Former "Moonlighting" star Cybill Shepherd is way too picky! The 57-year-old took a break from filming scenes on the Sapphic series, "The L-word" -- to dig for gold!
80. Good Grief Charlie Brown! Sometimes your frickin' nose just itches. Is it a crime if you tend to your itches? People need to grow up and quit taking these kinds of pictures. No wonder stars are paranoid about photographers. I would be too.
84. Don't these camera geeks have anything better to do? So, a star has an itchy nose, or perhaps a bug has flown up their nose. GEEEEEEEEEEee whizzzzzzzzzz, get a life! Quit being so nosey!!!! I wish these stars would band together, find out who these photographers are, hire another, who doesn't like them so much, to go after them with a camera and publish every disquisting picture of them they can find. So? No one knows, or cares who they are, but the funny pictures would make them stand out in a crowd anywhere they go. AAHHHHHHHHH, now that is revenge, make them the "star" of ugly pictures and share your hell of knowing whatever they do will be photographed and published. Wise up stars, fight fire with fire! Give them a dose of their own medicine for a change! Let them feel the blunt of David Letterman's jokes and others. What fun it could be for the stars!
86. TMZ, why don't you take some pictures of your staff and the smartass captions that you put on celebirties. I guess you and your staff will do anything for money. Why don't you get a real job if you can't get real news. Really glad I don't know you all you are so critical it makes me sick. You really need to clean your own house and stop picking other people apart. Your all SICK, SICK, SICK.
87. Omigod! You mean celebrities are actual human beings?? They get stuff in their noses like the rest of us?? WOW!! Certainly worth investigating. Perhaps congressional hearings are in order.
89. Nose picking, graphic sex (pornography), violence, cursing. Nobody needs to see it. It's personal. Showing it is tasteless. It's funny to other tasteless individuals which much of the media, print and film, encourages—"pushing the envelope". It's becoming a demeaning, tasteless, crude society. The more you show it, the more it's becomes acceptable, rather not so shocking. It's not saying much for any of us. The great masters of art and prose used great taste in depicting body parts or describing sexual acts, usually part of romance. And that's the beauty, the art. Let's be more creative, let's see some taste on TV, film and print.