Charlize Theron, who adopted her then 9-day old baby Jackson Theron in March, said her dogs just adore being involved with raising their new family member!
It was the most beautiful thing I’ve ever witnessed. From the moment this baby came into our home, those two dogs have never been more in love,” the 36-year-old told Ellen Degeneres on her talk show on May 24. ”People keep saying, ‘Oh you’re a single mom,’ and I’m like, ‘Actually, I’m not. I got two boys helping me out.’ It’s incredible.” The Snow White and the Huntsman actress cooed about each of her dogs’ new roles! “The pit[bull] woke up with me for every feed, for every change, and whenever the baby would cry the pit would start crying. He’ll do anything for that baby.” As for Berkley, her terrier mutt, he likes to lay with the baby’s pacifier in his mouth. Also in the interview, Charlize opened up about her long adoption process. “The adoption process took around two years. My mom said the most beautiful thing,” she said. “It took me nine months to fall in love with you [while you] were growing in my stomach. She’s like, it took you two years to fall in love with this little baby. It really took two years of just waiting and then one day it’s finally there. It just feels exactly how it’s supposed to feel. I don’t know how to describe it. It just feels right.” Isn’t that so cute? HollyMoms, would you let your dogs help raise your kid? [The Ellen Show YouTube page] SOURCE: New 'Snow White & the Huntsman' Clip Will Have You Crushing on Kristen Stewart's Prince *Spoilers*5/24/2012 In this exclusive featurette from Snow White and the Huntsman, the Huntsman himself (Chris Hemsworth) takes you behind-the-scenes to discuss his character, who is hired by the evil queen (Charlize Theron) to bring her Snow White (Kristen Stewart).
Previously we’ve mostly just been treated to growls and intimidating glares, but now we can see Hemsworth explain the initial attraction between himself and Snow White. “There’s something special about this girl.” Source: Guess who also Showed up Robert Pattinson support Kristen and Tom!!
Are you going some place or just going? I want an escape. I want to just get away and be anywhere but here. But more importantly, I want to belong somewhere. With so much accessibility for the generation’s group of delinquents, it’s refreshing to take a step back and look at how the Beat generation found meaning to life at a time of dark despair. If you have a thirst for adventure and a loose line of morality, you will enjoy all that Walter Salles has to offer in his cinematic interpretation of Jack Kerouac’s novel, On The Road.
Everyone’s a writer. Everyone’s a hipster. Any movie with lots of traveling, drinking, smoking and orgies is my kind of movie. I literally fell in love when Garret Hedlund opened the door butt-naked with Kristen Stewart lying naked in the background. I’m sorry, Twilight completely undervalues Kristen Stewart’s acting capabilities. I don’t know why they casted her as a virginous vampire lover. She definitely plays a better cracked out lover than anything Kirsten Dunst can do. I mean, it takes a completely different woman to sit naked between two dudes and jack them off simultaneously in a car. Dunst and her little ‘respectable woman’ act doesn’t cut it. Same goes for Elizabeth Moss, who plays a random wife that got dropped off for talking too much. Clearly, we’re living in a man’s world. The women have no impact at all to the activities the boys indulge themselves in. In fact, there’s more homo-eroticism in this film than there is of Kristen Stewart’s nudity (which is like, a lot). Sam Riley isn’t nearly as messed up as his idol Dean Moriarty (Garret Hedlund), but that’s not what this is about. It’s about how one extreme person can influence you so much with his own madness and inevitable self-destruction that leads you to a breath-through in personal maturity. Like President Truman says, “We have to cut down at the cost of living.” Whether you like it or not, creative talent results from a degree of suffering that puts one on the brink of insanity. Sal Paradise’s struggle with writing his book provokes the weak stomachs out there and reveals one of the most realistic dramatizations of the creative process to date. Source: |