Friday, April 17, 2015

Clinton Foundation to continue accepting some foreign money

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The board of the Clinton Foundation said Wednesday night that it will continue accepting donations from foreign governments, but only from six nations, a move that appears aimed at insulating Hillary Rodham Clinton from controversies over the charity's reliance on millions of dollars from abroad as she ramps up her presidential campaign.

Clinton, who resigned from the foundation's board last week, has faced mounting criticism over the charity's ties to foreign governments. Her campaign for the Democratic nomination referred questions about the board's decision to the foundation.
The board of the Bill, Hillary and Chelsea Clinton Foundation said that future donations will only be allowed from the governments of Australia, Canada, Germany, the Netherlands, Norway and the United Kingdom — all nations that previously supported the charity's health, poverty and climate change programs.
While direct contributions from other governments would be halted, those nations could continue some participation in the Clinton Global Initiative, a subsidiary program that encourages donors to match contributions from others to tackle international problems without direct donations to the charity. But the foundation will stop holding CGI meetings abroad after a final session scheduled for Morocco in May. And most foreign governments will no longer be allowed to sponsor programs.
The foundation also will begin disclosing its donors every quarter instead of annually — an answer to long-standing criticism that the foundation's once-a-year lists made it difficult to view shifts and trends in the charity's funding. Former President Bill Clinton and other foundation officials have long defended the charity's transparency, but the new move signaled sensitivity to those concerns, particularly as his wife begins her race for the White House.
Last month, while she was still a foundation board member, Hillary Clinton defended the family charity to questions about its reliance on donations from foreign governments, saying the foundation had "hundreds of thousands of donors."
An Associated Press analysis of Clinton Foundation donations between 2001 and 2015 showed governments and agencies from 16 nations previously gave direct grants of between $55 million and $130 million. Those governments include the six nations that will be allowed to continue donating. The remaining 10 are Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman, the United Arab Emirates, Algeria, Kuwait, Italy, Brunei, Taiwan and the Dominican Republic.
Foundation spokesman Craig Minassian said that under the new disclosure policy, "the Clinton Foundation is reinforcing its commitment to accountability while protecting programs that are improving the lives of millions of people around the world." But he also insisted that the old annual disclosure policy went "above and beyond what's required by voluntarily disclosing our more than 300,000 donors on our website for anyone to see."
Hillary Clinton had previously agreed with the Obama administration to limit new foreign donations to the foundation while she served as secretary of state, but at least six nations that previously contributed still donated to the charity during her four-year stint. In one case, the foundation failed to notify the State Department about a donation from the government of Algeria.
The foundation's board began discussions over the past two days about altering some of the charity's procedures in an effort that officials said was aimed at improving transparency without harming fundraising for critical programs. The board's decisions were first reported Wednesday night by The Wall Street Journal.
Clinton Foundation officials had hinted in recent weeks that the organization was considering new limits on foreign government donations after several media accounts this year raised questions about the foundation's reliance on those practices.
Republican Party critics and media accounts targeted the foundation's reliance on funding from several Mideast governments that suppress dissent and women's rights — concerns that Hillary Clinton's State Department focused on during her stint between 2009 and 2013.
But there are potential problems even among some of the six governments that will be allowed to continue providing direct donations to the foundation.
The Canadian Department of Foreign Affairs, which has already given the foundation between $250,000 and $500,000, has also pushed for the approval of the Keystone XL pipeline, which environmental critics say could spread carbon emissions. President Barack Obama has yet to decide on the project, which would span several U.S. states, but he has already vetoed one bill aimed at swiftly approving the plan.
Foundation officials said the charity is not involved in that issue at all and has a "strong program" aimed at curbing reducing carbon emissions. Source: Stephen Braun, Associated Press

Suge Knight Rushed to Hospital After Being Ordered to Stand Trial for Murder

It was another court date, another hospital visit for beleaguered former rap mogul Marion “Suge” Knight.

Knight, who was ordered to stand trial for murder, attempted murder and hit and run on Thursday, was rushed to a local hospital for a medical emergency after the judge handed down a decision that he should stand trial, a spokeswoman for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department told TheWrap.
No further details on Knight’s hospitalization were immediately available.
This marks the fourth time that Knight has been hospitalized on days that he was scheduled to appear in court for allegedly killing one man and injuring another in January. Among his medical emergencies, Knight collapsed during a court appearance when his bail amount was set at $25 million.
Knight is accused of running over Terry Carter and Cle Sloan with his vehicle during an incident in Compton, Calif., in January, killing Carter and injuring Sloan. He has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
On Thursday, Judge Ronald Coen ordered Knight to stand trial, and lowered the Death Row Records co-founder’s bail amount to $10 million.
However, a representative for the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department has denied those claims, telling TheWrap that Knight is “receiving the appropriate treatment.” In addition to multiple blankets, the spokeswoman said, Knight’s hot water is the same temperature as the other inmates’ and he’s been offered new linens, showers and medications. Source: Tim Kenneally

Kendall Jenner on Being a Reality Star: 'I Didn’t Have a Say'

Kendall Jenner landed the cover of GQ’s May issue (on newsstands today), and in addition to her racy photoshoot, the model and reality star provides some incredibly juicy sound bites. GQ’s contributing editor Zach Baron follows the youngest member of the Kardashian clan to Paris Fashion Week where she’s mobbed by fans at Balmain who were screaming her name and pulling at her hair and clothing.
“Why the f— would you let [her security guard’s name redacted] leave without me, Mom!” she immediately yells at Kris Jenner over her phone. (Jenner’s ringtone, by the way, is “Gold Digger by Kanye West.) “We just got fully attacked!” Next she calls her father, Bruce Jenner. “Hi, Dad, I just got almost killed by a million kids,” she said while her hands were shaking. Later that night, she watched footage of the incident with her mother. “I can’t believe they were pulling me that hard!” she said rather nonchalantly. And so goes a typical day in the life of Kendall Jenner. 
As paparazzi and E! camera crews document her every breath, the 19-year-old insists she’s trying to leave that part of her life behind to make it as a real model. At least the latter part is working. Read on for other key quotes from the GQ article.
On growing up a reality star:
“My life was always different growing up,” says Kendall. “I mean, even before the show, my dad was who he is. He’s an Olympic athlete. And we were going to premieres, like Finding Nemo premieres, and we would be little kids, like, before the show, walking down the red carpet.”

On tabloid headlines about her dad’s potential gender transition:
“All that is bulls—. I don’t even know what they’re talking about, so I have no idea.” When Baron asks if she’s upset because the story is true or false, she says, “That is not for me to answer.”

On life after Keeping Up with the Kardashians:

“It’s actually really hard for me to think of…but that day will come, and it’ll be fine. Everything that happens is still going to happen, just minus the cameras.” She says that while her mother and sisters Kim, Khloe and Kourtney chose to live in front of the cameras “me and my little sister were placed in. We didn’t have a say. It was in our home. There was no way we couldn’t be on it.” But would she have opted out? “Honestly, I can’t answer that question. I have no idea. I was 10 years old when the TV show started. I don’t remember what it was like before.” Source: Joanna Douglas

Friday, April 10, 2015

5 Mistakes That Delay Mortgage Approvals (and How to Avoid Them)

One of the hardest parts of getting a mortgage is interpreting advice from all the parties involved: mortgage lender, real estate agent, insurer, attorney or escrow officer, tax adviser, financial adviser, plus your family, friends and colleagues. Since your mortgage lender is involved in all parts of a financed home purchase, an ace lender can be your best guide.

Here are the five common mistakes that can cause hiccups in your mortgage process. Ask your mortgage lender to help you steer clear of them.

1. Excluding details of your financial profile

A good mortgage lender will begin by reviewing your basic personal and contact information, employment and residence history, income, assets and debts.
Simple, right? Only if you answer every question, whether it’s in person or on a form. If you don’t provide absolutely every detail about your financial profile, it can throw off the entire loan process.

2. Not providing every single piece of documentation

Next your lender will ask for detailed documentation for your entire profile, including:
  • 30 days of pay stubs
  • Two years of tax returns and W-2s
  • Year-to-date business financial statements if you’re self-employed
  • Two months of statements for all asset accounts
  • Explanations and paper trails of all deposits (and often withdrawals) above $1,000
  • A home insurance quote with adequate coverage
  • Full financials on any other homes or businesses you own
If one single page of any piece of documentation is missing, you’ll be asked to provide it. If your income is commissioned or variable in any way, you must authorize your lender to verify income directly with current and past employers.
The lender will also run your credit, which can reveal employers, addresses, debts and other credit inquiries that you didn’t disclose. If new information comes to light, you’ll be required to explain and document all of it.

3. Confusing approval with pre-approval

Misinterpreting approval status kills deals and can take years off your life. So remember this and live long in your new home: get your loan approved by an underwriter before you write any offer to buy a home.
Getting a mortgage “pre-approved” means you’ve talked to a lender (#1 above), or you may have even provided some documents (#2 above) and been told your profile looks good — but make no mistake, this isn’t a loan approval.
Be sure you ask to get “underwriting approved” and obtain a formal loan commitment in writing. Anything short of this means your profile has been evaluated, but your actual loan approval doesn’t officially begin until your loan agent submits your file to an underwriter.

4. Not sharing home offer details with the lender

The purchase contract — or offer you write on a home — dictates critical transaction timing milestones like how many days you have to secure loan approval and how many days you have to close.
Your real estate agent will take the lead here, but make sure your lender and agent are in sync, because the lender must provide these critical milestone dates that your agent writes into the contract.
If you miss either of these dates in your contract, you risk losing your initial deposit on the home. The only way your lender can provide accurate timelines is if they’ve executed all the steps above properly.

5. Being unrealistic or uninformed about rates

When a seller accepts your offer, you’re in contract to buy your home and ready to lock a rate for your mortgage. You can’t lock before you’re in contract because a rate lock runs with a borrower and a property.
This means you’re subject to rate market movement until you’re in contract, and rates change throughout each day as bond markets trade. Rates are priced based on how long they’re locked, so a shorter lock (such as 15 or 30 days) has a lower rate than a longer lock (60 days, for example).
To avoid rate surprises, ask your lender to quote rate locks based on your closing timeline. And don’t forget that if you’re cutting it close on qualifying and rates rise, the resulting cost increase can kill your loan approval. Ensure your lender is accounting for the possibility of higher rates so your loan approval remains valid if rates rise while you’re home shopping. Source: happy girl 

Rajon Rondo will not tolerate plot holes in movies

It is well known that Dallas Mavericks point guard Rajon Rondo is not the easiest guy in the NBA to play with or coach. He is famously demanding, like many of the greatest athletes in the world, but also committed to doing things his own way and improvising away from the prescribed game plan when he deems it necessary. People who work with him are not shy about expressing these frustrations, and Mavs head coach Rick Carlisle has butted heads with Rondo this season bothsomewhat controversially and as a matter of course.

Baxter Holmes digs deep into Rondo's methods in a new feature for ESPN.com, providing new examples of Rondo's long-established analytical acuity and relaying various stories of how he has frustrated and benefited (sometimes simultaneously) his coaches and teammates over the years.
 Buried in there, though, is an anecdote the likes of which we have not heard before. Rondo really, really hates plot holes in movies:
Rondo maintains a close circle, but during his eight-plus seasons in Boston, he was as close with [Celtics strength and conditioning coach Bryan] Doo as anyone. Doo always sought activities to keep Rondo engaged -- golf, tennis, a home run derby with softballs, pool, pingpong, throwing footballs off the wall into a trash can, unorthodox workouts, printing out math equations and racing to solve them first, trying to top each other in Lumosity brain games, designed to improve cognitive abilities. "If you can't keep up with him up here," Doo says, pointing to his head, "he won't listen to you."
Provide him with bad information? "Your credibility is shot," Rondo says. And if he doesn't buy the narrative, even off the floor, he'll bail, he'll disengage, as he does on movies whose storylines stray from logic, even for a moment. His last theater walkout: The Equalizer, starring Denzel Washington. "I didn't understand how he got the cop's number," Rondo says, referencing a certain scene. "It was just too much." He recently watched the movie again to see if he could stomach it. He couldn't.
I assume that director Antoine Fuqua and screenwriter Richard Wenk could not be reached for comment.
"The Equalizer" received mixed reviews (57 on Metacritic, 61 on Rotten Tomatoes), so Rondo's decision to walk out does not appear especially extreme even if the Denzel Washington action movie canon is full of plot holes. (I mean, that's pretty much all "Deja Vu" is, and it's awesome.) Plus, you cannot claim that Rondo does not bring fairness along with his toughness — he gave it another chance, even if it was too much to bear.
That last point is what comes through most clearly in Holmes's article. Rondo may be difficult, but he is that way in large part because he sticks to his point of view, not because he dismisses others out of hand. At its worst, this quality manifests as stubbornness. Yet it's also a form of integrity that can be quite admirable, particularly when a team needs a strong voice. Rondo would be easier to manage if he gave ground more often, but he'd also lose a lot of what makes him a special player and figure in the NBA. Source: happy girl

Frat Boy Jon Hamm Allegedly Set a Pledge on Fire

He's earned six Emmy nominations for playing charismatic jerk Don Draper on Mad Men, but if court documents from his time as a frat boy at the University of Texas-Austin are to be believed, Jon Hamm's greatest performance may be as a charismatic exemplar.

The Associated Press has obtained court documents which chronicle some truly disturbing hazing that led to the arrest of seven brothers in UT's Sigma Nu chapter, including Hamm, who was 19 at the time.
The New York Times wrote about the incident shortly after it happened in November 1990. They, of course, don't mention the pre-fame Jon Hamm by name, but the story says that it was the pledge's mother who reported the hazing to police. 
It gets worse. The documents also state that Hamm took the pledge to "the pit" in the fraternity house's basement where he allegedly pushed the man's face into the ground while he was doing push-ups, stood on his spine "with his full weight" and, as the Daily Mail puts it, "hooked the claw of a hammer underneath his genitals and led him by the hammer around the room."
The UT chapter of Sigma Nu was shut down after the attack and never reopened on campus.
In the aftermath, three of Hamm's frat brothers were sentenced to 30 days in prison. An arrest warrant was issued for Hamm in 1992, but according to the AP, the hazing charges against him were dismissed and he received probation.
In the lawsuit, the pledge said Hamm participated "till the very end," and university records show the actor left the school the same semester as the hazing. Hamm eventually transferred to the University of Missouri — in his home state — after his father died in 1991. He was also in the Sigma Nu chapter at Mizzou. Source: happy girl

Boston bombing survivor on Tsarnaev: ‘I think the death penalty is ultimately what he wants’

The Boston Marathon bombing survivor whowrote an open letter to Dzhokhar Tsarnaev hours after testifying at his federal death penalty trial says she hopes the guilty verdict will help her and other victims of the 2013 terror attack heal.

 “I hope with this we can move forward,” Rebekah Gregory said on Wednesday, shortly after the jury found Tsarnaev guilty on all 30 counts for his role in the April 15, 2013, bombings that killed three people and injured nearly 300 others. “I may be standing on one fake leg,” she told reporters outside her Katy, Texas, home, “but I am standing here stronger than ever because someone tried to destroy me, and he failed.”
An emotional Gregory mourned the “innocent lives” that were lost. “There have been children taken, and parents that will never get to put them to bed at night again,” she said. “I am still so jumbled up by it.”
“What he blew up really did blow up,” Gregory told KTRK-TV. “He has given myself along with the other survivors a chance and a platform to help other people and do our parts in changing the world for the better.” The 27-year-old, who had her left leg amputated below the knee in November after 17 surgeries failed to save it, said she is still coping with emotional stress as a result of the blasts.
“I have nightmares every night that someone is trying to kill me,” Gregory told ESPN. “So it’s very much a part of me still, and I know it’s always going to be there.” She said she isn’t sure whether Tsarnaev should receive the death penalty.
“I feel like he doesn’t really care,” Gregory said. “I think the death penalty is ultimately what he wants. So I don’t know — life in prison alone with your thoughts — I think that might be ... I don’t know. I’m glad I’m not the jury.”
The penalty phase of Tsarnaev’s trial is expected to start next week. It’s hard,” Gregory said. “There’s no justice that can be brought to this, ever.” Source: happy girl

Kelly Osbourne’s Going Back to the Red Carpet... and Her Root

Kelly Osbourne at the Emmy’s in August of last year. Photo: Getty Images
Well that didn’t take long! Less than three months after quitting E!’s Fashion Police,  Kelly Osbourne’s found a new home. After plenty of speculation as to just what the outspoken personality would do next, she’s chosen to return to familiar territory, hosting the MTV Movie Awards red carpet on Sunday at 8 pm ET on behalf of said network, alongside Jessie J and Josh Horowitz
This isn’t the first time Osbourne’s played red carpet host for MTV. All the way back in 2002, she hosted the Movie Awards Pre-Show. Pre-purple hair and fashion makeover, she was still in her “goth phase,” with a chunky, pitch black ‘do and plenty of eye makeup and red lipstick to go around. Kelly Osbourne working the red carpet at the MTV Europe Music Awards in 2003. Photo: Getty Images
“I want to make people feel good, and I want to have fun,” she told People magazine about her new gig. “I don’t want to feel like I’ve hurt people’s feelings or I’ve done something wrong. I just want to make this amazing.” Considering all the bullying that Osbourne endured at the hands of the media growing up, it’s actually surprising that she stayed onFashion Police for so long. She’s doubly excited that she’ll be more in control of the situation: “It’s really scary and it’s really exciting,” she said. “I get to be more creative and pick the questions and talk about fun things.” Of course, the MTV Movie Awards have always been about fun above everything else, so this is a match made in rock n’ roll heaven. Source: happy girl

Michelle Obama: 'Our Government...Outlawed Indian Religions'

(CNSNews.com) - On Wednesday, First Lady Michelle Obama addressed a gathering at the White House that focused on the topic of creating opportunity for Native American youth. The White House posted her prepared remarks online.

The full speech, as posted by the White House, can be read by clicking here. Here is an excerpt from the First Lady's remarks:
You see, we need to be very clear about where the challenges in this community first started.
Folks in Indian Country didn’t just wake up one day with addiction problems. Poverty and violence didn’t just randomly happen to this community. These issues are the result of a long history of systematic discrimination and abuse.
Let me offer just a few examples from our past, starting with how, back in 1830, we passed a law removing Native Americans from their homes and forcibly re-locating them to barren lands out west. The Trail of Tears was part of this process. Then we began separating children from their families and sending them to boarding schools designed to strip them of all traces of their culture, language and history. And then our government started issuing what were known as “Civilization Regulations” – regulations that outlawed Indian religions, ceremonies and practices – so we literally made their culture illegal.
And these are just a few examples. I could continue on like this for hours.
So given this history, we shouldn’t be surprised at the challenges that kids in Indian Country are facing today. And we should never forget that we played a role in this. Make no mistake about it – we own this.
And we can’t just invest a million here and a million there, or come up with some five year or ten-year plan and think we’re going to make a real impact. This is truly about nation-building, and it will require fresh thinking and a massive infusion of resources over generations. That’s right, not just years, but generations. Source: Happy Girl

Britney Spears Wears Too-Tight Crop Top While Filming Music Video With Iggy Azalea For New Album

C’mon, Brit Brit! Britney Spears successfully aced a fashion no-no while filming a music video on Thursday with Iggy Azalea. Source: Happy Girl


Britney Spears Wears Too-Tight Crop Top While Filming Music Video With Iggy Azalea For New Album.

L.A. Times receives purported prison letter from Robert Durst

“The Jinx” may be over, but the strange saga of Robert Durst continues to play out in real time. On Thursday, Durst, who is now wanted in Los Angeles for murder in the death of his friend Susan Berman 15 years ago, pleaded not guilty to gun charges before a Louisiana judge. At the same time, the Los Angeles Times published a handwritten letter Durst purportedly sent to the paper’s Houston bureau chief.

The Times said the letter, which it has not verified as having been written by Durst, arrived Wednesday, two weeks after a reporter wrote to the now-notorious New York City real estate heir at the Elayn Hunt Correctional Center in St. Gabriel, La. Durst has been locked up there since his arrest in New Orleans last month — in a virtually made-for-TV moment that coincided with the culmination of the HBO documentary series about Durst’s life and the crimes with which he’s been linked.
While Durst’s last interview ended in an eerie, inadvertent apparent confession, this letter — if it is, in fact, written by Durst — suggests he hasn't been completely deterred from talking to the press. That is, as long as the conversation has nothing to do with his alleged crimes. The almost illegible letter includes reflections on the writer’s “part-time” life in Los Angeles from 2008 to 2011, such as the traffic on La Cienega Boulevard and his favorite coffee spot on Sunset Boulevard; his interests: “opera and pro football;” and his health.
“As my minor balance [problem] expanded into full blown hydrocephalus requiring a shunt I knew that if I was going to let some guy drill into my head there was no place I would be willing to go ahead other than the Houston medical center and I left L.A.,” the letter says.
According to the Los Angeles Times, Durst, who had been living in Houston prior to his arrest in New Orleans, had a shunt installed last year to drain hydrocephalus, or fluid on his brain. He also underwent surgery for esophageal cancer, the Times said. The letter doesn’t address Durst's alleged crimes — not Berman’s death, nor the 2001 murder and dismemberment of his Galveston, Texas, neighbor Morris Black, for which he was acquitted, nor the 1982 disappearance of his wife, Kathleen. However, it does address this omission.
“I have said nothing about the charges, crimes or trials,” the letter says. “If you decide to use any of this, which is okay, please make the above clear.”  Last month, FBI agents who had been sent to arrest Durst in relation to Berman’s 2000 murder allegedly found Durst at a New Orleans hotel, in possession of $42,000 in cash, five ounces of marijuana and a .38-caliber rifle. As a result, he was indicted in Louisiana for illegally possessing a gun (since he is a convicted felon) as well as carrying a firearm while in possession of a controlled substance — a label that still applies to marijuana in Louisiana.
The two weapons charges, to which Durst pleaded not guilty Thursday, have delayed his extradition to California, where he will face murder charges. Still, the letter suggests that its author expects to be moved to Los Angeles soon and is open to further communication with the paper.
“I’m sure you know what your abilities are to visit me when I get to L.A.,” he wrote. Source: Happy Girl

Dad’s Trick Gets Baby to Sleep in Just 40 Seconds

Forget the lullabies, shushing, and those swinging contraptions. All you need to peacefully send a newborn off into slumber is apparently…tissue paper.
Sydney father Nathan Dailo shows the method that he says works wonders on his 3-month-old son, Seth, in a YouTube video that has sleep-deprived parents around the globe mystified about how he’s able to get his son from squirmy to snoozing in just 40 seconds. 
STORY: The Best Way For Babies to Sleep
The footage titled, “How to put a baby to sleep in less than ONE MINUTE” and posted on March 23 has already raked in more than 388,000 views and some gratitude. “This worked for my baby 5 times already so thanks!“ posted one viewer. (Though another laments the maneuver did little to sooth her 1-year-old child who was, as the commenter writes at 11 p.m., “not only wide awake but also tore the tissue I was trying to use.”) 
STORY: Sleep Training Your Baby: The Great Debate
But Dailo swears by the technique — which consists of simply gliding a tissue paper over his son’s face over and over until he’s out like a light. In Seth’s case, that only takes about 14 strokes. “Really, any light touching on your baby’s forehead area works too,” writes the dad in his post. “It’s just funnier with a tissue lol…You can try just about anything though. We have found running your fingers over their forehead or over the bridge of their nose lightly will give the same effect too.” 
While the method may be strange, there’s no doubt it can be successful. Why is that? The repetition is soothing, according to Tarzana Pediatrics Medical Group pediatrician Dafna Ahdoot. “It’s not the tissue that matters, it’s the motion,” she tells Yahoo Parenting. “You’re basically stimulating baby’s ability to self soothe, which calms him down and helps him go to sleep.” 
Similar to babies sucking their thumb or rhythmically touching their faces as newborns do, the strokes of the tissue paper act like a massage. “It seems like this guy hit the right frequency,” says Ahdoot. “A recent study from a doctor in Israel found that 1 stroke massage every 3 seconds is the rhythm that most helps babies fall asleep.” Stroking motions actually increase the child’s melatonin levels too, the hormone that your body makes as you fall asleep, she adds. Trouble is, after a few months this tissue technique should be tossed. “By four months, when sleep structure changes into a more adult rhythm of sleep, you want to help babies self soothe and not be dependent on methods that you have to provide,” she says. Source: Happy Girl

Freida Pinto On Her Butt Double, “Desert Dancer” & Bruno Mars

You probably know Freida Pinto as the gorgeous, talented actress from Slumdog Millionaire, but did you know she’s also an experienced pole dancer? We found out this little nugget and more when she sat down with Yahoo Style’s Nick Axelrod for a rollicking round of Web sleuthing in this episode of “I Yahoo’d Myself.”
Among the racy topics discussed: Pinto casting her own “butt double” for the 2011 film Immortals; her first (awkward) commercial for Wrigley’s gum; and learning to work the pole for Bruno Mars’ “Gorilla” music video. (She appeared as a stripper!) “It is so hard doing anything on the pole,” revealed Pinto, who stars in the new film Desert Dancer (out April 10). “It’s a lot about technique, but it’s a lot about strength. And do you know where the strength comes from?” WHERE?! Watch the video above to find out…
Check out more “I Yahoo’d Myself” videos here, including interviews with Eva Mendes, Bethenny Frankel, Jessica Biel,Game of Thrones’ Natalie Dormer, and others. Source: Happy Girl

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