50/50: Getting Cheated On While Ill With Cancer Sounds Awful
We've all worried — some of us more seriously than others — if we're going to die alone. In the movie 50/50, it's not really a joke.
We've all worried — some of us more seriously than others — if we're going to die alone. In the movie 50/50, it's not really a joke.
According to Us Weekly, Seth Rogen, 29, married his longtime girlfriend, writer Lauren Miller, at Kunde Estate in Sonoma, California over the weekend! Rogen's acting buddies like Jonah Hill, Paul Rudd, Craig Robinson, Judd Apatow, Leslie Mann and more looked on as a female rabbi officiated the wedding ceremony, which was situated on a hill overlooking the beautiful wine country. After the vows, the bride and groom drove off in a convertible, en route to the reception.
If you were to scan the news headlines over the past few months, the primary message you would glean about men in America would be this: They are failing. Failing to become adults; failing to be financially independent; failing as fathers; failing as husbands. It’s enough to make a girl like myself throw her hands up in the air and vow to be single for the rest of her life. Yet, the more I read, the more I start to wonder: whose standards are we going by here? And what if all these statistics about men in their 20’s and 30’s living lives of self-indulgent abandon, delaying marriage, and being neglectful fathers aren’t nearly as black and white as they seem? What if there’s more going on beneath the surface, and what about all the men who don’t fall into those categories? The ones who are involved fathers, devoted husbands, and successful career men. Isn’t it high time we gave them a little bit of press?
By Alex V. of The Urban Dater Reality. If reality was an actual person, I’d probably punch it in the neck. Why? Sometimes, or most times (depending on how much baby Jesus thinks I suck) reality really is a jerk. Only sometimes, though.
Comic actor Seth Rogen made like one of his signature characters when he bumbled through a sweet-but-hilarious proposal to his longtime girlfriend Lauren Miller. He charged into the closet to propose to her (don't people usually burst out of those?) and found his lady love in an unexpected state of the half-naked kind.
And another Hollywood star bites the dust: Green Hornet star, Seth Rogen proposed to his girlfriend, Lauren Miller, who, unfortunately for anyone with a crush on the comedian, said "yes". So who is Lauren Miller, and what makes a guy, who can pretty much get any girl now that he's a huge star and dropped some serious lbs, put a ring on her lucky finger?
Celebs are under constant pressure to look their very best, and even though what's attractive is entirely subjective, the general opinion is that "the very best" equals "the very thinnest." And while it may seem that that pressure to be skinny is only directed at women, men feel it too. But we hope the following 7 guys don't change a thing, because we love them just the way they are: cuddly and cute!
Earlier this month, Jennifer Love Hewitt told Lopez Tonight that she once decorated her ladygarden with Swarovski Crystals. Normally, we'd say, "TMI," but after hearing about other celebrities' pubic hair preferences, we're not particularly surprised:
In the first episode of Entourage this season, Turtle is utterly confused by the premise of Knocked Up. Implicitly, we're told a sense of humor and, ultimately, a heart-of-gold do the trick but lots of inquiring minds find this to be a specious premise. Is this reasonable? Is a sense of humor really the end-all be-all for most women?
Zack and Miri Make a Porno: sweet love story of two aimless twentysomethings drawn together by a low-budget porno -- or a meditation on the difference between f*cking and making love?
Seth Rogen has come out. (No, not out of that closet! But let's face it: the nice guys never make the tabloids!) More literally, the "Knocked Up" star has come out of hiding as a fro-rockin, chubby –but always charming– geek to reveal his leaner, greener self; his weight loss served as preparation for his upcoming role as lead in the big screen adaptation of "The Green Hornet", according to a Celebitchy report. "I certainly don't feel like a movie star – not in this body anyway," Rogen told the UK’s "Independent" in September. "I think when you do comedy, you play by a different set of rules. No one really wants you to be in that good shape. Being in good shape implies a level of vanity that isn't necessarily funny." Well, we still think he's funny. And that he's never looked better.