane Pearl, the wife of slain Wall Street Journal reporter Daniel Pearl, Jolie reminds us that she really can act, that the supporting-actress Oscar for “Girl, Interrupted” wasn’t a fluke, that there is indeed substance beneath the sex appeal. She deeply immerses herself and, as a result, stands tall as the film’s graceful heart and soul. It’s pretty hard to imagine that her name won’t be at the forefront again come awards season this year.
(Likely to get overshadowed in the mountain of praise Jolie will duly receive is Dan Futterman as Pearl himself. The Academy Award-nominated screenwriter of “Capote” only gets about a half-dozen scenes to give us an impression of who this determined journalist was, mostly in flashbacks, and he does so with subtlety and intelligence.)
Director Michael Winterbottom (”24 Hour Party People,” “Welcome to Sarajevo”) wisely applies his trademark documentary-style approach, making us feel the building tension and dread as a multicultural coalition of investigators and journalists drops everything to track down Pearl’s kidnappers. (The unadorned, fly-on-the-wall camerawork comes from longtime Winterbottom collaborator Marcel Zyskind. John Orloff wrote the no-nonsense screenplay based on Mariane Pearl’s memoir, “A Mighty Heart: The Brave Life and Death of My Husband Danny.”)
Like the stylistically and thematically similar “United 93,” this is a film that clearly needed no dramatic embellishment. And like “United 93,” we know the devastating ending from the moment we walk in, yet may find ourselves silently, futilely hoping that things will turn out otherwise. Daniel Pearl was kidnapped and beheaded by Islamic militants because he was Jewish, and the killing was videotaped. Thankfully, though, we don’t have to see it.
But being aware of his outcome makes each early moment sadly meaningful — the image of Danny pulling away in a taxi for his fateful meeting while researching shoe bomber Richard Reid, a casual mention that he might be late for dinner, a perfunctory “I love you” on the cell phone before saying goodbye.
Once Danny fails to return to the home where they’re staying in Karachi, Pakistan, on the night of Jan. 23, 2002, Mariane — herself a journalist for French radio — puts her skills to use trying to determine what might have happened to him. She is six months pregnant with their first child, a son Danny wanted to name Adam, but she moves quickly and efficiently. At her side from the start is his longtime friend and colleague, Asra Nomani (Archie Panjabi), but as the hours tick away and the situation grows more grim, their circle expands to include investigators, editors and ambassadors.
Winterbottom puts us smack in the middle of them, gives us a seat at the table as they piece together names and faces, times and places. But that doesn’t necessarily mean we’ll always be clued into what’s going on. The sensation of realism that permeates every frame of this film means that we also experience the same chaos these people endure; it can be frustrating but, then again, making us omniscient wouldn’t make any sense.
Leading the investigation is the head of Pakistan’s counterterrorism unit, a man known as Captain (Irrfan Khan, with tremendous presence) who turns out to be more caring and sympathetic than he initially appears. He orders his men to scatter through Karachi’s crowded streets, dark alleys and hidden back rooms, rounding up the usual suspects.
This, by necessity, takes us away from Jolie. We truly miss her presence, and when she’s gone, “A Mighty Heart” can get a bit draggy. For a big chunk in the middle it feels like a standard crime drama — though it’s a strikingly crafted and stirring one.
“A Mighty Heart,” a Paramount Vantage release, runs 108 minutes. Three stars out of four.
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/06/22/america/NA-FEA-A-E-MOV-US-Film-Review-A-Mighty-Heart.php
First of all we the Jp’s Will NOT let these insane huvane trolls from ph and d-listed sway US in any way about brad. IF SO then it would be shame on us.
if you haven’nt notice they keep repeating the same junk- brad doesnt defend angie-brad should speak up
-angie does dugs! same person/s.
that troll/s think if they repeat it- change tag names and then answers itself- we the jp’s will begin to think it
give it no life.
USE WATERMELON’S PIZZWATER AND PUT IT OUT. REMEMBER YOURE DEALING WITH CALCULATING EVIL SAD PATHETIC VITCIM FANS OF HEAD AND SHOULDERS.
IGNORE OR INSULT.PH IS SHUT DOWN THE HATERS ARE HERE.
OMG I just checked moviefone and AMH is playing here.. in my small town!!! I thought I would have to wait to rent the DVD.
Im so going tonight!
Jesse James will open in limited release, the studio will try to push Casey Affleck to some awards. Brad will do only 1 big interview and right now the magazine will be :Interview. He will not talk about his personal life, only a few mentions of him being a dad.
yo real talks why r dere ppl talkin sayin how her kids are ugly like really now how you gonna talk sh*t about children…nd anotha thing why da hell do u ppl concern urself wid brangelina..word dere r ppl dat live for dem…”BRANGELINA 4EVER” “I LUV BRANGELINA” nd sh*t like dat…real talks you ppl need to concern urself wid ur own life cuz she aint ur realtive or anythin! nd now ppl gonna be sayin why im here on dis site…WELL its cuz i kno somebody who OBSESSES like u ppl on dis site bout brangelina nd its frikin stupid! all i gotta say is i don give a 2 sh*t bout wat any of u ppl gotta say…all i gotta say is get a life nd stoop concernin urself wid dere’s!
293 Elphie
=————-
I hope you’ll be able to answer this for me then…WHAT SHOULD BRAD PITT SAY THAT WOULD ANY OF THIS STOP?
How do you know that he will only do one interview?
284 NIN | 06/22/2007 at 1:58 pm
S*IT! A lot of nasty people on DListed taking Ted C’s Blind Item as gospel truth that Angie is on heroine. Quite pathetic really.
Tabloid journalists are some of the most vile people on the planet.
(Flag This)
_________________________________
If it’s not true AJ should sue for defamation
294 think positive! | 06/22/2007 at 2:03 pm
Probably is, but it just gets rather annoying.
I highly doubt she’s on smack. There are so many people out who love to put 2 and 2 together to make 5.
Angie is clear-headed and smart. She is learning more and more everyday about international law and politics. All this on top of learning lines and acting and being a parent and supportive partner. She has an international pilot’s license that she acquired in a very short time. She is a very intelligent woman.
People are daft of they think she is using any kind of drugs. Drug addicts can’t function, let alone do all the things Angie does everyday.
I shouldn’t even have stooped to address this silly issue. It’t laughable that anybody could think it true.
Thanks JJ for 2 new threads.
191 BRAD DEFENDING JEN
————————
this was from his interview with Diana Sawyer in 2005, before the VF and the pity party.
I was on the last thread. Thank you Neela, for posting the Smith Q&A from Newsweek, *rolled eyes*, I think he was brilliant in responding to stupid/ignorant/tabloidish trolls readers.
I can’t wait to see the movie tonight. Don’t forget to bring some kleenex ladies.
302 No way out!!!! | 06/22/2007 at 2:08 pm
284 NIN | 06/22/2007 at 1:58 pm
S*IT! A lot of nasty people on DListed taking Ted C’s Blind Item as gospel truth that Angie is on heroine. Quite pathetic really.
Tabloid journalists are some of the most vile people on the planet.
(Flag This)
_________________________________
If it’s not true AJ should sue for defamation
**************************************
You can’t sue on a blind item.
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