Sunday, August 19, 2007

Mary Kate and...Ghandi??

Mary Kate Olsen has a new movie coming out. No big deal there, right? However, in THIS movie the 21 year old Mary Kate, who still looks like a teenager, has a passionate kissing scene with none other than Ben Kingsley. Ben Kingsley? You mean the guy who won an oscar for playing Ghandi in the movie four years before Mary Kate and her twin sister Ashley, were born? Yep. That’s the one!



The movie is called the Wackness, and is slated to come out in 2008. It’s supposed to be a comedy. The movie was filmed last week, and in an interview a few days later, Kingsley was quoted as saying this about Olsen and the scene: “It went extremely well and she was very focused. She was very good, very professional. She was quite wonderful.” (Yeah, Ben. I’ll bet she was.)

In the movie, Kingsley’s character is a therapist. He forms a friendship with a teenaged drug dealer, who uses pot as barter for therapy sessions. (A pot smoking psychologist? It’s for medicinal purposes, right? Uh, huh.) Mary Kate’s character is one of the male drug dealer’s customers. The movie previews don’t expound on how the gangly looking Mary Kate winds up kissing a man three times her age. Apparently, the interaction between the young girl and the grandfatherly therapist lasts only a few seconds and then the characters never see each other again.



“It’s for a few seconds and then we disappear and we never see each other in the movie.” Kingsley says “But she is a trigger into my quest for happiness.” (You mean the pot didn’t cut it?) We can only imagine how a senior citizen ends up in a passionate lip-lock with a girl who looks young enough to be “carded” in the bars.



Mary Kate Olsen got her start on the television sit com “Full House” in a role she shared with her twin sister Ashley. Recently, the pair appeared opposite each other in the 2004 movie “New York Minute”.


Angela Edwards lives on Washington State's Coastline in the Great Northwest
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Tim Donaghy, former NBA referee, pleads guilty to felony charges

Former NBA referee Tim Donaghy pleaded guilty to two felony charges Wednesday for betting on the league’s basketball games during his time working as an official. The charges came about during an investigation of the Gambino crime family in Brooklyn, New York. Donaghy, who had been making bets on the NBA games didn’t hesitate to wager on the games he worked.


The FBI first contacted the NBA on June 20 to discuss one of the referees who had allegedly been gambling on the games. Donaghy resigned July 9 after 13 years as an NBA official. NBA commissioner David Stern said he would have fired Donaghy sooner, but was told that might affect the investigation. Stern also said that the NBA would “continue with our ongoing and thorough review of the league’s officiating program to ensure that the best possible policies and procedures are in place to protect the integrity of our game.”


Donaghy would speak in code during telephone conversations to tip off high stakes gamblers with information on the inside and gave them recommendations on which teams would be profitable bets. When Donaghy’s picks hit, he was paid $5,000.


“By having this nonpublic information, I was in a unique position to predict the outcome of NBA games,” Donaghy said to the judge in the Brooklyn courtroom on Wednesday.
Donaghy was released on $250,000 bond. He faces a maximum sentence of 25 years in prison when he is sentenced November 9 for conspiracy to engage in wire fraud and transmitting betting information through interstate commerce. He also will be required to pay a $500,000 fine and at least $30,000 in restitution to the government.


According to court papers, Donaghy, who is 40 years old, began placing bets on NBA games in 2003. Last December, he began giving gambling associates sensitive, “inside” information, which included the crews who would officiate the games, and the ways that the players and the various officials interacted.


Donaghy’s two alleged co-conspirators are James Battista, a professional gambler with the nicknames “Baba” and “Sheep” and Thomas Martino. The pair also appeared in court on Wednesday and were released on $250,000 bail after their arraignment on charges to defraud the NBA. None of the defendants in this case was charged with organized crime affiliation.


Angela Edwards lives on Washington State's Coastline in the Great Northwest
Need more money?
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