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Ariana Grande Had the Best Response to Reports of a $1.5 Million Tattoo-Removal Offer


You might have heard that Ariana Grande had a slight ink mishap last week. She wanted to get a tattoo on her palm that said “7 Rings”—the name of her new single—in Japanese kanji. But some of the significance was, uh, lost in translation. The tattoo translated to “shichirin,” which means “small Japanese barbecue grill.” Delicious, but not really what Grande was going for.

The error made news, but Grande was characteristically chill about the whole incident—she even owned up to the mistake in a tweet. “Indeed, I left out ‘つの指’ which should have gone in between,” Grande tweeted. “It hurt like fuck n still looks tight. I wouldn’t have lasted one more symbol lmao. But this spot also peels a ton and won’t last so if I miss it enough I’ll suffer thru the whole thing next time.” (She also confirmed that she really enjoys tiny BBQ grills.)

She then tried to fix it, posting the modified tattoo in her Instagram Stories. But even her second attempt wasn’t quite right: The tattoo now reportedly reads, “Japanese BBQ finger.”

That’s when companies eager for PR are said to have piped up: TMZ reported that a company called LaserAway, which specializes in tattoo removal, offered on Friday to remove the ink in exchange for her appearance in a shoot for the company and some social media shoutouts. “Sources”—take that as you will—told TMZ the deal was worth around $1.5 million.

Her manager, Scooter Braun, told TMZ that he “can’t speak” for Grande because they hadn’t received the letter, but joked he’d be willing to get a tattoo and then have it removed for that chunk of change (same, TBH).

Grande, however, had a much more direct response: She quote-tweeted TMZ’s headline from the story and added her own answer right above it. “i’ll give y’all a million to get off my nuts,” she said.

And that, we think, is the matter settled.

RELATED: Don’t Worry, People: Ariana Grande Fixed Her Tattoo



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Chrissy Metz Responds to Reports That She Called Alison Brie a 'B*tch' at the Golden Globes


A hot mic loose on tonight’s Golden Globes red carpet seemed to catch This Is Us star Chrissy Metz in an awkward moment. At the end of her interview on the Facebook Live pre-show, Metz was asked to help introduce Alison Brie. (The Glow actress was about to be interviewed elsewhere on the carpet.) But it, uh, didn’t go quite as planned.

“Do you know a girl named Alison Brie?” one of the co-hosts asked Metz. “Do I?” she replied. When the camera panned to focus on Brie, some close listeners seemed to hear Metz add, “She’s such a bitch.” The Internet, of course, soon took notice:

Brie hasn’t publicly responded to the moment, though Vanity Fair writer and reporter Nicole Sperling reports that she asked Brie about it. “Just asked Alison Brie about this,” she wrote on Twitter. “She had not heard about Metz’s comments and seemed very confused by the entire matter. ‘But why?,’ she asked. ‘I know her. I saw her on the carpet and I told her how beautiful she looked.'”

But while fans and tabloids dissected the clip, Metz took to Twitter to address the moment—and shut it down. “It’s terribly unfortunate anyone would think much less run a story that was completely fabricated! I adore Alison and would never say a bad word about her, or anyone!” she wrote in a retweet of an Us Weekly article about the incident. “I sure hope she knows my heart.”

Several of Metz’s friends and fans also took to social media to defend Metz. “Folks, I’ve known @ChrissyMetz for three years and I have NEVER heard her say a mean word about anyone. Move on,” director and producer Ken Olin wrote.

More Stories From the Golden Globes 2019:

Every Single Look From the Golden Globes 2019 Red Carpet

Exclusive: All the Details Behind Chrissy Metz’s Golden Globes Dress

Sandra Oh Opens the Golden Globes With an Emotional Speech





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Demi Lovato Calls Out Tabloid Reports on Her Recovery: "It's No One's Business But Mine"


Demi Lovato has just shared an update on her recovery from what was reportedly a drug overdose in July—and clapped back at tabloids speculating about her health.

On Twitter Friday night (December 21), Lovato posted a series of tweets in which she defended her ongoing journey to sobriety. “I love my fans and I hate the tabloids,” she wrote. “Don’t believe what you read. People will literally make stuff up to sell a story.”

Lovato did not share where the rumors about her health came from, but she refuted them with a powerful statement: “I am sober and grateful to be alive and taking care of ME.”

She also added that when she wants to share her recovery journey in full, it will happen on her own terms: “Someday I’ll tell the world what exactly happened, why it happened and what my life is like today.. but until I’m ready to share that with people please stop prying and making up shit that you know nothing about. I still need space and time to heal.”

“Any ‘source’ out there that is willing to talk and sell stories to blogs and tabloids about my life isn’t actually a part of my life because most of the shit I see is soooooo inaccurate,” she said. “So newsflash: your ‘sources’ are wrong.”

She ended her message by reassuring fans that she is in a healthy place. “All my fans need to know is I’m working hard on myself, I’m happy and clean and I’m SO grateful for their support.”

“I’m so blessed I get to take this time to be with family, relax, work on my mind, body and soul and come back when I’m ready. I have my fans to thank for that. I’m so grateful, truly. I love you guys so fucking much ? thank you ??,” she continued.

Lovato has already opened up about her recovery after being hospitalized following the reported overdose in July. She shared her first update in a letter on her Instagram in September, which has since been deleted. “I have always been transparent about my journey with addiction,” she said. “What I’ve learned is that this illness is not something that disappears or fades with time. It is something I must continue to overcome and have not done yet.”

All reports from Lovato’s family since then suggest that the singer is getting healthy. In September, her mother, Dianna de la Garza, said in an interview that Lovato is “getting the help she needs” to recover. Later, her younger sister, Madison de la Garza, shared an update on her health in an October interview. “She’s working really hard on her sobriety, and we’re all so incredibly proud of her,” she said.

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Demi Lovato’s History With Substance Abuse, Explained

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Demi Lovato Is Working ‘Really Hard On Her Sobriety,’ Says Her Younger Sister





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Vice Media Under Fire for Rampant Sexual Misconduct Allegations, the 'New York Times' Reports


Several months after allegations against Hollywood producer Harvey Weinstein began a wave of change regarding how sexual harassment allegations are handled at work, Vice Media has become the subject of a new New York Times investigation. The report, published December 23, shone light on four sexual harassment or defamation settlements and published more than two dozen further allegations by current and former employees who say they’ve witnessed or experienced sexual misconduct at the hands of Vice employees and executives.

According to the Times, the publication’s president, Andrew Creighton, allegedly fired an employee for rejecting his advances, for which he reportedly paid a $135,000 settlement in 2016. The Times also reports that Vice reached a settlement after former head of Vice News Jason Mojica allegedly punished a female employee after they got involved sexually. He was fired in November. In January 2016, the company settled with a woman who alleged that Vice producer Rhys James asked her if she had sex with black men and what color her nipples were; James was put on leave last month. Lastly, Vice reportedly settled in 2003 with a writer who said the publication falsely wrote that she agreed to sleep with a rapper she interviewed. In addition, a woman interviewed by the Times described a coworker putting her hand on his crotch outside of work. Still another alleged she was the target of unwanted kissing.

“We have failed as a company to create a safe and inclusive workplace where everyone, especially women, can feel respected and thrive,” Vice co-founders Shane Smith and Suroosh Alvi said in a statement to Vice staff. “Cultural elements from our past, dysfunction, and mismanagement were allowed to flourish unchecked. That includes a detrimental ‘boy’s club’ culture that fostered inappropriate behavior that permeated throughout the company.”

In response to the allegations, Vice fired three employees, brought on a new human resources leader, created a Diversity and Inclusion Advisory Board that includes Gloria Steinem, and issued a prohibition on supervisors dating people working under them.

“The misogyny might look different than you would have expected it to in the 1950s, but it was still there, it was still ingrained,” Kayla Ruble, a journalist who worked for Vice from 2014 to 2016, told The New York Times. “This is a wakeup call.”

Related: Powerful People in Entertainment Who Have Been Accused of Sexual Harassment or Assault



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Reports: Capitol Hill Has a Huge Sexual Harassment Problem Too


America is currently grappling with a seemingly never-ending flood of reports, allegations, and #MeToo accounts documenting just how pervasive sexual harassment and assault is in numerous industries. As it turns out, Congress is apparently no exception to this type of predatory behavior—and a new report from The New York Times details just how bad it really is.

More than 50 lobbyists, lawyers, and former aides came forward to share their stories with the Times, describing sexual harassment as an “occupational hazard” for those in D.C. For those who try to report these incidents, they must undergo an arduous process—one that rarely works in their favor.

Per the Times:

Under federal law, complainants must undergo a confidential process,
where co-workers who might be able to provide corroborating evidence
are excluded. They often must wait about three months before
submitting an official complaint, yet must file one no later than 180
days after the episode. Once filed, victims must submit to up to 30
days of mandatory counseling and complete another 30 days of
mediation.

If mediation fails, the person then must wait 30 more days before
seeking an administrative hearing or filing a lawsuit in Federal
District Court.

In the case of M. Reese Everson, a one-time fellow with the Congressional Black Caucus, she was told her report of sexual harassment could not be processed by the Office of Compliance because she was a fellow and not a full-time employee, reports the Times. Other instances the newspaper reports are also incredibly dismaying: Lawyer Rebecca Weir was completely unaware that an office existed to report these kinds of incidents when former Republican Congressman Gary Miller allegedly leered at her and asked her to twirl for him one day in his California office in 2001 when she was a then-district worker. For Hannah Hudson, who worked for a Democratic congressman from Oklahoma in 2009, a work trip allegedly resulted in a Republican senior staffer trying to open her wrap dress and asking her why she was “holding out” on him.

Female legislators are not unfamiliar with facing harassment on the Hill. Three former lawmakers and one current one made allegations to the Associated Press that varied from “isolated comments at one hearing, to repeated unwanted come-ons, to lewd remarks and even groping on the House floor.”

As CNN reported on Tuesday, sexual harassment on the Hill is so prevalent that women legislators, interns, and staffers have formed a whisper network centering on a word-of-mouth “creep list” of men who act inappropriately. There’s also a series of unwritten rules when it comes to interacting with male colleagues: “Be extra careful of the male lawmakers who sleep in their offices—they can be trouble. Avoid finding yourself alone with a congressman or senator in elevators, late-night meetings or events where alcohol is flowing. And think twice before speaking out about sexual harassment from a boss—it could cost you your career.”

Fifty women spoke to CNN about sexual harassment in Congress, and one former Senate staffer described an incident from several years ago that occurred when she was riding in a “members only” elevator that lets legislators quickly reach the House or Senate floor. Her boss introduced her to a fellow legislator, and when she shook the other senator’s hand, he “stroked the inside of her palm ‘in a really gross, suggestive way'” that left her feeling “very yucky.” The woman was “shaken by how brazen the senator was to do this with his colleague standing right next to them.” The woman declined to give her name or reveal the legislator involved in the encounter, adding that she was afraid to tell her boss about the incident. Both of the men in her account are still in office.

The incident described to CNN was certainly not the first time a woman working in Congress has faced unwanted advances in an elevator. In the 1990s, reports alleged that former South Carolina Sen. Strom Thurmond groped Washington Sen. Patty Murray breast while riding in an elevator with her. As Politico reported in 2015, “So notoriously predatory was Thurmond that when Susan Collins came to the Senate in 1997, she was warned to avoid getting on an elevator alone with him.”

For the women coming forward to share their accounts, the goal is for the Office of Compliance to take more pointed action to handle these types of incidents. More than 1,500 former congressional aides have signed an open letter to Congress asking them to mandate sexual harassment training and reexamine how the Office of Compliance handles harassment requests. Already, the Senate has passed legislation to make sexual harassment training mandatory for all members—though the bill did not include any updates on how harassment claims are handled.

Today (Tuesday) the Committee on House Administration is expected to have a hearing on how Congress addresses sexual harassment. Here’s to hoping things move forward quickly.

Related Stories:
An Explosive Report Alleges Decades of Sexual Harassment by Harvey Weinstein
Thousands of Women Share Stories of Sexual Harassment and Assault on Twitter
Jane Fonda and Gloria Steinem Talk Race, Sexual Harassment, and Harvey Weinstein



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