Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Kelly Rowland Is Engaged (And It Happened on Skype!)
Fans had a hunch that singer Kelly Rowland would be headed down the aisle soon after spotting beautiful new bling on her left hand ring finger back in November, and it looks like the rumors are true.
In an interview for The Queen Latifah Show, the X Factor judge confirmed that she and her manager Tim Witherspoon got engaged over Skype when he proposed to her while she was in Bulgaria. The interview will run on Wednesday, reports E! News.
"He put a ring on it," says Rowland. "We've kept it very, very low – for years, to be completely honest."
She can say that again! Their proposal may have been long distance, but that didn’t make it any less romantic.
"It was so late, I remember we were both just kinda like, honestly, just staring at each other,” Rowland adds. “And he asked me, and it was just that simple to say yes. I was like, 'I got my best friend to ride through life with.' He really is my best friend."
Although the low-key couple likes to stay out of the spotlight, we’re hoping to see more of them around as they prepare to say “I do.”
Congrats, you two. Leave your well wishes for the happy couple below!
Mega Millions Jackpot Climbs To $586 Million
DES MOINES, Iowa (AP) - The Mega Millions jackpot soared to $586 million on Monday amid a frenzy of ticket purchases, a jump that pushed the prize closer to the $656 million U.S. record set last year.
Paula Otto, executive director of the Virginia Lottery and
Mega Millions' lead director, said ticket sales are ahead of
projections for Tuesday's drawing, increasing the likelihood that the
record could fall by then. If the prize goes unclaimed for a 22nd
consecutive drawing, the next one likely would shatter the record, set
in March 2012, she said.
"I think we'll be very close to the record, and maybe even surpass it," Otto said, adding that sales are difficult to predict.
That was enough for Drew Gentsch to play one ticket Monday
morning. The attorney from Des Moines never plays, but the jackpot was
too good to pass up.
"I think it's ridiculous but you have to dream big," he
said. "The odds of winning are so low, there's no real reason to play.
But it's fun to do so once in a while."
Between 65 and 75 percent of the roughly 259 million
possible number combinations will be in play when the numbers are drawn,
Otto estimated. She said the jackpot may be increased one more time on
Tuesday morning in advance of the evening drawing.
"Lotto players are procrastinators. They tend to buy on the day of the draw," she said.
No ticket matched the six numbers needed to win Friday's
$425 million prize. The jackpot was raised Saturday to $550 million
before Monday's jump to $586 million. It is currently the fourth-largest
jackpot in U.S. history.
Some players were taken aback by the growing jackpot and the possibility that it could keep getting bigger.
"It gets the excitement up, but there's a point when it's
too much," said Justiniano Pahl, who works in human resources. "$5
million would be good; $550 million would be good. Either one would
change your life."Natali Justiniano Pahl, 47, bought five tickets from a
convenience store in downtown Des Moines. She said the growing jackpot
made her excited, albeit somewhat weary.
I Was Married To A Real 'Wolf Of Wall Street'
"The Wolf Of Wall Street" doesn't hit theaters until December 25, but one ex-wife is opening up about what it was like being married to the real-life "wolf"'s right-hand man.
In a recent article in the New York Post, Nancy Porush gives us a glimpse into her relationship with ex-husband Danny Porush, who is portrayed by Jonah Hill in the film.
"I saw him morph from a nice wholesome guy into showy narcissist whom I hardly recognized anymore," Nancy told the paper of Danny's transition to a stock swindler in the mid-'90s.
Alongside Jordan Belfort, Danny co-founded the Long Island brokerage house Stratton Oakmont and used a “pump and dump” scheme to scam Wall Street investors out of $200 million before both were eventually prosecuted and sent to prison.
Though Nancy said the man she married in 1986 was the kind of guy "whose idea of a good time had once been grilling in the backyard with a beer in his hand," that quickly changed as Danny became more involved in the investing scam and the "frat-house lifestyle" spearheaded by Belfort.
"Danny changed with money; he’d frequently stay out late at night, saying he had a business meeting in the city that he couldn’t get out of. I was a young mom with two babies," Nancy told the paper. "'I’m not stupid or naive -- but I really didn’t know what was going on. I was home watching 'Sesame Street' with our sons."
The con eventually caught up with Belfort and Porush, though. In 1999, after being investigated by the Securities & Exchange Commission, Danny pleaded guilty to security fraud and money laundering and was sentenced to 39 months in prison. (Belfort, too, was convicted of securities fraud and served 22 months in prison before being released in 2006.)
Danny got out of prison in 2004 and now lives in a multi-million dollar mansion in Boca Raton with his current wife, whom he left Nancy for even after she'd stuck by his side throughout his criminal case.
Because Nancy failed to realize her husband was putting assets in her name as part of his defrauding scheme, she considers herself one of his victims.
"There were many victims Danny defrauded -- but I was one of them. And the government validated that. Legally, I too was a victim," Nancy said. "I sold off everything to support my family -- teaching yoga and pilates, selling clothes, skin care, anything to provide for the kids... I got nothing, not even alimony, and I didn’t want anything -- I just wanted out."
Nancy isn't the only one telling the her story in light of the film's upcoming release. In an interview with MotherJones.com, Danny himself talked about seeing his life portrayed on the big screen and took issue with the wild exploits -- sale-room parties with strippers and chimpanzees, threeways -- portrayed in the film, which is based Belfort's memoir.
"Stratton was like a fraternity," Porush told the website. "A lot of goofing around, hazing -- but the worst we ever did was shave somebody's head and then pay 'em ten grand for it."
2 Ohio kidnapping survivors ink book deals
Missing Women Found
NEW YORK (AP) - Two of the three Ohio women held captive for years in a Cleveland house have a book deal. Viking announced Monday that it has acquired the planned book by Amanda Berry and Gina DeJesus. The book is currently untitled and is scheduled to come out in 2015.
Berry and DeJesus are working with Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington Post reporters Mary Jordan and Kevin Sullivan. Negotiations were handled by Washington attorney Robert Barnett, whose clients have ranged from President Barack Obama to Amanda Knox.
Berry, DeJesus and Michelle Knight were rescued in May and their kidnapper, Ariel Castro, was arrested and eventually sentenced to life in prison. He was found hanged in his cell in September.
Knight is working on her own memoir, which Weinstein Books plans to publish next spring.
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