Brad Pitt @ Larry King Live
Brad Pitt talks with CNN’s Larry King about helping to rebuild New Orleans, plus his life with Angelina Jolie and their kids.
“[My kids are] as much blood as I am theirs,” Brad says. “And they are brothers and sisters. One was from Ethiopia, one came from Vietnam, one from Cambodia, one was born in Namibia. They have fun, they squabble. It makes me so proud. (pounds chest)”
The father-of-four is among those helping the most vulnerable in the city’s Lower Ninth Ward. He tells Larry about the 150 affordable homes being built post-Hurricane Katrina, and why the “Make it Right” project means so much to him, as well as the people who will live there.
Watch a preview of the interview on CNN. Brad’s actual interview with Larry will air TOMORROW, Dec. 5 @ 9PM ET/PT on CNN.
15+ pictures inside of Brad Pitt @ Larry King Live…








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http://news.moneycentral.msn.com/provider/providerarticle.aspx?feed=BW&date=20071204&id=7899627
December 4, 2007 4:00 PM ET Alcoa Foundation Helps Fund Brad Pitt’s ”Make It Right” Project to Build Green Affordable Housing in New Orleans
Alcoa AA and Alcoa have announced support for Brad Pitt’s “Make It Right” (MIR) project to build green affordable housing on a large scale to help victims of Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans, Louisiana. An Alcoa Foundation grant of $150,000 was made to the Make It Right project today.
The MIR project - conceived by Pitt and a group of experts in New Orleans - is a large-scale redevelopment project for affordable housing that incorporates innovative design to be stronger, safer, and environmentally friendly. MIR’s goal is to construct 150 homes in the low-income neighborhood of New Orleans’ Lower Ninth Ward, the area hardest hit by Hurricane Katrina in which more than 80 percent of homes were completely destroyed by flood waters. The name comes from a former resident’s plea to help “make this right.” Groundbreaking is scheduled for January 8, 2008.
The MIR core team is a partnership between William McDonough + Partners, a world leader in environmental architecture; Cherokee Gives Back Foundation, the nonprofit arm of Cherokee, a firm that specializes in remediation and sustainable redevelopment of environmentally impaired properties; Graft, an international leading architecture firm that collaborates with Brad Pitt on projects around the world; and the Jolie-Pitt Foundation, a charitable institution established to aid humanitarian causes around the world.
A key aspect of the project is its ability to be replicated. MIR is developing a panelization system in which structural insulated panels (SIPs) common to all designs are constructed and stored off site. This standardized system will maximize efficiency and minimize cost, allowing the housing design to be replicated throughout the neighborhood as well as promoting a new universal paradigm of affordable, environmentally responsible home design.
Alcoa Foundation will also support a community-based artistic event in New Orleans designed to raise MIR project funding on a broad scale. The “Make It Right Art Installation Project”–held from December 2, 2007, through January 8, 2008, and symbolically located at the site of the Industrial Canal levee break–is intended to raise local, regional, and national awareness of the issue and maximize overall fundraising to help MIR extend homebuilding benefits beyond the initial goal of rebuilding 150 homes.
More details about MIR can be found at http://www.makeitrightnola.org
(About Alcoa and Alcoa Foundation at link above.)
Felinelilly @ 12/04/2007 at 5:14 pm
I just got the picture of the phone voice in the Peanuts cartoons. Wa…wawa…wawawa…wawa..lol
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Yes, that’d how I picture them, too. That or a bunch of Elmer Fudges “I’ll gwet you Bwrad mmamwwah” lol.
Thank You Jared
# 47 lee @ 12/04/2007 at 3:09 pm
Shiloh is technically African American (afterall, she was born in the motherland)
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Oh, golly, that’s a joke NO ONE has ever made before. Today. No one has made it TODAY. But over the last 18 1/2 months? I’d say it’s been made about 18,000 times a day….
# 87 frank @ 12/04/2007 at 3:39 pm
@ Brad,
of course someone reported you. these fans can’t stand to have anything sully their pristine threads. even if they get your comment deleted, the sentiment is still there….lingering. they just want to live in denial that people can’t stand these media wh*ores. they live in a dream world. freaks really.
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If what you say is true, then why is YOUR comment still on the thread? You sanctimonious twat.
177- Piper:
Daffy Duck or stuttering Porky Pig, take your pick…lmao. Can you see it? :D
# 93 unknown @ 12/04/2007 at 3:43 pm
I second that comment Frank! I am the only one here representing myself, Brad is one person I am one but the loonies like to group things together for better understanding, that’s what happens to limited shut-ins.
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We may be shut-ins, but at least we’re in our own homes…which, unfortunately, you can’t say. And it’s not even like you’re a Katrina victim or any other natural disaster. Technically speaking, you’re not even homeless. If one wants, one can refer to living in certain the facilities of the state or federal gov-o-mint as “home”. After all, that’s why they call if “life”, ain’t it?
182- Passing Through:
OMG, SH!T! :lol:
thank God the regulars are back,i cannot stomach trolls any more
# 122 Felinelilly @ 12/04/2007 at 4:09 pm
105- Passing through:
I tried to help, really I did, but I don’t get stupidese either…
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Well, thanks for trying! Sometimes it’s just best to pretend like you didn’t even see the post…
# 129 janice @ 12/04/2007 at 4:18 pm P
assing Through @ 12/04/2007 at 3:53 pm From the previoius thread…could one of you haters help me out please. I was going to repsond to this post addressed to me on the previous thread…but I don’t speak Stupidese. Would one of you trolls, ShitzySpamboGal for instance, please interpret this gibberish for me? Thanks in advance….
# 782 ???? @ 12/04/2007 at 3:14 pm passing througgh
you always know best.Iread yout posts.OMG.So youn and so much of knowleage?Like it or not-Jhonny Depp is the sexiest man alive.Great actor.Pittypitty would never act like depp.Maybe he has this wide-wide cheecks?I am old (hahahha) but i remember a saying that depp can wear anything and noone is better than jhonny.He is.He is also living life devoted to the family and supporting but he doesnt the world to know.He needs privacy.Thats why he moved to France But joli-look at me -is only talking shi”’t.otherwise she would be gone from usa hollywood and so…
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Oh my…WTF is this? See this is why I say some of the haters aren’t even worth it. Reading and writing are certainly not high on their list of priorities. I refuse to believe that ‘this’ is English. Maybe it was written in code. Forget the haters..this has me intrigued and I’m gonna try and crack it. Give me a minute or two, if all else fails I’m going to run it through Babelfish.
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Hey Janice - I got a kick out of it myself. I was like, “WTF is this moron talking about?” All I really understood was this part -
So youn and so much of knowleage?
Youn = young
knowleage = knowledge
So she thinks I’m young and she thinks I think I know everything. But…HA HA! She’s wrong! I’M OLD AND I KNOW EVERYTHING!!!!! HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA! Who’s got the last laugh now, missy!
Great interview, cant wait to see the entire thing, Thanks JJ, I have two new threads to check out tonight
Ok, here is an article I just found that clearly highlights the difficulty facing n.o.l.a. right now. Another reason that what Brad Pitt is doing really commendable.
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In Mississippi, Poor Lag in Hurricane Aid
By LESLIE EATON
GULFPORT, Miss., Nov. 14 — Like the other Gulf Coast states battered by Hurricane Katrina, Mississippi was required by Congress to spend half of its billions in federal grant money to help low-income citizens trying to recover from the storm.
But so far, the state has spent $1.7 billion in federal money on programs that have mostly benefited relatively affluent residents and big businesses. The money has gone to compensate many middle- and upper-income homeowners, to aid utility companies whose equipment was damaged and to prop up the state’s insurance system.
Just $167 million, or about 10 percent of the federal money, has been spent on programs dedicated to helping the poor, mostly through a smaller grant program for lower-income homeowners.
And while that total will certainly increase, Mississippi has set aside just 23 percent of its $5.5 billion grant money — $1.25 billion — for these programs. About 37 percent of the residents of the state’s coast are low income, according to federal figures.
Mississippi is the only state for which the Bush administration has waived the rule that 50 percent of its Community Development Block Grants be spent on low-income programs, according to the Department of Housing and Urban Development, which administers the program. It is also the only state to ask for such waivers.
State officials, from Gov. Haley Barbour on down, insist that the state does not discriminate by race or income when it hands out aid to storm victims.
“We feel like we have programs in place to address all walks of life,” said Gray Swoope, executive director of the Mississippi Development Authority, which administers the federally financed grant programs.
Any delays in spending money on low-income projects have been caused by the complexity of creating the projects, said Donna Sanford, director of the disaster recovery program for the development authority. The state, Ms. Sanford said, “has done everything that we can to keep it on track and moving as fast as possible to meet the needs of everyone.”
Nonetheless, resentment at being left out of Mississippi’s economic recovery has been stirring in poor communities along the coast, and nowhere more so than in this city, hit hard by Hurricane Katrina’s storm surge, where the state plans to spend $600 million of the federal money to repair and improve its shipping port.
Though the expansion will increase employment here, historically very few port jobs have gone to low-income residents.
Some critics contend that the main interest of state leaders in spending community development dollars is to help big businesses like shipbuilders and casinos and the port.
The state’s spending plan “moves business to the forefront and forgets about the people on the ground,” said Anthony Thompson, pastor at Tabernacle of Faith Ministries, whose spotless church (rebuilt by volunteers) is next to a moldering subsidized housing project that he says has not been touched since the storm.
In his mostly black neighborhood in west Gulfport, Mr. Thompson said, “I see a lot of people waiting on help; I see a lot of houses still damaged.”
State officials say that programs not limited to lower-income residents help them nevertheless.
The aid to utilities helped everyone on the coast, including renters, officials say. And almost a third of the families who got money from the state’s main housing compensation program were low-income, which in Gulfport would mean an annual income of less than $39,000 a year for a family of four.
The nature of that program helps explain the unhappiness in some neighborhoods. It provided grants of up to $150,000 to homeowners who lived outside of the federally defined flood plain and so did not have flood insurance to cover their losses when their houses were swamped by the storm surge.
To be eligible, families had to have carried regular homeowners’ insurance, so that, as the governor said when he was selling the plan to Congress, “we’re not bailing out irresponsible people.”
But advocates for the poor said that requirement barred many of the least affluent, especially retirees and the disabled, who live on fixed incomes. “The fact is, people who have no money choose food and medicine, and not insurance,” said Ashley Tsongas, a policy adviser for the aid group Oxfam America. “That moral superiority doesn’t recognize the reality people face.”
Renters were also excluded from the program, as they were in Louisiana, and homeowners who had wind damage were also not covered. Some federal officials have said Louisiana’s decision to help cover wind losses is one reason its program almost ran out of money.
Two-thirds of Mississippi’s block grants have not yet been spent. In fact, few of the coastal states have spent much of their grant money, with the exception of Louisiana, which has already used almost half of its original allotment and just received an additional $3 billion for its home-rebuilding program.
Because fewer applicants than expected applied for Mississippi’s assistance program, the state still has almost $2 billion left, some of which it plans to use for community development projects and for the port expansion.
The port, at the foot of Gulfport’s main street, flies a Chiquita banner under its American flag; fruit imports remain down but are bouncing back, though exports of frozen poultry have stopped since the storm destroyed the port’s refrigerated warehouses. The state says that the expansion will add about 1,000 jobs over the next five years, and that many of those will be reserved for low-income residents.
But some community advocates are dubious, noting that before the storm only 10 percent of the port jobs went to low-income residents. They also think the cost per job will be too high.
And they note that the port’s own master plan envisions a new tourist and casino development. “It’s not all about bananas,” said Reilly Morse, a lawyer for the Mississippi Center for Justice.
Mr. Morse and many others who oppose the port plan say the state should first ensure that all the families now living in more than 10,000 government trailers have a permanent place to live, that rental housing gets built and that all homeowners can repair their houses.
“I don’t have any problem with economic development and expanding the port, but not at the cost of people,” said James W. Crowell, president of the N.A.A.C.P. branch in Biloxi, just down the beach from Gulfport.
Brent Warr, who became Gulfport’s mayor just months before the storm, called the port expansion “an incredible opportunity for the city,” and said he had been assured that the new facilities would be devoted to maritime use, not to gambling and cruise ships. “We don’t have to make this community about neon and chrome,” he said.
Asked about the frustrations some residents have about the lack of aid in their communities, Mr. Warr said it would take time, because the development authority has to create programs all at once while making sure the money is well spent. “It’s like taking a funnel and packing it so full of money that nothing can come out,” he said.
Dorothy J. McClendon fears that none of that money will reach her east Gulfport neighborhood, Soria City, where she leads a civic group with the modest motto, “Moving Toward a Drug-Free Community.”
Because it is north of the railroad tracks which serve as a sort of levee, the neighborhood did not flood, so residents cannot get state grants, Ms. McClendon said. Few had insurance to cover their wind-damaged roofs; she is sleeping on a couch in her living room because she fears that the water-damaged ceiling in her bedroom is going to fall.
Repairs to public works and economic development projects appear to happening elsewhere; Soria City’s main business is a tiny shop selling sodas and snacks and 25-cent cigarettes. Even the program to help small landlords does not apply to this neighborhood, Ms. McClendon said, because while there are plenty of properties that could be fixed up and rented out, few were occupied right before the storm, as the program requires.
“But we’re here, we’re hurting,” she said. “We need help, too.”
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/11/16/us/16mississippi.html?_r=1&oref=slogin
Apologies if the length of the article was a bit of an eyesore. :-/
I hope that there will be enough interest in MIR’s projects and proposals so that they can expand throughout the whole Gulf Coast.
Clearly the need for assistance is far greater than what the government wants to admit.
Great work!
He look so delicious!
I could just lap him up with a biscuit.
So proud of Brad. They are a beautiful family. Was Angie as strong willed when she was with BBT and JLM? Or did she become stronger after the break ups?
I’m so glad Brad and her are together! LK is trying to catch Brad off guard by asking about getting together when they were working and if they argue! Straight from the tabs! Brad is smarter then him!
They are great!
proud to be a jolie-pitt fan
not a fan of their movie star status but the fact that they work very hard to make positive changes all over the world……but it’s also VERY clear that family is everything to them
bdj @ 12/04/2007 at 5:23 pm
Good news. Thanks for posting. Peace
cj @ 12/04/2007 at 2:56 pm I don’t know if a man can get any hotter than Brad Pitt.
IMO, he just became even more irresistible after he became this family man that we have come to admire these past few years. It really touches my heart to see a man truly in love with his family.
Way to go Brad!
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To be perfectly honest, I dont give a crap when Brad feel in love with Angie, His marriage was over at least 2 and a half years before MMS. The man was deprived of his life long dream of being a Dad. He was disrespected from the start if you as me.
Life is to darn short, and Brad got what he deserved, a wifey that loves him, and respects him. And that other woman, got what she deserve, No worry about children wasting her time when she can be at the spa, and all under Courtney and her family. win win,,, No
now @ 12/04/2007 at 3:00 pm Let`s see how many years he will stay with his family before hanging with another young beautiful woman.
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Please, by all means, I beg you to hold your breath,
bampzs #1 @ 12/04/2007 at 4:31 pm I Love the way he LOVE his children and Angelina.
Brad has a great heart just like Angie together they make a great team.
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You know they say a good woman can bring out the best in a man,, And Angie has indeed done that..
Passing Through @ 12/04/2007 at 5:41 pm
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ROTFLMAO!!!
Here in the Philippines and other South American countries, what would be better for this troll is reclusion perpetua instead of life because -
“1) this troll will suffer lifetime barring from holding public office (w/c in our RPC, life does not)
2) it does not allow pardon or release until the first 30 yrs have been served (although after 40 the sentece ends, whereas life does not have any definite extent or duration of imprisonment and this troll may have parole anytime
3) Unlike life imprisonment, the length of a sentence for reclusión perpetua is an indivisible penalty of 40 years and cannot be altered during sentencing.
HELLO & KAWAY TO ALL THE JP FANS AND MY KABABAYANS….special kaway sa lola (abuela) ni little Bradley.
PROUD TO BE A JOLIE-PITT fan….and amazing, amazing vision and follow-up Brad……you are truly a visionary and a man of action..
lookwhaticando
Life is to darn short, and Brad got what he deserved, a wifey that loves him, and respects him. And that other woman, got what she deserve, No worry about children wasting her time when she can be at the spa, and all under Courtney and her family. win win,,, No
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Exactly !!! I just don’t understand why are the faniston loons still complaining and bickering ? X got what she want , maintaining a life style she always want, obviously, she didn’t want any changes in her life including having kid.
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