If a picture is worth a thousand words, then Dianna Agron's date with Harold Ancart speaks volumes.
The Glee alum and the Belgian painter looked very loved up as they stepped out together on Nov. 7. Clad in a tan trench coat, cropped black trousers and dark flats, Dianna was seen holding hands with Harold—who was stylishly dressed in a white button-down, khakis and red loafers—during a shopping trip in New York City.
At one point during their day out, the couple stopped on the sidewalk and Harold leaned in for a sweet kiss.
Comedian Martin Lawrence's fiancée Roberta Moradfar and eldest daughter Jasmine cheered him on as he received the Luminary trophy at the 28th Annual Bounce Trumpet Awards inside Hollywood's Dolby Theatre on Wednesday.
At 54, the German-born, Maryland-raised star is 16 years older than the aesthetics nurse practitioner - whom he popped the question to way back on March 31, 2017.
Martin dazzled the red carpet in a black velvet tuxedo over a matching turtleneck and patent leather loafers.
There are too many! Maybe you heard, but this Friday Iron Man 2 comes out. Last Friday, Paper Man was released. February had The Wolfman; March, Repo Man. At the tail end of 2009, A Serious Man and A Single Man joined the Oscar race. Later this year, there will be Solitary Man, Extra Man and the documentary Winnebago Man. Well, gee, that’s a whole lot of movies with the word man in the title!
Steve-O. Steve-O, the still-mischievous Jackass alum, has a comedy special out later this week — he promises you’ll get some of the new stand-up Steve-O, mixed with some of the old stunt-driven Steve-O. (Though, the latter is slightly more cautious these days.) While promoting the project in a recent interview with GQ, Steve-O discussed his electrifying act, revisited the early years of his fame and substance abuse, and revealed why he’s still doing (at least somewhat) insane things.
Religion This article is more than 9 years oldThis article is more than 9 years oldAlex Malarkey co-wrote a bestselling book about a near-death experience – and then last week admitted he made it up. So why wasn’t anyone listening to a quadriplegic boy and a mother who simply wanted the truth to be heard?
When he wrote a blogpost in 2012, complaining about the explosively popular genre of books about near-death experiences, the evangelical writer and editor Phil Johnson did not know what he was getting into.