Writer and pop culture lover. Always checking celebrity Insta!
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Savannah Chrisley is offering fans a killer view as she shows off her figure in a bikini and enjoys the weekend sunshine.
The reality star and beauty founder has made headlines galore for holding down the Chrisley fort amid her parents’ prison sentence. Proving that she can still live her best life, Savannah updated her Instagram on Saturday.
Explore More PITTSBURGH — John Pinette, the chubby stand-up comedian who portrayed a hapless carjacking victim in the final episode of “Seinfeld,” has died. He was 50.
Pinette died of natural causes Saturday at a hotel in Pittsburgh, the Allegheny County Medical Examiner’s Office said Sunday evening. Pinette’s agent confirmed his death.
The portly Pinette was a self-deprecating presence on stage, frequently discussing his weight on stand-up specials “Show Me the Buffett,” “I’m Starvin’!
Damon Dae net worth is
$16 Million Damon Dae Wiki: Salary, Married, Wedding, Spouse, Family Damon Dae is a composer and actor, known for A Mother's Choice (2010), Angel Wishes: Journey of a Spiritual Healer (2009) and A Mother's Choice: The Ultimatum (2012). Net Worth$16 MillionProfessionComposer, ActorComposer TitleYearStatusCharacterA Mother's Choice2010ShortAngel Wishes: Journey of a Spiritual Healer2009Actor TitleYearStatusCharacterA Mother's Choice: The Ultimatum2012ShortSgt Johnathan James Known for moviesA Mother's Choice (2010)
as Composer
The crowd gathered in a Minneapolis event hall in early July had spent the day watching players tackle video game challenges. But they cheered the loudest when a gamer called Peanut Butter took the stage to play the Nintendo sports game “Ken Griffey Jr. Presents Major League Baseball.”
Peanut Butter’s objective was to win a single baseball game. He sped through the game calmly, occasionally wagging his ears. As he neared victory, the crowd roared its support in a synchronized chant: “Who’s — a — good — boy?
Explore More In 1993, actor Danny Trejo was walking through San Quentin State Prison, where he was filming scenes for the movie, “Blood In, Blood Out.”
The cast and crew stopped at cells C545 to C550, which were blocked off for the filming, and suddenly Trejo felt an eerie sense of déjà vu.
“We were climbing the stairs to the set and with every step, my heart pounded harder,” Trejo writes in his new memoir, “Trejo: My Life of Crime, Redemption, and Hollywood” (Atria Books), out now.