Kid Rock, Pamela Anderson file for divorce
Pamela Anderson and Kid Rock each filed divorce papers Monday seeking to end their marriage of less than four months.
Anderson's representative would not comment on the reason or any particulars of the divorce. Anderson and Rock, whose real name is Robert Ritchie, each cited “irreconcilable differences” in their divorce filings in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
“Yes, it's true,” Anderson wrote in a brief statement on her Web site. “Unfortunately impossible.”
A message left with Ritchie's attorney wasn't immediately returned.
The relationship between Anderson, 39, and Ritchie, 35, has been a turbulent one since they became engaged in 2002.
They broke up the following year, but later reunited and held several wedding ceremonies over the summer.
They were wed in late July near St. Tropez, France, and again at a courthouse in Beverly Hills on Aug. 3. They also tied the knot in an Aug. 17 ceremony in Nashville, Tenn.
The pair filed separate divorce petitions, about an hour apart, early Monday.
Elton John bounces back from bout of nausea
Elton John left the stage briefly during a weekend concert in Brisbane after being struck by a bout of nausea. John left the stage without a word about two hours into his Sunday concert. He was gone for about five minutes, the Australian Associated Press reported Monday.
When he returned, the 59-year-old pop star used an Australian colloquialism to explain that he had left the stage to vomit. “I thought I'd better chunder in the toilet (rather) than all over the front row,” he was quoted as saying. Apparently feeling better, John closed the show about 45 minutes later.
Foreman has fond
memories of Grants Pass
George Foreman says Grants Pass is where he started to turn his life around.
Foreman said he was headed for a life of crime in Texas when he saw a TV ad with football players Jim Brown and John Unitas touting the Job Corps, a federal program for troubled youths. Foreman landed at a Job Corps facility called Fort Vannoy at what is now Rogue Community College.
“When you hear me say ‘Grants Pass, Oregon,' it was like the beginning of me,” Foreman, 57, said in a recent interview.
Foreman spent six months with the Job Corps in Grants Pass in the mid-1960s. He would go on to win an Olympic gold medal in 1968 and become heavyweight champion of the world in 1973. He retired for a decade, but returned to win a championship belt at age 45. And, of course, his George Foreman grills have made him a household name.
- From wire reports
Anderson's representative would not comment on the reason or any particulars of the divorce. Anderson and Rock, whose real name is Robert Ritchie, each cited “irreconcilable differences” in their divorce filings in Los Angeles County Superior Court.
“Yes, it's true,” Anderson wrote in a brief statement on her Web site. “Unfortunately impossible.”
A message left with Ritchie's attorney wasn't immediately returned.
The relationship between Anderson, 39, and Ritchie, 35, has been a turbulent one since they became engaged in 2002.
They broke up the following year, but later reunited and held several wedding ceremonies over the summer.
They were wed in late July near St. Tropez, France, and again at a courthouse in Beverly Hills on Aug. 3. They also tied the knot in an Aug. 17 ceremony in Nashville, Tenn.
The pair filed separate divorce petitions, about an hour apart, early Monday.
Elton John bounces back from bout of nausea
Elton John left the stage briefly during a weekend concert in Brisbane after being struck by a bout of nausea. John left the stage without a word about two hours into his Sunday concert. He was gone for about five minutes, the Australian Associated Press reported Monday.
When he returned, the 59-year-old pop star used an Australian colloquialism to explain that he had left the stage to vomit. “I thought I'd better chunder in the toilet (rather) than all over the front row,” he was quoted as saying. Apparently feeling better, John closed the show about 45 minutes later.
Foreman has fond
memories of Grants Pass
George Foreman says Grants Pass is where he started to turn his life around.
Foreman said he was headed for a life of crime in Texas when he saw a TV ad with football players Jim Brown and John Unitas touting the Job Corps, a federal program for troubled youths. Foreman landed at a Job Corps facility called Fort Vannoy at what is now Rogue Community College.
“When you hear me say ‘Grants Pass, Oregon,' it was like the beginning of me,” Foreman, 57, said in a recent interview.
Foreman spent six months with the Job Corps in Grants Pass in the mid-1960s. He would go on to win an Olympic gold medal in 1968 and become heavyweight champion of the world in 1973. He retired for a decade, but returned to win a championship belt at age 45. And, of course, his George Foreman grills have made him a household name.
- From wire reports
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