Who’s the Most Awful Celebrity? You Decide!
May 12, 2009
Is Lindsay Lohan’s quest for attention worse than Octomom’s? Is Robert Pattinson’s naughtiness just as breathtaking as Michael Phelps’? And Tom Cruise’s antics don’t look so bad when compared to Michael Jackson’s—or do they?
We’re just tickled yellow to introduce our race to the bottom, a giant tournament-style game designed to find the absolute Most Awful Celeb ever!
And the best part is you get to decide! Whether ya think Most Awful means a vile, villainous lawbreaker or just an overexposed diva, here’s your chance to make the call.
We’re starting with 128 of Hollywood’s baddest, bitchiest and blahest. New rounds of voting open Mondays and Thursdays, and in four weeks, we’ll narrow the supercrowded field down to just one single celeb whose truly unruly behavior trumps everybody else’s in the Biz.
Round one voting closes on Wednesday, noon (Hollywood time), so make your pick in each of the 64 minicategories of awfulishness. Have all sorts of awful fun, babes, it’s a must!
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Woman finds ‘Twilight’ sequel script in trash
ST. LOUIS - A St. Louis beauty salon owner accidentally happened upon one of the hottest Hollywood scripts — the pages from an upcoming “Twilight” sequel — in a trash bin.
Casey Ray found two scripts, one for the vampire sequel “New Moon,” and one for a different movie titled “Memoirs.” She decided to return them to the studio making the films. In return, she was invited to attend the movies’ premieres, her lawyer said.
Ray recently was waiting for her fiance to finish work when she spotted two scripts in a trash container. She was outside a hotel where actors were staying during a St. Louis shoot for the upcoming George Clooney movie, “Up in the Air.”
It’s not clear how the scripts wound up in the bin.
The Clooney movie includes actress Anna Kendrick, who is also in the “Twilight” vampire movie. A spokeswoman for Kendrick, Lisa Perkins, said the actress wouldn’t have left scripts lying around.
When Ray found the scripts, she considered leaking them to a national tabloid but decided against it, said her lawyer, Al Watkins.
“My client didn’t really want to get paid,” he said, but she was interested in hanging onto the scripts as collector’s items.
Watkins helped her return them to Los Angeles-based Summit Entertainment LLC, the studio making the movies. He said the studio invited Ray to premieres for the two films, and will certify the scripts as authentic after the movies are released.
“Summit doesn’t comment on any of the deals it does,” Summit spokesman Paul Pflug said. But he added, “We thank Ms. Ray for doing the right thing.”
The “Twilight” movies are based on the novels of Stephenie Meyer, so many of the plot turns are well known to readers. But keeping the “New Moon” script written by Melissa Rosenberg out of the public eye preserves which elements of the book will be included in the films, Pflug noted.
Last year’s original “Twilight” film grossed over $350 million worldwide.


