Tuesday 16 October 2012


Celebrities Young Pics – Celebrity Childhood Pictures


George Clooney

Charlize Theron

Mariah Carey

Megan Fox

Brad Pitt

Christina Aguilera

Sandra Bullock

Sharon Stone

Tom Cruise

Rihanna

Angelina Jolie

Bruce Willis

Avril Lavigne

Leonardo Dicaprio

Julia Roberts

Madonna

Ben Affleck

Marilyn Monroe

Sylvester Stallone

Arnold Schwarzenegger

Michael Jackson

George Bush

Barack Obama


Celebrities Who Married Fans


1.Married To Fan John Travolta And Kelly Preston


2.Married To Fan Tom Cruise And Katie Holmes


3.Married To Fan Sandra Bullock And Jesse James


4.Married To Fan Kelsey Grammer And Kayte Walsh

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5.Married To Fan Ruben Studdard


6.Married To Fan Corey Feldman


7.Married To Fan Priscilla Presley And Elvis





Monday 8 October 2012


The most expensive TV series ever made

Game of Thrones

Boasting an estimated budget of US$60 million, the ten-episode first season of this epic fantasy series ranks as one of the most expensive ever. With seven expected seasons (one for each of the books in George R.R. Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series),Game of Thrones is shaping up to be one pricey, pricey series.Game of Thrones


Terra Nova

Steven Spielberg and co. are practically throwing money at their new time-travel/dinosaur series, Terra Nova. The pilot is proving that producing visuals likeAvatar's for the small screen doesn't come cheap: its budget has overblown to almost US$20 million.
Terra Nova


Lost

The Lost pilot cost a whopping US$14 million (mostly because of the cost of purchasing, shipping, and dressing the actual aircraft body used to represent the wreckage). They managed to reign in the budget, with subsequent episodes costing a mere (by comparison) US$4 million each.
Lost

Friends

The longer a show goes on, the more expensive it usually gets. Actors get raises, and in the case ofFriends, they got big ones. US network NBC famously forked out US$180 million for the final season. That's a whopping US$10 million per episode, the highest price ever paid for a 30-minute series in television history