Lindsay Lohan Un-OFFICIAL Fan Site Blog

Lilit Marcus: Possible Post-Ungaro Career Moves for Lindsay Lohan

Following her disastrous collection, Lindsay Lohan has been fired from Emanuel Ungaro. Now that her career in haute couture is derailed, what can our plucky LiLo do next?

* VIP cocktail waitress in Vegas — if Rachel Uchitel could land a man like Tiger Woods from this job, think about the guy or girl Lindsay could land.
* Molson Beer Girl — it worked out really well for Pamela Anderson. That said, does it matter that Lindsay isn’t from Canada?
* Celebrity personal assistant — because it would be karmic retribution for treating her own assistants like crap.
* Drug dealer — cut out the middleman!
* Dancing with the Stars contestant — seriously, I can’t believe she hasn’t done this one already. Think how awesome it would be if Maks was her partner.
* DJ — if you can’t be with the one you love, honey, love the one you’re with.
* Girl Next Door — now that the Shannon twins have moved out of the Playboy Mansion, Hef is in the market for some more girlfriends. Lindsay could get her own room!
* John Mayer’s New Girlfriend — doesn’t pay, but the publicity can’t be beat.
* Body double in Twilight — simply having her name attached to that film couldn’t be a bad idea at this point in her career.

See more at The Gloss.

Read more: Rachel Uchitel, Hugh Hefner, John Mayer, Twilight, The Girls Next Door, Lindsay Lohan, Pamela Anderson, Comedy News

Lindsay Lohan Suing E-Trade For ‘Milkaholic’ Baby Ad (VIDEO)

AP:

MINEOLA, N.Y. – Lindsay Lohan is feuding with the E-Trade babies.

The actress has filed a $100 million lawsuit claiming a television ad for the Wall Street firm that aired during the Super Bowl and Olympics was modeled after her.

Talking babies in the ad engage in chatter that refers to “milkaholic Lindsay.” The 23-year-old actress has famously sought substance abuse treatment.

Lohan’s name was never mentioned. But her New York lawyer contends that “Lindsay” is an equally recognizable moniker for her client — like that of Oprah or Madonna.

Lohan’s legal team is seeking an injunction to stop future airings.

An E-Trade spokeswoman is declining to comment.

WATCH:

Read more: Lindsay Lohan, Lohan E-Trade Ad, Lindsay Lohan E-Trade, Lohan Suing E-Trade, E-Trade, Milkaholic Baby Ad, Lindsay Lohan Lawsuit, Lindsay E-Trade Ad, Entertainment News

Brian Ross: Mamas, Don’t Let Your Babies Grow Up to Be Lindsays

Parents wanting to name their baby “Lindsay” may want to think twice, after E-Trade Financial found itself at the unintended comedic end of a $100M lawsuit brought about by the actress Lindsay Lohan who claims that the Super Bowl ad for the company defamed her.

The story, appearing in the New York Post, is fairly stunning.

Ms. Lohan, who just watched her fashion career with Ungaro sink faster than a submarine with screen doors, seems to think that she is in the same class of celebrity as “Oprah” or “Angelina,” when the truth is that her co-star Herbie is probably better known as a first-name actor.

The suit was filed in a Nassau County (NY) court. No word yet as to whether terrorists have spiked the water in Nassau with hallucinogens or other narcotics that might explain what would prompt area lawyer Stephanie Ovadia filing this suit for Ms. Lohan. I guess if the cash is green and you can avoid openly laughing when someone with a first name shared by millions of other people comes and tells you that she wants damages for use of her uniqueness, you can file almost anything.

First, watch the commercial, if you haven’t seen it already:

Now I’ve seen this commercial a few times, and I cannot say with a straight face that I ever found any reason to suggest that it was riffing on Lindsay Lohan.

Perhaps if the male baby had said something like: “Lindsay? Oh you mean that skanky freckled-face bi-sexual baby and media ho?” Then maybe she might have a point.

E*Trade should give her a million for the free publicity.

What’s next? Lawyers recommending to y’all that everyone with a child named Lindsay should find a lawyer, develop a slog of class-action lawsuits, and sue E-Trade for defaming your daughter’s good name?

Make sure, by the way, that you file a trade or service mark for your child’s name at birth, as Lindsay’s mom apparently has done.

Lindsey Graham is thinking about filing a similar suit, as are Lindsay Wagner and Lindsay Price and Lindsay Hartley and Lindsey Vonn.

I’m thinking, for my son, Holden, to compel the Salinger estate to recall every copy of “Catcher in the Rye,” and to demand that the name “Holden Caulfield” be replaced with “Iggy Caulfield” Let the guys named Iggy fight that one out.

I can see the 15-minutes-of-fame thing as a selling point to the lawyer, but, unless there is some brilliant strategy on the part of Ms. Lohan’s agent and management in making her look like a complete fool and spend a week as the subject of jokes on the nighttime shows instead of pitching her upcoming projects on them, then I can’t see the win here.

Even New York and LA area crack dealers are sitting back and shaking their heads at this one.

Lindsays ain’t easy to love and they’re harder to hold.
They give you a song-and-dance and demand diamonds and gold.
Designer buckles and old faded jeans,
And each night begins a new binge.
If you don’t like their acting as teens,
Now it’ll probably make you cringe.

Mamas, don’t let your babies grow up to be Lindsays.
Don’t let ’em make movies or design fashion lines,
Let ’em be actresses and publicity-hounds and such.
Mamas don’t let your babies grow up to be Lindsays.
‘Cos they’ll never stay home and they’re always alone.
Even with someone they love.

Lindsays like smokey old club rooms and all kinds of liquor,
Little Gucci handbags and bad boys and girls of the night.
Them that don’t know her won’t like her and them that do,
Sometimes won’t know how to take her.
She ain’t wrong, she’s just different but her pride won’t let her,
Do things to make you think she’s right in the head.

Mamas, don’t let your babies grow up to be Lindsays.
Don’t let ’em on Leno or Letterman too,
Let ’em do Kimmel and Ferguson and such.
Mamas don’t let your babies grow up to be Lindsays.
‘Cos they’ll think they’re bigger than they are,
And sue someone for using the name.

Ms. Lohan, you’re no Oprah. Leave your comedy career on the silver screen, and keep it out of the courtroom.

My shiny two.

Read more: Herbie, Lindsay Lohan, E*Trade, Angelina Jolie, Herbie the Love Bug, Humor, Comedy News, Hollywood, Comedy, Lawsuits, Oprah Winfrey, Lohan Sues E*Trade, E*Trade Lawsuit, Entertainment, Law, Oprah, Angelina, Funny, Entertainment News

Lindsay Lohan Shows Butt, Breasts In ‘Purple’ (PHOTOS)

Lindsay Lohan lets a lot hang out in a racy new photo shoot with Terry Richardson for ‘Purple’ magazine – the same magazine for which she recently posed as Jesus.

Which of these shots is the artiest of the bunch?

PHOTOS:

Read more: Lindsay Lohan Terry Richardson, Slidepollajax, Terry Richardson, Lindsay Lohan Purple, Celebrity Skin, Lindsay Lohan, Entertainment News

Paul Katz: The Perfect Present – Week 5 Of "Mental Muscle" Boot Camp

Part seven in a series.

As I went through “Be Present” week of “Mental Muscle” Boot Camp, a life-changing experience from the past was never far from my thoughts.

Two years ago, a fight with a longtime friend escalated while I was at work and could not speak by phone. Fierce emails were traded back and forth. By the time I left the office that night, I was in a complete rage.

As I got in my car and turned the ignition, the fight continued in my head. My anger remained at a fever pitch as I planned out what I’d say the next time my friend and I might speak.

Then I remembered a passage from Eckhart Tolle’s “A New Earth” about car accidents and a person’s state of consciousness when they’re involved in one. I recognized that I was not fully paying attention and primed to have an accident if I did not find a way to calm down.

Tolle’s primary lessons are about being in “the present moment” or “the now.” I took a deep breath and decided to put my focus squarely on what was happening in that exact moment and nothing else. I started out in silence, but my thoughts kept drifting back to the fight. I doubled my focus by speaking every thought about the present moment out loud.

“I am driving.”

“I am driving and breathing.”

“I am driving and looking at that red stop light.”

“I am driving and watching that dog pee on the lawn.”

….and so on, for the entire half-hour trek home.

By the time I walked into my apartment, I was completely calm. Whatever rage I felt was gone. The fight was now in the past and I was not about to interrupt the calm by bringing it back into the present.

With this experience, I ingrained an understanding of what it means to be fully engaged with the present moment. So, I wondered what reactions “Be Present” week in Boot Camp would bring up as I’d already incorporated this practice into my life.

One of James Mellon’s directives was to take an hour and do something fulfilling that was “outside the norm.” I was spooked by those words, “outside the norm”, because I had no clue what that would be. I immediately went to the “Mental Muscle” blog to express that.

As I wrote that I already take an hour to do something fulfilling every day, a voice from the past rose up. During a breakup, someone said to me, “I think all you like to do is watch television and go to movies.” With those words, I bought into a belief that my world is small and I am limited in what I like to do.

Three days later, James read that aloud during one of the chat sessions, and said, “Who gets to judge what you like to do? Maybe you’re just specific in what you enjoy. How about that? How about getting rid of ‘I am limited’ and instead saying, ‘I know me. I know who I am. I know what I like and I’m open to liking more things’?”

I had never thought of it that way. I held on to an ex-boyfriend’s words for almost 20 years and allowed them to define me. This was just another reminder of how easy it has been to carry negative events from my past into the present.

Recently, I’d made a decision to welcome a new room-mate into my apartment. My landlord had final say over my choice. When we spoke, he made his reservations clear, but also said, “I trust and have faith in you and know you’ll be responsible.”

I didn’t focus on that part of what he said at all. I was stuck on the fact that he had reservations about my choice. I was now rethinking a decision I had been solid with for days. The possibilities of what could go wrong came up. What if I was about to make a mistake?

This is a pattern. I tend to discount my own voice because I think people I trust know better for me than I know for myself.

I was with a friend and fellow Boot Camper, AJ, when I hung up the phone with my landlord. I talked out the fear, trying to understand why I was blocked when five minutes prior, I was so certain. Once I came to a conclusion, I thanked AJ for being there. He said, “I didn’t do anything. You did it.”

What I had done was recognize that I was trying to outguess the future, and therefore, not present. I can be incredibly fearful of making a mistake. It’s as if I want to be absolutely perfect with every choice I make, so there will be no regrets.

Ultimately, I see that is all about a need for control and “staying safe.” Of course, I don’t want negative outcomes, but I can’t control whether or not they happen.

In a way, this experience repeated itself on Monday. I wasn’t feeling well and spent an hour debating whether I should call in sick to work. All I could think about was work getting backed up and how overwhelmed I would feel when I returned.

My present state of physical health and taking care of myself so I could be functional was less on my mind than future consequences from my absence. That is definitely not “the now.” I wound up calling in.

Compared to the intensity of previous weeks of Boot Camp, I felt like I got a bit of a breather this week. At the very least, I am glad to be reminded that letting go of the past, and stopping projection into the future, can only lead to a perfect present.

Read more: Science of Mind, Eckhart Tolle a New Earth, Being Present, Spiritual Boot Camp, The NoHo Arts Center for New Thought, New Thought, Eckhart Tolle, James Mellon, Mental Muscle, Anxiety, Spirituality, Living News

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