infolinks
Monday, October 28, 2013
I am looking for a good time
Friday, June 29, 2012
Channing Tatum: Looking sexy is hard
The hunky actor stars in Magic Mike alongside Matthew McConaughey and Matt Bomer. The film follows a group of male strippers and Channing has revealed how hard it is to constantly exude sexiness.
"It's harder than anyone thinks for guys to be sexy... Girls can just do it, just walking.... Guys, it's not the same thing. Especially when you put them in a thong," he told the Los Angeles Times. "Everything you're trying to do to be sexy makes you look like a clown. I challenge any guy to go and try to be sexy to his girl. It's a very humbling experience."
Channing, a former exotic dancer himself, reveals a lot of flesh in the upcoming semi-autobiographical movie. Despite his former profession, the 32-year-old star is not always comfortable with getting his toned torso out in front of a crowd.
"You get in at 18, and halfway through 19 you look around and you're like, 'Man, I don't want to do this,'" he explained.
"I never really enjoyed taking my clothes off. That was a weird thing. I really enjoyed the dancing, the performance of it all, the craziness of the life. But I would always take my pants off and run off stage."
© Cover MediaWednesday, April 18, 2012
Nude Leotards, Sexy Feathers—Is Anyone Looking Out for the Dance Moms' Kids!?

Are there rules surrounding the children on reality TV shows? It seems like the girls on Dance Moms need an advocate.?
—Kittykapow, via Twitter
Yes, child, there are rules, and not just the kind involving what shade of body glitter matches which tone of vaguely sexual nude leotard. As lawless as it might seem out there in the Dance Mom Wild West, what with rugrats dressed up as randy Vegas showgirls, there is, apparently, someone on set who's supposed to look after the kids:
TOO MUCH TOO SOON? Did Dance Moms Go Too Far?
And that person is a studio teacher. In showbiz, studio teachers are hired to take care of minors while on set—make sure they learn their school lessons and get their juice boxes. Depending on the state, studio teacher duties can range from simple education to more involved monitoring—protecting a kid's general welfare or morals, for example.
The Collins Avenue production team behind Dance Moms tells me that there is such a guardian on set while the show is being filmed.
"Dance Moms adheres to state labor laws and standards in every state where the show is produced, including providing tutorial services to the cast featured on the show," Collins Avenue head Jeff Collins tells me. "In fact, we travel with a full-time tutor to ensure the children have a representative on the set."
The Dance Moms studio is based in Pennsylvania; the labor law there requires a tutor for child performers. Where the on-set teacher was when the moppets were being trussed up like Lady Marmalade in see-through burlesque get-ups, I can't tell you. But a studio teacher was there, all right.
THE SOUP: They've Been Watching Dance Moms, Too
"Requirements are there be one tutor for every 10 children," Collins tells me, "and Dance Moms falls well under that number."
So could a studio teacher have put the kibosh on some of the racier scenes in Dance Moms? Can we blame a studio teacher for the latest pink feather tease?
Probably not. In fact, it's quite possible that the tutor has no say in what the kids wear or how they are portrayed on camera, as long as state labor laws are met. That's according to Toni Casala, founder and president of Children in Film, a company that advises producers on child showbiz laws in all 50 states.
"When a teacher does have the power to look out for the welfare of the child, that teacher still has to leave most judgments to the child's family," Casala tells this B!tch. "If the teacher shows concern about bad language on the set, the parent can just say, ‘My kid hears those bad words every day'."
And if a parent, say, insists that sexy flamingo get-ups are A-OK, well, chances are, there's not much a studio teacher can do about it either.
WELL, AT LEAST THE KIDS AREN'T KILLING EACH OTHER: Right, Hunger Games Cast?
Monday, March 26, 2012
Nude Leotards, Sexy Feathers—Is Anyone Looking Out for the Dance Moms' Kids!?

Are there rules surrounding the children on reality TV shows? It seems like the girls on Dance Moms need an advocate.?
—K. Fulgieri, via Twitter
Yes, child, there are rules, and not just the kind involving what shade of body glitter matches which tone of vaguely sexual nude leotard. As lawless as it might seem out there in the Dance Mom Wild West, what with rugrats dressed up as randy Vegas showgirls, there is, apparently, someone on set who's supposed to look after the kids:
TOO MUCH TOO SOON? Did Dance Moms Go Too Far?
And that person is a studio teacher. In showbiz, studio teachers are hired to take care of minors while on set—make sure they learn their school lessons and get their juice boxes. Depending on the state, studio teacher duties can range from simple education to more involved monitoring—protecting a kid's general welfare or morals, for example.
The Collins Avenue production team behind Dance Moms tells me that there is such a guardian on set while the show is being filmed.
"Dance Moms adheres to state labor laws and standards in every state where the show is produced, including providing tutorial services to the cast featured on the show," Collins Avenue head Jeff Collins tells me. "In fact, we travel with a full-time tutor to ensure the children have a representative on the set."
The Dance Moms studio is based in Pennsylvania; the labor law there requires a tutor for child performers. Where the on-set teacher was when the moppets were being trussed up like Lady Marmalade in see-through burlesque get-ups, I can't tell you. But a studio teacher was there, all right.
THE SOUP: They've Been Watching Dance Moms, Too
"Requirements are there be one tutor for every 10 children," Collins tells me, "and Dance Moms falls well under that number."
So could a studio teacher have put the kibosh on some of the racier scenes in Dance Moms? Can we blame a studio teacher for the latest pink feather tease?
Probably not. In fact, it's quite possible that the tutor has no say in what the kids wear or how they are portrayed on camera, as long as state labor laws are met. That's according to Toni Casala, founder and president of Children in Film, a company that advises producers on child showbiz laws in all 50 states.
"When a teacher does have the power to look out for the welfare of the child, that teacher still has to leave most judgments to the child's family," Casala tells this B!tch. "If the teacher shows concern about bad language on the set, the parent can just say, ‘My kid hears those bad words every day'."
And if a parent, say, insists that sexy flamingo get-ups are A-OK, well, chances are, there's not much a studio teacher can do about it either.
WELL, AT LEAST THE KIDS AREN'T KILLING EACH OTHER: Right, Hunger Games Cast?
Monday, December 26, 2011
Hot looking girl at the beach
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