Saturday, December 20, 2025
Home Blog Page 1200

Gossip: Abby Lee Miller Probably Won’t Survive Prison; Why Is Leonardo DiCaprio Wearing a Heart Monitor

Abby Lee Miller opened up about her prison sentence in a new interview airing on Tuesday, July 25.

The former “Dance Moms” star, 50, who began her 366 days behind bars for fraud on Wednesday, July 12, admitted to making many mistakes that contributed to her sentencing. “I probably won’t survive,” she solemnly told “The View’s” Jedediah Bila in the interview filmed before Miller reported to prison.

In the preview, Miller revealed that she panicked upon hearing the guilty verdict. However, although she fears tarnishing her legacy, she’s remaining hopeful. “I gave kids a new life,” the Lifetime star said. “No one can take that away from me. No one.”

As the clip ended, Miller — who announced in March that she was leaving the hit series — owned up to her mistakes: “I’m doing the time. I am taking the blame,” she confirmed.

Here’s the Real Reason Why Leonardo DiCaprio Is Wearing a Heart Monitor

Is Leonardo DiCaprio’s health okay?

The Oscar winner got fans all worried when he was spotted out in New York City with a heart monitor under his shirt over the weekend. The photos quickly raised concerns, though the actor seemed to be in good spirits in paparazzi pictures as he took a stroll around the block with a pals.

According to “Entertainment Tonight,” the 42-year-old is doing fine after visiting a doctor. An insider tells the publication Leo is wearing the device as part of a “routine checkup” in order to stay on top of his health. In fact, Leo — whose so-called “dad bod” has become quite the viral sensation — is reportedly proud of his shape these days.

He was recently overheard boasting his lack of a fitness regimen to models over Fourth of July. “It was a party at this private estate. He was drinking his beer and bragging to these models about how he doesn’t work out,” a source told “Page Six.” “The girls were like, ‘Does he think that’s attractive? It’s not like he’s in Titanic shape anymore.’”

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

5 Ridiculously Embarrassing Public Sex Stories

There’s a little exhibitionist in many of us. The thrill of doing something naughty in a place you’re not supposed to can be a total turn on. But what happens when public sex goes awry?

Recently, Buzzfeed asked its readers, “What’s the funniest thing that’s happened to you during public sex?” And wow, did they deliver. People are horny and unafraid of getting caught, apparently. Out here in from of God and everybody.

Here are some of their most gasp-worthy moments.

Best (or worst) walk of shame award goes to:

The time me and my ex decided to have sex in the elevator at our college. We pushed the stop button in between floors and just started going at it. We could hear the people at the bottom (it was a small shaft) complaining about the elevator being broken and talking and my phone kept ringing. We finished quickly and I answered my phone when I got my pants back up and it was a friend of ours…telling us to turn the elevator back on because he was waiting and they could hear us. We had to ride to the bottom and walk out after everyone heard him call us and they all knew. – trishab42b52cf6c

This one has…. layers:

My girlfriend was meeting my parents for the first time and they decided to go downstairs into the family room, leaving me and her in the living room to watch a movie. Mind you, the movie that was playing was Shrek. One thing led to another, and she decided to go down on me while my parents were downstairs. It was all going fine until I heard my dad coming upstairs. She instantly brought her head up and sat up on the couch, while I threw a blanket over my lap (I wasn’t wearing any clothes waist down). He just checked up on us, and then when he left, we finished the deed. Oh, and on top of that, I orgasmed at almost the precise moment that “I’m A Believer” started playing from the movie. I’m definitely a believer now.

Looking on the sunny side:

I was hooking up with this guy who was also my friend. We were in his car in this what we thought was a vacant parking lot. We were totally Marvin Gayeing it when this woman pulled up. She was in this golf cart looking car with flashing lights and thank god no siren. We found out it was private property. The most mortifying part was because my friend and his lazy ass didn’t want to go to the back seat we were going it at in the drivers seat. I had to get out stark naked and walk around to the passenger seat. Her face read: ” This isn’t the first time this has happened to me.” At least my butt looks good just to end this on a bright note.

A little tourism never hurt anybody:

My boyfriend and I were having sex in a hammock at the Grand Canyon and we thought we were being sneaky about it until we realized the trees were bouncing. Pretty sure I ruined a family’s trip to one of the greatest wonders of the world. – caitlinmaes

But be sure to speak the language:

While in Cancun, I was hooking up with a gorgeous swede on a beach bed. Everything was great until one of the resort security guards shined his light on us and said “no sexo on la playa.” Luckily we were able to hop a fence and continue on the water heater. I’m sorry Mexico. – Julia H

We’re all sorry, Mexico.

This Instagram Account Will Call You Out On Your Fake-Ass Camping Photos

Social media allows outsiders to trick people into believing these curated snapshots constitute the fundamental makeup of their lives. No where is this attitude more pervasive than Instagram. But now some accounts are calling out those who want you to think their lives are cooler than they are. One of the more insidious communities out there on Instagram is the travel blogger community. There are thousands of scenic vistas and gorgeous backdrops that will fill your entire being with envy. Their campsites rest underneath unbelievable night skies or aside awe-inspiring mountain cliffs. But post some fake-ass camping photos on IG and you will be called out.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BRzUdncl_ck/

https://www.instagram.com/p/-15SfVFpSr/

Or did they camp there? A rising Instagram account it @youdidnotsleepthere, which calls out those who “do it for the gram” in the camping world. The account is run by Luisa Jeffrey, an outdoor enthusiast from Portland. She felt called into action following a 21-day adventure when a friend suggested pitching a tent in some crazy locations “for the photos.”

“My friend was like, ‘Let’s set the tent up over here and take a picture,’” the 28-year-old told Field Magazine. “And I was like, ‘What? Why are you doing that?’ And she was like, ‘People do that all the time!’

“I was completely caught off guard and thought it was just the most ridiculous thing ever, but when we got back home I started noticing how much people really do do that, and I started looking at photos wondering if they were actually legit.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/_Ua4KgFpZG/

https://www.instagram.com/p/BVpopfJly0Y/

Taking cues from other accounts with similar ethos like @youdidnoteatthat and @youdidnotskatethat, Jeffrey says she used to scavenge for photos to post. But now she’s flooded with the staged travel pictures that she doesn’t need to do much digging any longer.

As she told Mashable, “I wouldn’t have started the account if I didn’t feel like the whole thing was a joke. There is just such a lack of transparency and honesty about people’s lives on Instagram. And it’s so tired.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/BVKYanjlTHi/?taken-by=youdidnotsleepthere

https://www.instagram.com/p/BTej7jAlsNL/?taken-by=youdidnotsleepthere

How Are Cults Created And Who Joins Them?

With Quentin Tarantino set to write and direct the latest movie to take a stab at the Manson Family murders and the strange sexual allegations that surround R&B singer R. Kelly, cults seem to be at the forefront of everyone’s mind. The topic of cults feed into our morbid curiosity because they’re associated with negative and frightening events. How does a group of people fall under the spell of one person and decide to alter their lifestyle according to what they say? How does one leader have the charisma required to lure people in?

Cults are like religions because they give people a sense of belonging and they give meaning to their lives. They are associated with kooky stuff – like The Beatles and considering someone the second coming of Christ – and they’re not respected by most people because they haven’t withstood the test of time. We can all believe that Jesus walked on water, but we draw the line when a random person says that they can do the same.

A good example of this religion Vs cult argument is the Church of Scientology, which is basically a sci-fi novel (it’s founder, L. Ron Hubbard, was in fact a science fiction and fantasy writer) but it’s considered a religion because it has existed for over 60 years, it’s got its own church with a detailed set of beliefs, and it has more than 10 million followers including Tom Cruise. Scientology can’t be dismissed as a cult, even though one of it’s main beliefs is that man is really an immortal alien called a Thetan.

You might think that a person must be crazy to join a cult and to submit themselves to this lifestyle, but it’s surprisingly simple if they’re young or susceptible enough to fall under someone else’s influence. Cult leaders create their own reality and separate their group from the outside world. By creating this divide, they make their followers believe that they’re the ones who hold the truth and that they’re right, while the rest of the world is wrong. Does this ring any bells with any of your religious beliefs? 

Most of us come from some sort of religious background, be that catholicism, judaism, or the muslim faith. These religions already have some stories that defy nature and that explore the supernatural. Charming cult leaders take this and exploit it, providing their own version of miracles and their own spin on these tales that fosters their god-like image and create devotion from their followers.

Sadly, most cult leaders exploit and prey upon other people’s weaknesses, which is why cults are associated with so many controversies and tragedies. The only way to prevent these is to have the necessary knowledge and to know when someone’s full of shit. 

Gossip: Beyoncé Is Already Working On Next Album; Porn Traffic Plummets During GoT Premiere

On this week’s episode of The B. Scott Show podcast, B. Scott dropped a few exclusive tidbits about Beyoncé’s upcoming album!

“I’ve been hearing that Beyoncé is currently working on her next album. She is, in fact, trying to gather different producers and stuff to work with. She’s already having discussions about what her look is going to be for the next album. She already has a direction in mind and she’s been bouncing images around to people about what she would like to do or what she thinks the next look should be. Which makes sense — because Coachella will be here before you know it!”

Well, alright! What would you like to see more of from Beyoncé on this next album?

Porn Traffic Plummets During GoT Premiere

Pornhub’s statisticians found that across the United States, traffic to Pornhub was down by 4.5 percent during the premiere episode.

That’s a considerable change in visitors as Sunday night is one of the most popular times for people to visit Pornhub, and greater than the 4.0 percent drop we recorded during the first episode of Season 6 in April of 2016.

Love the fresh dirt we bring over daily from Naughty Gossip? Let us know in the comments!

What Just Changed About Massachusetts’ Marijuana Bill?

A little less than one year before legal marijuana officially opens for business in Massachusetts, lawmakers in the House and Senate have agreed upon legislation that changes some aspects of the new law.

Both the House and Senate came up with ideas for this “compromise,” however, on the Senate side, these changes were met with opposition by legalization activists. As it stands now, and will likely soon pass, the bill is literally a compromise between the two sides and puts some tricky hoops in place for citizens to jump through.

The most jarring of these changes is the ability for cities and towns to ban all things cannabis in their region. If the proposed bill passes, a town’s law enforcement will be able to implement a ban if the people of said town voted “No” in the majority against legalization. Granted, these towns and cities are in the minority, but this can clearly lead to enforcement confusion, inadvertent law breaking for Massachusetts residents not aware they’re in a “dry” area and property values could spike or drop, depending on the state’s temperature as a whole.

The bill also states that even if the town or city voted to legalize in the majority, they can still ban pot shops and sales on their own accord, just not via local law enforcement. Again, this could lead to mass confusion.

The taxes were another contention. Originally voted in at 12 percent, which is on the low side comparatively with other legal states, the House proposed a hike to 28%, concerning some that people would simply return to the black market. The Senate, on the other hand, proposed no change, so, being the compromise bill that it is, they landed smack dab in the middle at 20 percent.

Finally, regulation was tweaked and prodded in the new bill. The original law called for a three member board called the Cannabis Control Commission. It is the board’s job to come up with rules regarding marijuana packaging, production, violations and fairness among other concerns and details.

The House and Senate agreed that the board should be raised to a five person panel, with government appointed members, much like their casino regulatory board.

Though many voters believe the original law stood on its own and needed no compromise, this new bill has been fast tracked and the new changes are likely imminent. Luckily, legalization proponents seem fairly satisfied with the results – for now.

Cannabis Cigarettes Can Soon Be Purchased At These Supermarkets

This month in Switzerland you will be able to buy legal cannabis at your local supermarket. Okay, we’ll explain. The product in question is being labeled the world’s first hemp cigarette and is produced by the independent cigarette company Heimat.

Thanks to Switzerland’s cannabis laws, which states products can contain up to 1 percent of THC, these hemp cigarettes fit under the legal limit. Starting July 24, Heimat’s hemp cigarettes will be sold in Coop, one of Switzerland’s largest supermarket chains. According to its Swiss manufacturers, it will become the “first and only cigarette containing cannabis that is sold in a regular supermarket.”

The cigarettes contain both hemp and cannabidiol (CBD). Because of the Swiss limitations of THC allowed, the cigarettes will have 20 percent CBD, the supposed right amount to experience the health benefits of CBD. According to USA TODAY, the cigarettes will include four grams of THC in a pack of 20. That pack will run you around $20 and can also be purchased online.

Here is how Heimat describes the taste:

[…] the natural tobacco-and-hemp blend develops a bouquet of mild, sweet and spicy aromas when smoked, exuding the unmistakable scent of cannabis.

You may be curious to try such a product. But the company emphasizes that this is for Switzerland usage only. As the company writes on its website, “Heimat Tabak & Hanf cigarettes can be consumed legally wherever smoking is permitted—in Switzerland, in any case. The cigarettes should not be taken abroad, as this may result in prosecution due to the differences in the permissible THC limits in other countries.”

Of course you can buy similar products in dispensaries in states that have legalized marijuana. But in America, you likely won’t see any hemp cigarettes anytime soon.

An In-Depth Comparison Between Cannabis And Opioids

Cannabis has been used since 4000 BC and in the 1990s, opioid prescriptions took off. But what really is the difference between cannabis and opioids?

Cannabis has been used to treat ailments since 4000 BC. Despite its abilities to offer relief for those in pain, this drug became demonized and criminalized beginning in the early 20th century. Conversely, in the 1990s, opioid prescriptions took off, leading to an epidemic of dependency and overdoses. Until this time, chronic pain was severely untreated. But what really is the difference between cannabis and opioids?

Cannabis has been proven to alleviate chronic pain without the health risks posed by opioids. Our team at Apollo Cannabis Clinic created the below infographic, “Cannabis Vs. Opioids,” to offer an in-depth comparison between these two drugs – and ultimately offer an alternative to opioids.

Infographic via NJ News Network

For more cannabis business coverage, visit the MJ News Network

This Rehab Clinic Lets Patients Smoke Marijuana

The non-conventional practice certainly has its detractors.

A Los Angeles drug rehabilitation clinic is offering a radical approach for patients wanting to kick a dangerous addiction. It’s called Cannabis-Inclusive Treatment and the controversial program is making headlines across the country for allowing patients to smoke marijuana.

High Sobriety provides a “a spectrum of treatment alternatives for individuals who have been previously unable to stop using alcohol and/or other drugs after attending traditional abstinence-based settings,” according to its website.

The New York Times features the clinic on Monday. Times reporter Matt Richtel describes the experience:

In almost any other rehab setting in the country, smoking pot would be a major infraction and a likely cause for being booted out. But here at High Sobriety — the clinic with a name that sounds like the title of a Cheech and Chong comeback movie — it is not just permitted, but part of the treatment.

The new clinic is experimenting with a concept made possible by the growing legalization of marijuana: that pot, rather than being a gateway into drugs, could be a gateway out.

Dr. Mark Wallace, chairman of the division of pain medicine in the department of anesthesia at the University of California, San Diego, told the Times that over the last five years he has used marijuana to help several hundred patients transition off opiates.

“The majority of patients continue to use it,” he said of marijuana. But he added that they tell him of the opiates: “I feel like I was a slave to that drug. I feel like I have my life back.”

The non-conventional practice certainly has its detractors. “It’s an affront to evidence-based treatment and it has no place in recovery,” Kevin Sabet, a drug policy consultant told Addiction Professional last month.

The Los Angeles clinic says its main goal is to prevent relapse. According to the website:

At High Sobriety, our first and foremost goal is to eliminate the risk of death from drug use. Cocaine, heroin, methamphetamine, pharmaceuticals, and other street drugs all have a lethal dose. Leading the death toll, killing more than all others combined, is alcohol. Cannabis has no known lethal dose. The simple truth is eliminating drugs with a lethal dose and using a drug with no lethal dose is a massive improvement, life improving, and life saving. For generations we have been told that cannabis is a “gateway” drug, at High Sobriety, we believe it is an exit drug.  A medical protocol that can aid the minimization of harm and elimination of use of drugs with a lethal dose. With comprehensive mental health treatment, people can live happier and safer lives by switching from egregious, lethal drugs to safer, cannabis, creating space for strides and improvements in all areas of life.

And there is a growing body of evidence suggesting that cannabis may, indeed, be an exit drug. States that legalized medical marijuana report treating far fewer opioid users, according to a new study.

Hospitalization rates for opioid dependence and abuse dropped on average 23 percent in states after cannabis was regulated for medicinal purposes. Hospitalization rates for opioid overdoses dropped 13 percent.

The fear perpetrated by anti-cannabis advocates that legalized weed would lead to more cannabis-related hospitalizations is simply unfounded, according to the report in Drug and Alcohol Dependence.

“Medical marijuana laws may have reduced hospitalizations related to opioid pain relievers,” said study author Yuyan Shi, a professor at the University of California, San Diego. “This study and a few others provided some evidence regarding the potential positive benefits of legalizing marijuana to reduce opioid use and abuse, but they are still preliminary,” she added.

Instances Of Millennial Bashing In Medieval Times

As a millennial and a teacher of millennials, I’m growing weary of think pieces blaming my generation for messing everything up.

The list of ideas, things and industries that millennials have ruined or are presently ruining is very long: cereal, department stores, the dinner date, gambling, gender equality, golf, lunch, marriage, movies, napkins, soap, the suit and weddings. In true millennial fashion, compiling lists like this has already become a meme.

A common thread in these hit pieces is the idea that millennials are lazy, shallow and disruptive. When I think of my friends, many of whom were born in the 1980s, and my undergraduate students, most of whom were born in the 1990s, I see something different. The millennials I know are driven and politically engaged. We came of age after the Iraq War, the Great Recession and the bank bailout – three bipartisan political disasters. These events were formative, to an extent that those who remember the Vietnam War might not realize.

The idea that young people are ruining society is nothing new. I teach medieval English literature, which gives ample opportunity to observe how far back the urge to blame younger generations goes.

The most famous medieval English author, Geoffrey Chaucer, lived and worked in London in the 1380s. His poetry could be deeply critical of the changing times. In the dream vision poem “The House of Fame,” he depicts a massive failure to communicate, a kind of 14th-century Twitter in which truths and falsehoods circulate indiscriminately in a whirling wicker house. The house is – among other things – a representation of medieval London, which was growing in size and political complexity at a then-astounding rate.

Winner and Waster,” an English alliterative poem probably composed in the 1350s, expresses similar anxieties. The poet complains that beardless young minstrels who never “put three words together” get praised. No one appreciates old-fashioned storytelling any more. Gone are the days when “there were lords in the land who in their hearts loved / To hear poets of mirth who could invent stories.”In a different poem, “Troilus and Criseyde,” Chaucer worries that future generations will “miscopy” and “mismeter” his poetry because of language change. Millennials might be bankrupting the napkin industry, but Chaucer was concerned that younger readers would ruin language itself.

William Langland, the elusive author of “Piers Plowman,” also believed that younger poets weren’t up to snuff. “Piers Plowman” is a psychedelic religious and political poem of the 1370s. At one point, Langland has a personification named Free Will describe the sorry state of contemporary education. Nowadays, says Free Will, the study of grammar confuses children, and there is no one left “who can make fine metered poetry” or “readily interpret what poets made.” Masters of divinity who should know the seven liberal arts inside and out “fail in philosophy,” and Free Will worries that hasty priests will “overleap” the text of the mass.

On a larger scale, people in 14th-century England began worrying that a new bureaucratic class was destroying the idea of truth itself. In his book “A Crisis of Truth,” literary scholar Richard Firth Green argues that the centralization of the English government changed truth from a person-to-person transaction to an objective reality located in documents.

Today we might see this shift as a natural evolution. But literary and legal records from the time reveal the loss of social cohesion felt by everyday people. They could no longer rely on verbal promises. These had to be checked against authoritative written documents. (Chaucer himself was part of the new bureaucracy in his roles as clerk of the king’s works and forester of North Petherton.)

In medieval England, young people were also ruining sex. Late in the 15th century, Thomas Malory compiled the “Morte d’Arthur,” an amalgam of stories about King Arthur and the Round Table. In one tale, Malory complains that young lovers are too quick to jump into bed.

“But the old love was not so,” he writes wistfully.

If these late medieval anxieties seem ridiculous now, it’s only because so much human accomplishment (we flatter ourselves) lies between us and them. Can you imagine the author of “Winner and Waster” wagging a finger at Chaucer, who was born into the next generation? The Middle Ages are misremembered as a dark age of torture and religious fanaticism. But for Chaucer, Langland and their contemporaries, it was the modern future that represented catastrophe.

These 14th- and 15th-century texts hold a lesson for the 21st century. Anxieties about “kids these days” are misguided, not because nothing changes, but because historical change cannot be predicted. Chaucer envisioned a linear decay of language and poetry stretching into the future, and Malory yearned to restore a (make-believe) past of courtly love.

But that’s not how history works. The status quo, for better or worse, is a moving target. What’s unthinkable to one era becomes so ubiquitous it’s invisible in the next.

Millennial bashers are responding to real tectonic shifts in culture. But their response is just a symptom of the changes they claim to diagnose. As millennials achieve more representation in the workforce, in politics and in media, the world will change in ways we can’t anticipate.

The ConversationBy then, there will be new problems and a new generation to take the blame for them.

Eric Weiskott is an Assistant Professor of English at Boston College
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Don't Miss Your Weekly Dose of The Fresh Toast.

Stay informed with exclusive news briefs delivered directly to your inbox every Friday.

We respect your privacy. Unsubscribe anytime.