Why Men Are Settling For Mrs. Good Enough

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YOUTUBE DIVORCE

What’s Up With That A-Rod Guy Anyway?

What’s Up With That A-Rod Guy Anyway?

All the Alex Rodriguez in bite-sized pieces.

Is there too much A-Rod information out there? Couldn't agree more. We've collected the most relevant stories, stats, rumors, and innuendo of the past few days. It's exhausting keeping up with this guy.

YouTube Divorce Granted

YouTube Divorce Granted

Tricia Walsh-Smith is finally free.

A Manhattan judge has upheld the prenup between Tricia Walsh-Smith and Phillip Smith. You may remember Walsh-Smith as the nutty broad that used the video platform YouTube to air her grievances. It did not work out as well as she would have liked.

The YouTube Divorce

The YouTube Divorce

Would you air all your dirty laundry on YouTube?

Tricia plays out her grievances -- who gets the Park Avenue apartment, who gets the house in Florida, who controls the half-a-million per year she's entitled to in her prenup -- in several videos that she has uploaded online. She identifies herself as a "writer/actress/good egg" and the screen flashes the message, "Will poor, vulnerable Tricia be evicted? Or will mean bad husband do the right thing?" As if pixelated debasement was not enough, this chronic over-sharer tells the mag all about the couple's lackluster sex life, arguments over money and their family feuds. (Exhibit A: her husband's child is identified on-screen on YouTube as "nasty, evil stepdaughter.")

The YouTube Divorce Rant

The YouTube Divorce Rant

A new high (or low) has been reached in the world divorce.

It appears the that the bar has either been raised, or lowered depending on your opinion, in terms of airing divorce grievances. A woman, who is about to engage in a high-profile divorce, used YouTube as a platform for get wicked on her husband. Will things ever be the same?