MOM of 7

….life AMPLIFIED by 7 kids!

REAL Woman versus the “model” 01/12/2012

‘Most runway models meet the BMI criteria for anorexia’, claims plus-size magazine in powerful comment on body image in the fashion industry

By TAMARA ABRAHAM

A magazine dedicated to plus-size fashion and models has sparked controversy with a feature claiming that most runway models meet the Body Mass Index criteria for anorexia.

Accompanied by a bold shoot that sees a nude plus-size model posing alongside a skinny ‘straight-size’ model, PLUS Model Magazine says it aims to encourage plus-size consumers to pressure retailers to better cater to them, and stop promoting a skinny ideal.

Size 12 (U.S.) model Katya Zharkova, 28, stars in the shoot, which has a powerful statistic accompanying each image.

Plus Model MagazineSize matters: PLUS Model Magazine has shot size 12 Katya Zharkova pose with a ‘straight-size’ model to demonstrate the difference between them

 

One, printed alongside a photo of the Russian beauty holding a tape measure across her rear, reads: ‘Twenty years ago the average fashion model weighed 8% less than the average woman. Today, she weighs 23% less.’

Another states: ‘Ten years ago plus-size models averaged between size 12 and 18. Today the need for size diversity within the plus-size modeling industry continues to be questioned.

 

 

‘The majority of plus-size models on agency boards are between a size 6 and 14, while the customers continue to express their dissatisfaction.’

And finally, further highlighting how poorly the fashion world caters to plus-size women, the magazine tells us: ‘50% of women wear a size 14 or larger, but most standard clothing outlets cater to sizes 14 or smaller.’

Plus Model MagazineBody image: The Russian beauty poses with a tape measure around her rear alongside a statistic that shows how different models are from real women

In an accompanying editorial, the magazine’s editor-in-chief, Madeline Figueroa-Jones, explains that the feature is a response to a fashion and beauty industry which continues to endorse a skinny ideal that is not always healthy and alienates a huge percentage of the market.

She writes: ‘We are bombarded with weight-loss ads every single day, multiple times a day because it’s a multi-billion dollar industry that preys on the fear of being fat.

‘Not everyone is meant to be skinny, our bodies are beautiful and we are not talking about health here because not every skinny person is healthy.’

Ms Figueroa-Jones says consumers can no longer identify with models; the disparity between real woman and those that grace ad campaigns and the covers of magazines is to wide now.

 

Plus Model MagazineBody image: The model proudly bares her U.S. size 12 curves in the magazine shoot

 

‘Small women cannot be marketed to with pictures of plus-size women, why are we expected to respond to pictures of small size 6 and 8 women?’ she asks.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/article-2085226/PLUS-Model-Magazines-Katya-Zharkova-cover-highlights-body-image-fashion-industry.html#ixzz1jGkOW5lc

 

Divorce Really Does Make Marriage Better! (what do you think?) 10/18/2011

The divorce rate for second marriages may be higher than that of first marriages, but don’t tell that to people on their second marriages. Many feel their second marriages are actually much, much stronger than their first. And while the statistics don’t support this notion, reason really should.

After all, don’t we learn from our mistakes?

Divorce is one of life’s most traumatic events. Anyone who has been through it likely puts a much higher premium on only going through it once. The fact is, many people marry for the wrong reasons. They marry out of fear of being alone or because everyone else is doing it. And when you marry young (under 26), you also do it not knowing how the person will change.

Every day we are married, we learn more about marriage. After nearly nine years of marriage, I can officially say I have a pretty good understanding of what it takes to make a marriage last. And it’s not undying love and passion (though those are important, too).

What really matters in marriage is a strong foundation, AKA the “boring things.” Is he responsible with money? Loving? Do you feel a close friendship? Does he make you laugh? Can he keep a job? Is he volatile or does he have any addictions? These are the kinds of things women should ask themselves when getting married.

From the outside, it’s often easy to predict which marriages will last and which will fail. But that doesn’t mean those predictions come true. Some of it is luck — my husband and I married at 25 and have grown and changed enormously since then — but some of it is also foresight. I was engaged before my husband and my inner voice knew it was wrong.

MORE:
http://thestir.cafemom.com/love_sex/127177/divorce_really_does_makes_marriage

 

Cuddle or Good Sex? Which do you want??? 07/19/2011

Men love to cuddle while women just want to have sex

Jessica Laurence

By Jessica Laurence, Jul 12, 2011

 

Time to turn those outdated stereotypes on their heads; men want more hugs while women just want to get down to it.

According to researchers from the Kinsey Institute in the US who surveyed over 1,000 couples aged between 40-70, cuddling makes a real difference to how happy men feel.

The survey showed men who often kissed and hugged were three times as contented as men who didn’t get so much cuddle time.

As a relationship progressed, men more frequently reported feeling content in their relationships, while women were more likely to report better sex.
(more…)

 

What’s Really Happening on Oprah’s LAST Show? 05/25/2011

Oprah

CHICAGO — Oprah Winfrey walked on stage for her talk show finale Wednesday to a standing ovation from her studio audience before thanking her viewers for watching for a quarter of a century.

She ended her show on a simple, quiet note–a marked contrast to the spectacle of the two-day, celebrity-studded bash at the United Center that preceded the finale.

“There will be no guests, no surprises,” she told her audience. “You will not be getting a car. This last hour is about me saying thank you. It is my love letter to you.”

Winfrey said she was eternally grateful to her audience.

“Twenty-five years and I’m still saying ‘Thank you America,'” she said. “Thank you so much. There are no words to match this moment.”

Winfrey told them that sometimes she was a teacher, but more often her viewers taught her. She called the episode her “last class,” and talked about the lessons she had learned over the course of the show. She urged her viewers to “be the safe harbor for somebody else, to do for them what you have said the show has done for you.”

She closed the show by saying her departure was “all sweet and not bitter” and telling her audience, “I won’t say goodbye, I’ll just say, until we meet again. To God be the glory.”

 

I DECLARE: Mondays! Most Depressing Day of the Week? 05/16/2011

Today I (MOM OF 7) decided that MONDAYs are the ABSOLUTE WORST DAY OF THE WEEK!  I was the last one to leave the house today (which is usual) on my way to work and as I was walking down the front steps I thought to myself:

Well, the kitchen didn’t really get cleaned last night; I still don’t have a plan for the dog chore that’s not going so well; there is stuff laying in the family room that doesn’t belong there; the boys room is a mess; Sarah doesn’t have any clean underwear; I need to do my own laundry; I need to organize the dog stuff on the back deck…….
 
Oh and Stephen leaves in 5 weeks and there’s about 10 things I need him to do or answer for me before he leaves…..
 
MONDAYS ARE DEPRESSING!  
 

And as I thought all this I was hoping all of you would agree!  But then, I stumbled upon this *great* article…and it had me rethinking that surely everyone would agree that MONDAYS are the most depressing day of the week.  So what do you think?

http://www.spring.org.uk/2008/05/mondays-are-not-as-depressing-as-you.php

Mondays should be depressing. The memory of a fun weekend still fresh in the mind, returning to all the problems left behind on Friday and the endless expanse of time until next weekend. Surely Mondays are the most depressing day of the week?

New research, though, suggests Mondays aren’t as bad as we think. Unfortunately it also finds that Fridays and Saturdays aren’t as good as we imagine either.

Imagined moods

Charles S. Areni of the University of Sydney and Mitchell Burger of the NTF Group surveyed 202 participants about what they imagined was their typical mood on each day of the week. This revealed some predictable results:

  • People thought their worst moods were experienced on Monday mornings and evenings.
  • People thought their best moods were experienced on Friday and Saturday mornings and evenings.

Fortunately Areni and Burger didn’t believe these reports were accurate so they decided to test a further 351 people’s moods in the moment by asking them how they were feeling each day, on that day.

Actual moods

They found that, on average, people’s mood remained about the same throughout the week. Mondays weren’t as depressing as people thought and Fridays and Saturdays weren’t as exciting as people predicted.

Mood Graph

On average, people were actually in the worst mood on Wednesday and the best mood on Sunday, but the differences were small.

The results demonstrate the memory bias: when thinking back we tend to recall the worst incidence of an event we’ve experienced before. Mondays are stereotypically depressing, so we tend to recall the worst Mondays. Fridays and Saturdays are stereotypically exciting so we tend to recall the best Fridays and Saturdays.

Consequently, in reality our mood fluctuation over the week might not follow the stereotypical pattern of a steady increase from a low on Monday through to a high on Saturday. Instead our weekly average mood profile could be much flatter than we imagine.

 

Let Me OUT Of The Snow-Globe! (or at least stop shaking it) 04/20/2011

I’m stressed.

I’m feeling unorganized.

I don’t see the plan.

And when you put those three things together, I feel like I’m in one of those tiny Christmas Snow-Globes and someone is shaking the crap out of it.  You know the kind…the cute decorative globes that are full of snow…you shake, you turn upside down and the pretty snow falls inside the globe.

Pretty, yes!  But imagine being INSIDE the globe and it’s upside down, being shaken side to side.  Probably doesn’t feel so great, right?  

The VanCamp tribe just got bigger.  (and you were thinking that wasn’t possible)

We went to adopt a puppy and ended up adopting a 2 year old hound mix, and 2 sister puppies that are 3 months old and are black lab/border collie mixes.

CRAZY!

Went for one.  Ended up with 3!

I’m not sure I can say there’s any logic to our decision.  Can’t say that we thought this totally through, can’t say that it makes sense.  I can tell you that I wanted to do this, I wanted my husband and kids to be happy and in the process my husband fell in love with the two puppies and MOM of 7 fell in love with the 2 year old hound.

On Sunday, we brought home the 2 year old hound, Duke.  He’s settled in rather nicely. Tonight, however, the SNOW GLOBE SHAKING is going to be intense because Stephen is bringing home the twin puppies.

My blood pressure and pulse is probably rather high.  I’m not ready.  I feel anxious.  I’m worried.  I have NO CLUE what to expect.   Gesh, it was easier giving birth to my twins.  WHY is this such a hard transition for me?  Why am I letting this be such a hard transition for me?

You see, in the last three days I’ve learned more about myself than I have in 39 years.

Sadly, this is what I’ve realized:

1.  I have control over NOTHING!

2.  As much as I plan, I have 7 kids (outnumbered!!!) that may not follow MY plan.

3.  Repeat #1….I have control over NOTHING!  NOTHING!  NOTHING!

I’ve lived my life controlling situations, events, and frankly PEOPLE.  Sorry…it’s the truth.  I’m a fixer.  I’m a doer.  I’m a manager.  I come up with plans, and I get people around me (personally and professionally) to buy into this plan and execute it for me/with me.

When I was at my peek professionally, I was managing over 30 people executing plans left and right….I was WINNING (thank you Charlie Sheen). And this is when I felt the most alive and secure—when I had people around me buying into my plan and helping me execute it.

Now, I no longer have “that” job.  Now I negotiate million-dollar contracts. For the most part, however, I’m still getting people to buy-into MY terms of the contract.  So I still have “control” over the situation.

Once I step out the double doors at work, I lose all sense of control.  I drive 20 minutes home and the entire way, I feel my stomach churn because I realize I’m walking into a situation (home) where I have virtually no control.

NO!  I’m not saying that my kids rule the house.  I’m not saying I’m not the alpha dominant (along with Dad of 7) one in my house.  I’m not saying that there aren’t any rules/regulations/expectations in my house.  But let’s get real….it’s NOT a controlled environment.

Kids may not have done their chores.

Kids may have plans they didn’t consult with you about.

Kids may have broken something.

Kids may (shocking) disagree with you.

Kids may (shocking) push back on your plan.

Does any of this sound familiar?  Does any of this sound like YOUR life?  

WE TRULY HAVE CONTROL OVER…….NOTHING!  NADA!  ZIPPO!

So, do you have any coping strategies YOU would like share?  Cuz right now, I’m STUCK IN THE FREAKIN’ SNOW GLOBE and I certainly can’t see through all the snow and shaking it making my stomach feel really upset!  

 

So If Barbie Was Real…… 04/08/2011

Some people have skeletons in their closet. I have an enormous Barbie in mine.

She stands about six feet tall with a 39″ bust, 18″ waist, and 33″ hips. These are the supposed measurements of Barbie if she were a real person. I built her as a part of the first National Eating Disorder Awareness Week (NEDAW) at my high school, later introducing her to Hamilton College during its first NEDAW in 2011.

When I was a little girl, I played with my Barbie in her playhouse, sending her and Ken on dates that always ended with a goodnight kiss. I had fond times with my Barbie, and I admired her perfect blonde locks and slim figure. Barbie represented beauty, perfection and the ideal for young girls around the world. At least, as a seven-year-old, that is what she was to me.

In January 2007, I was looking for a way to make my peers realize the importance of eating disorders and body image issues. I was frustrated after quitting the cheerleading squad, frustrated with pressures to look and act a certain way and most of all frustrated with the eating disorder controlling my life. I wanted to do something that would turn others’ apathy into action. That evening, my neighbor and I found two long pieces of wood and started measuring. With a little math, nails and hammering, we built a stick figure that stood about six feet tall.

The chicken wire came next. Surrounding her wooden frame, we created a body that wasn’t much thicker than a stick figure, but had the womanly and unattainable curves and proportions that impressionable young girls idealize. We stuffed the chicken wire with newspaper and created a body that creepily leaned against the wall in my neighbor’s basement. She now needed some skin, so I brought her back to my apartment and employed the masterful art of papier maché.

Taking stacks of newspaper, glue and water, I skipped my high school semi-formal dance to give my girl some skin. Oddly, I started to feel my fondness for Barbie return, now not as a plaything but as a tool to reveal the negative body image that she promotes. As I papier machéd, I couldn’t forget Barbie’s impressive bust and blew up balloons over and over again to achieve a perfect 39″ measurement. Once her chest was secured, I spent hours dipping and smoothing the paper, and later mixed paints to replicate her seemingly perfect white skin tone. With a little hard work and a lot of time, a headless, footless and handless body soon stood in my apartment.

But it was then I became stumped. I couldn’t figure out how to recreate the recognizable face of the Barbie we all know and love. With NEDAW just around the corner, I was panicked. On my way to get office supplies, I drove by a Toys ‘R’ Us, and that’s when it hit me. Remember that Barbie with just shoulders and a head, meant for you to practice brushing her hair? I confidently walked into the toy store for the first time since I was a kid. I found the Barbie head, found a friend to assemble that head, and clothed Barbie for her first debut.

I dressed Barbie in my old clothes. The skirt she still has on today is a reminder of who I once was. That skirt, a size double zero, used to slip off my waist when I was struggling with anorexia. I put it on Barbie to serve as a reminder that the way Barbie looks, the way I once looked, is not healthy and is not “normal,” whatever normal might mean. My Barbie’s role is simple. She grabs the attention of apathetic onlookers and makes them think and talk about an issue that thrives in silence. In the last four years, Barbie has surpassed my expectations, attracting attention and sparking conversation among listeners and readers across the nation.

Once a year, at the end of February, Barbie comes out of the closet to meet my friends, strangers, and those apathetic onlookers. During NEDAW, she reminds people that eating disorders and body image issues are serious and prevalent. Holding an awareness week in high school or college is just one way to get students to discuss these important issues. However, constant discussion and education is key to dealing with and overcoming eating disorders.

Despite her bizarre appearance, Barbie provides something that many advocacy efforts lack. She reminds of something we once loved, while showing us the absurdity of our obsession with perfection.

More “Get Real, Barbie” statistics:*

• There are two Barbie dolls sold every second in the world.
• The target market for Barbie doll sales is young girls ages 3-12 years of age.
• A girl usually has her first Barbie by age 3, and collects a total of seven dolls during her childhood.
• Over a billion dollars worth of Barbie dolls and accessories were sold in 1993, making this doll big business and one of the top 10 toys sold.
• If Barbie were an actual women, she would be 5’9″ tall, have a 39″ bust, an 18″ waist, 33″ hips and a size 3 shoe.
• Barbie calls this a “full figure” and likes her weight at 110 lbs.
• At 5’9″ tall and weighing 110 lbs, Barbie would have a BMI of 16.24 and fit the weight criteria for anorexia. She likely would not menstruate.
• If Barbie was a real woman, she’d have to walk on all fours due to her proportions.
• Slumber Party Barbie was introduced in 1965 and came with a bathroom scale permanently set at 110 lbs with a book entitled “How to Lose Weight” with directions inside stating simply “Don’t eat.”

For more information, call the South Shore Eating Disorders Collaborative at 508-230-1732 or visit the National Eating Disorders Association at http://www.nationaleatingdisorders.org.
* Source: Body Wars, Margo Maine, Ph.D., Gurze Books, 2000.

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/galia-slayen/the-scary-reality-of-a-re_b_845239.html

 

04/05/2011

Cosmetic Surgery:  The Answer to BULLYING?!

Just seven years old, Samantha Shaw of Sturgis, S.D. is about to experience something very grown-up: she’s going to have cosmetic surgery.

It’s not because she has a serious facial deformity or a life-threatening medical condition. Samantha is having cosmetic surgery because she gets teased about her protruding ears.

“The kids at school always ask her about her ears, and sometimes adults can be worse,” said Cami Roselles, Samantha’s mother. “One lady walked up to her and said, ‘Oh my God, what happened to your ears?'”

When people ask, Samantha just tells them she was born that way, but Roselles said the questions really bother her daughter.

“She always asks me why people ask questions. She’s very sensitive, so it really does get to her.”

Samantha’s doctor thought her ear deformity would get better as she got older, but Roselles said nothing changed. After doing some research, she looked into a type of cosmetic procedure called otoplasty, more commonly known as “pinning back” the ears.

Samantha, who will have her otoplasty on April 5, isn’t the onlychild to undergo cosmetic surgery because of bullying. Statistics from the American Society for Aesthetic Plastic Surgery show that the number of children and teens who get cosmetic surgery increased nearly 30 percent over the past decade. Experts believe an increase in bullying behavior is one reason for the upward trend.

Brian Donoghue, an 11-year-old from Long Island, N.Y., had the surgery last summer.

His mother, Valerie, said kids at school would often ask Brian why his prominent ears looked the way they did.

“He would turn it into a ‘Look what I can do with my ears’ sort of thing and he’d kind of fold up his ears. The kids thought it was funny,” said Donoghue.

But even though Brian was able to use a defense mechanism to fend off the taunts, his mother, who is an assistant principal at a high school on Long Island, said she’s seen the effects of bullying and didn’t want her son to go through that.

Experts say bullying can cause problems like depression in victims, and eventually, bullied children may start to lash out, feel depressed, and have academic difficulties.

“If we had gone much longer, we might have started to see some of those other behaviors,” said Donoghue.

Dr. Frederick Lukash, the plastic surgeon who handled Brian’s case, said he could tell from drawings Brian did that he was tormented by the teasing.

“His drawings showed exaggerated ears while other kids had normal ears. I could tell there were some deep-seated issues,” Lukash said.

Before doing surgery on a child, Lukash said most surgeons will talk to the child during multiple consultations to find out how the child feels, and how he or she interacts with peers. He encourages them to draw pictures. In many cases, like Brian’s, it’s clear children are upset by constant teasing.

As kids get older, teasing can take a turn for the worse and turn into bullying. In the age of social media and the Internet, parents say it’s reached a new level.

“Bullying is very different now with Facebook and sites like that,” said Donoghue. “I didn’t want him to go through that.”

But other experts say doing plastic surgery on a child sends the wrong message.

“Changing appearance is not the solution,” said Cheryl Rode, director of clinical operations at the San Diego Center for Children. “We never want to hold the victim responsible for the bullying.”

Rode said the responsibility must lie with schools and other places where children are as well as with society.

“It is our responsibility on a national level, not the responsibility of parents of victims to make change happen.”

What Lies Ahead for Samantha

Roselles said she decided to go through with the surgery because she’s worried the teasing may turn into more serious bullying.

“Having it done now is probably the best, instead of when she gets older and they make fun of her more.”

Otoplasty isn’t covered by insurance, though it used to be.

“If it’s not causing a functional problem, then it’s not covered,” said Lukash.

Otoplasty can cost between $5,000 and $10,000. That is more than Roselles could afford, so she reached an organization called the Little Baby Face Foundation. Surgeons working with the foundation operate for free on children with facial deformities, and the foundation covers other expenses, like Samantha’s trip to New York City.

Otoplasty is the most common cosmetic operation done on children. In addition to cleft lip or cleft palate surgery, it’s the only cosmetic procedure acceptable for young children.

Dr. Steven Pearlman, a facial plastic and reconstructive surgeon in New York, is scheduled to perform Samantha’s surgery.

“She’s going to have two related procedures. The general one is otoplasty for children whose ears stick out. We set back the ear and make it look more natural and normal,” Pearlman said.

The other procedure will be on her right ear, which is folded over. That condition is called lop ear. Both surgeries have a high success rate.

“The ideal age is about six years old,” said Pearlman. “The ear is 90 percent of adult size, so we can operate successfully and a child is old enough to understand why the operation is important.”

Samantha said she is nervous about having surgery, but excited about her trip to the Big Apple. She’s also excited about doing things many little girls her age get to do.

“She wants to wear her hair like other girls in her class do,” said Roselles, “and she wants to get her ears pierced.”

 

 

 

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/cosmetic-surgery-answer-bullying/story?id=13255540

 

MOM of 7 Dates Her Kids! 03/08/2011

Filed under: Faith,family,Ian,Kids — Mom Of 7 @ 3:34 pm
Tags: , , , , , , ,

MOM of 7 Dates Her Kids!

When I was divorcing my first husband my kids and I came up with this “date” concept.  Simply, we would take turns having one-on-one time with each other.  For three hours or so, generally on a weekend, one child and I would go somewhere (generally they got to pick) and we’d make it fun.

I loved it.  I used it as a time to tell them what was going on (with the divorce) and figure out where they stood with all the change.  The concept stuck and now several years later, we still do this.

Last weekend, my 10 year old, Ian, was driving me nuts.  The first problem is that he is too much like me so we butt heads quite a bit.  I love him dearly, but he’s one intense child, very strong-willed and very type A personality.  Hmmm, wonder where he got all this—I’ll blame it all on my X husband but we all know that’s a lie!  🙂

The entire weekend I felt like I was having to correct him, redirect him, set him straight.  So by the end of the weekend I was convinced HE HATED ME!  Come on, you know how I feel.  We’ve all been there.  As parents you struggle with correcting/over correcting versus not doing a thing and if  you know me I strongly abhor NOT DOING A THING.  I have to do something.   But after several episodes of confrontation with him I’m worn out emotionally.

So imagine my surprise, in the middle of the rough weekend, he asks ME for “boy time/girl time.”  (that’s what he we call it:  Boy time Girl Time or Girl Time)  Of course, I said YES!  Any opportunity to regroup in a positive way with my kids, I’m all about.   So we agreed upon Monday night (last night).

Honestly, I haven’t seen this all American, sports loving boy be this excited in a long time.  He instant messaged me as soon  he got home yesterday.  He couldn’t contain the excitement in his 10-year-old brain.

By 5:30 yesterday we were on the road to Dick’s Sporting Goods.  He was in Heaven.  And I was in Heaven cuz he was spending his allowance money, not my money.  🙂

But what made this night ultra cool was that once again I was reminded how important it is for us to make one-on-one time for each of our kids.  Honestly, I find out the most and greatest information when I take the time to slow down and spend one-on-one time with them.

Yesterday, Ian was in his typical form asking deep question that HE initiated; questions about Heaven and Hell and sex and drugs, alcohol.  He asked questions most 20 year olds wouldn’t ever ask their parents.  He asked questions that he would NEVER ask if I hadn’t taken the time to be alone with him.

One of the last questions he asked was about hearing the voice of God.  How? He wondered.

We finished our thoughts and questions as we pulled into the driveway nearly three hours after we started our “date”.  I put the car in Park and Ian said “thanks!”  I said…”for what?”  He said, “thanks for everything Mom.”

The way he thanked me was so incredibly sincere sounding it truly touched my heart.  I thought to myself, I didn’t spend any money on him (he used his allowance) but I gave him my time, and my thoughts and together we made great conversation.  And for that, he thanked me from his heart.

My friends, NEVER UNDER-ESTIMATE THE POWER OF ONE-ON-ONE TIME WITH YOUR KIDS!

 

Natalie Portman: Attacked by Huckabee! 03/04/2011

Natalie Portman:  Under Attack by Mike Huckabee!

In her Oscar speech, Natalie Portman thanked her fiance for giving her the ‘most important role’ in her life. Former Arkansas Governor, Mike Huckabee publically criticized Portman’s sentiments, saying she was, in effect, “glorifying and glamorizing” out-of-wedlock pregnancy.

Honestly, I say….”COME ON Huckabee!  Really?  Are we going to be THAT legalistic?”

What is your opinion?  Let me know; LEAVE A COMMENT!

To read the whole story:

http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/41896661/ns/today-entertainment/