7 Celeb Moms Who Adopted As Single Mothers [PHOTOS]
Recently, new research revealed that even if a woman never gets married, there's still a 44 percent chance that she will have a baby at some point in her life.
Recently, new research revealed that even if a woman never gets married, there's still a 44 percent chance that she will have a baby at some point in her life.
By KB in NYC We all know that dating is a minefield, right? But here’s the thing; getting older doesn’t help. A lot of 40-year-old men only want to date 25-year-olds. And here’s why: a woman in her 30′s or 40′s knows what she wants. She’s been around the block a few times, and she’s less willing to compromise. She’s less easily impressed and she is, in a word, more discerning.
By Jenna Barbieri This weekend at The Times Center in Manhattan, famous legends of film, theater, music and dance will join together to express their shared love for the arts at the 10th Anniversary of Arts & Leisure Weekend. Kicking off the spectacular event tonight will be none other than two-time Academy Award-winning actor-director-producer, Kevin Spacey.
With Jennifer Aniston's new single-mom-by-choice comedy, The Switch, getting Bill O'Reilly all het up about how single mothers are destroying America, we decided to take a look at some famous single mothers who decided to embark on the tough and rewarding job that is parenthood by themselves.
There are a lot of reasons why Lance Armstrong and Sheryl Crow might have called it quits. His not-quite-ex-wife. Her touring schedule. Those garish, if not well-intended yellow rubber bracelets. The fact that she sang a duet with Kid Rock. And yet, when the Grammy-award winning singer and seven-time Tour de France champion/cancer survivor finally threw in the towel — after two and a half years of working out, working the red carpet, and working for a cure — it was actually due to something far less glitzy and a lot more human: Crow's 43-year-old biological clock.
Lance Armstrong proposes to pregnant girlfriend, Anna Hansen.