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5 Forgotten Celebrity Scandals That Still Haunt Us

5 Forgotten Celebrity Scandals That Still Haunt Us

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In 2000, Angelina Jolie took home two Best Supporting Actress awards for her portrayal of Lisa Rowe in the 1999 film Girl, Interrupted. She then infamously kissed her brother on the lips.
In January, after winning a Golden Globe for her performance, Angelina made headlines for locking lips with her brother James Haven. She continued the love at the 72nd Annual Academy Awards in March, where the two shared a passionate kiss on the red carpet as they wore matching black outfits. Later that night, she took home the Oscar."I'm in shock," Angelina said in her Oscar speech. "And I'm so in love with my brother right now. He just held me and said he loved me, and I know he's so happy for me, and thank you for that." After thanking her parents and others, Angelina went on to shower her brother with love. "Jamie, I have nothing without you. You are the bravest, strongest man I've ever known. Thank you. I love you so much.""Saying I'm 'in love' with him is just an expression," she told Vogue, two years after winning the Oscar. 'What I meant was, in this moment, with all this shit going on, all that matters to me is that guy sitting right there who has stood by me and is so fucking happy for me."
"Matthew McConaughey was arrested in 1999 for getting really high and playing the bongos while naked at 3 a.m." — anonymous
In 1999, Matthew was put in handcuffs for a loud music complaint and resisting arrest, after he was reportedly found naked in his home playing the bongos while smoking a bong.
The incident happened after the University of Texas alum attended a Texas Longhorn football game. He was arrested in Austin, Texas, after police responded to a noise complaint — only to find him naked, playing the bongos (yes, seriously), and dancing around his home in the early hours of the morning. Officers reportedly found some marijuana at the scene, which added to the charges, but honestly, the most memorable part was the image of McConaughey, in full free-spirit mode, bongo-drumming in the buff. He later laughed it off, saying, 'What's wrong with beating on your drums in your birthday suit?' Classic.'What I didn't know was that while I was banging away in my bliss, two Austin policemen also thought it was time to barge into my house unannounced, wrestle me to the ground with nightsticks, handcuff me and pin me to the floor,' Matthew wrote in his memoir.
Before Rocky made him a star, Sylvester Stallone's first movie role was actually the lead in an adult film called The Party at Kitty and Stud's.
In 1970, a then-struggling Stallone starred in a low-budget softcore film called The Party at Kitty and Stud's. He was in his early twenties, broke, and sleeping in a bus station when he landed the role. For $200 for two days' work (and a roof over his head), he played 'Stud,' a very enthusiastic young man in a plot that included light bondage and a dinner party.After Stallone hit it big, the film was re-released — very opportunistically — as Italian Stallion, a nickname that would follow him all the way to the boxing ring.He told Playboy in 1978, 'It was either do that movie or rob someone because I was at the end – at the very end – of my rope. Instead of doing something desperate, I worked two days for $200 and got myself out of the bus station.'
A tale so outrageous it sounds made up, but it's 100% real (and very unfortunate for some unsuspecting tourists).
In August 2004, a tour bus belonging to the Dave Matthews Band was crossing Chicago's Kinzie Street Bridge when the driver decided to empty the bus's septic tank — right into the Chicago River below. The very bad timing? A boat full of tourists was cruising under the bridge at that exact moment. Over 800 pounds of raw sewage came raining down. A literal crapstorm.The band quickly apologized and insisted it was done without their knowledge. They even donated $100,000 to environmental causes and paid fines. But the damage was done — and the story lives in infamy as one of the nastiest (and oddly hilarious, depending on your humor) mishaps in music history.So the next time you visit Chicago, maybe bring an umbrella if you decide to take the open-top boat tours.
Yes, the same Nikola Tesla that Elon Musk named his electric car company after as a way to honor his contributions to electrical engineering.
Serbian-American inventor, engineer, and futurist Nikola Tesla was widely known for being a brilliant and eccentric inventor, but somewhere along the line, he built up a reputation for falling in love with a bird.In his later years, Tesla became more reclusive and isolated, living mostly in hotel rooms and spending time feeding pigeons in a park in New York City. This one particular pigeon stole his heart. But not just any pigeon, a radiant white one with gray-tipped wings that he said would visit him daily through his hotel window, and they'd spend time together in quiet companionship. Tesla claimed he could communicate with her in a way that transcended words and that he loved her 'as a man loves a woman.' He even believed the pigeon loved him back. Tesla said that one night, the pigeon flew in to see him for the last time. Her eyes gleamed like powerful lamps, and he saw a light so bright he believed she was dying. When she passed, Tesla said he felt his life's work was finished, as if her death marked the end of something sacred.
Is there a wild celebrity or Hollywood story that the world seemingly forgot about, but you think about often? Let me know in the comments!

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The Anna Wintour Effect: How To Build An Iconic Brand Legacy In 2025
The Anna Wintour Effect: How To Build An Iconic Brand Legacy In 2025

Forbes

timean hour ago

  • Forbes

The Anna Wintour Effect: How To Build An Iconic Brand Legacy In 2025

Anna Wintour at The 78th Annual Tony Awards held at Radio City Music Hall on June 08, 2025 in New ... More York, New York. (Photo by John Nacion/Variety via Getty Images) Before social media gave leaders an opportunity to brand themselves, I've long said Anna Wintour was leading the conversation. As the legendary Editor-in-Chief of Vogue and global chief content officer of Condé Nast, Wintour spent decades building her brand and shaping the public conversation through sheer taste, quiet control, and unapologetic decision-making. From helping launch Christian Lacroix to championing Michael Kors and Giorgio Armani, her editorial decisions didn't just define fashion—they solidified her status as one of business's most powerful personal brands and one of fashion's most iconic and influential leaders. LONDON, ENGLAND - FEBRUARY 20: Queen Elizabeth II and Anna Wintour attend the Richard Quinn show ... More during London Fashion Week February 2018 on February 20, 2018 in London, England. 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On Virgin, Lorde has never been less certain or more alive
On Virgin, Lorde has never been less certain or more alive

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

On Virgin, Lorde has never been less certain or more alive

When Lorde emerged on the music scene at 16 years old, seemingly fully formed like Athena springing from Zeus's head, preternatural precociousness was part of her appeal. As an old soul immersed in youth culture, the clear-eyed certainty with which she observed her world permeates her early albums. Her knack for putting the exact right words to growing up in the 21st century earned her a cult following of young people who looked to her to make sense of their lives. Even when she rejected this devotion on her last album Solar Power ('If you're looking for a savior, that's not me') she was still a 'prettier Jesus' preaching from a place of self-assuredness, the 'Girl (Who's Seen It All)' and could pass on that wisdom to her followers. Not anymore. On her messy, visceral fourth album, Virgin, Lorde finally manages to take herself off the pedestal. Her immense songwriting talent is still on display, but the lyrics purposely shed the perfect precision of previous work. (Lorde told Rolling Stone that 'in the past, I'm really trying to craft these lyrics. This time I was like, 'No, be smart enough to let it be really basic. Be plain with language and see what happens.'') The result is urgent, immediate, and alive in a way Lorde has never been before—and few of her peers could accomplish. There will be inevitable comparisons to Charli XCX's Brat, which Lorde (who featured on the beloved 'Girl, so confusing' remix) has said influenced her own work. Like Brat, Virgin favors straightforward language and makes dance-pop out of heavy introspection, trading in topics like generational trauma and disordered eating. But Virgin is really a return to the form Lorde herself pioneered on her debut album Pure Heroine; the dark, spare electronic beats of that record had a huge influence on subsequent pop music. Virgin marries that Pure Heroine sensibility with the more naturalistic, acoustic sounds present on Melodrama and Solar Power to surprising effect. 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The album's dedication to viscera emphasizes that she's a real, flesh-and-blood 28-year-old woman, not an ageless, unknowable idol. If there's a fault in Virgin, it's that the hyperspecificity can occasionally render it unrelatable ('Favorite Daughter,' for instance, is relatable in concept, but allusions to the jet-setting lifestyle of a young pop star with a poet mother are pretty unique). That's the price of entry for a project so baldly honest, and a worthwhile one to pay. More often, the specificity is a benefit, like all great songs that use individual experiences as a doorway to universality. Take the affecting 'Clearblue,' which starts particular—'After the ecstasy, testing for pregnancy'—but broadens into an achingly human and beautifully expressed sentiment about how relationships feel like they can change us down to the DNA. Or the gorgeous album closer 'David,' which is so particular to Lorde and her relationship that it name-drops her first album. 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Throughout her career, we've watched Lorde grow up, but from a mysterious remove. Now she invites us deep inside the flawed process of personhood, both profound and mundane, mortal and divine. Virgin is an album so earnestly, painfully vulnerable you can almost see straight through to the blood and guts. It's not always polished or pretty, but it doesn't have to be. It's alive. More from A.V. Club Podcast Canon: Making Gay History is a treasure trove of archival recordings 3 new songs and 3 new albums to check out this weekend Squid Game creator Hwang Dong-hyuk has only read David Fincher rumors "in articles" like the rest of us

Anna Wintour will step down as Vogue editor-in-chief
Anna Wintour will step down as Vogue editor-in-chief

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Anna Wintour will step down as Vogue editor-in-chief

Fashion media's reigning queen is abdicating her throne. Well, one throne, at least: Anna Wintour is stepping down as editor-in-chief of Vogue. The 75-year-old, an iconic figure who has been enshrined all over pop culture (but perhaps most famously in The Devil Wears Prada), has served as the EIC at the American version of the magazine for 37 years. She will remain as Vogue's global editorial director and chief content officer of parent company Condé Nast. Per Variety, Wintour told staffers on Thursday the publication will begin the search for a new head of editorial content. In 2021, Condé implemented a new organizational structure wherein international markets each have a head of editorial content that reports to a global editorial director; the new U.S. role will align with similar positions in the U.K., China, France, Italy, etc. 'Over the last four years Anna's role has exponentially expanded with a global remit across all brands, in addition to the day-to-day editing of American Vogue,' a spokesperson told NBC News. Stepping away from the EIC role 'is expected to give Wintour the ability to devote more time to the magazine's global output, in addition to leading all Condé Nast titles except The New Yorker,' Variety reports. Wintour began her career at Condé as Vogue's first creative director in 1983. She moved on to become the editor-in-chief of British Vogue in 1985. She ultimately succeeded Grace Mirabella as EIC of U.S. Vogue in 1988, and became more or less synonymous with the brand. She's often been parodied for her signature bob haircut and sunglasses, frequently seen sitting in the front row of fashion shows and serving as the chair of the annual Met Gala. Wintour, and the publication of the magazine's most important installment of the year, were the subject of the 2009 documentary The September Issue. More from A.V. Club On Virgin, Lorde has never been less certain or more alive 3 new songs and 3 new albums to check out this weekend James Cameron calls Christopher Nolan's Oppenheimer "a bit of a moral cop out"

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