Saturday, October 30, 2010

Charges Filed Over Katy Perry and Russell Brand's Raucous Wedding

Kicking it with the Brands isn't always a teenage dream for everyone.

Katy Perry and Russell Brand have dodged charges for disturbing the peace with their wild wedding in India last week, but the resort where their nuptials went down…not so much.

Managers at the Aman-i-Khas hotel where the couple got hitched have been charged with violating noise laws, with the late-night festivities breaking the district's rules against loud music after 10 p.m.

It didn't help that the event took place adjacent to a sacred tiger sanctuary.

In the wake of the celebration, a local politician announced that investigators would determine whether there was any wrongdoing.

Officials said today that Perry and Brand, who decamped from India for a honeymoon in the Maldives this week, are off the hook for any transgressions. But the resort management now faces penalties that range from a fine to jail time.

Jealous Angelina Jolie Flips Out on Brad Pitt

Courteney Cox and David Arquette announced they were separating after 11 years together. Not only is their marriage falling apart, but also Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie’s relationship because of it.

For those not in the know Courteney Cox is Jennifer Aniston’s best friend. Jen was married to Brad Pitt and got divorced shortly after he met and reportedly started romancing Angelina.

According to the National Enquirer (story via here), Jolie is so jealous she won’t have Brad speak even to friends of Aniston’s. Clearly, she’s convinced he’s trying to get back with Jen.

The tab writes – citing the ever-present and never-named reliable sources – that, after Cox and Arquette announced their separation, Brad called Courteney to have a word with her and see if there was anything he could do for her.

Courteney is not only Jennifer’s friend, she’s also Brad’s, so it’s only natural to call her to see how she was doing. Angelina, it seems, did not really see things that way – and totally flipped out when she heard about it.

“Angie flew into a rage when Brad admitted he called Courteney – and she accused him of using the Arquette split to reach out to Jen,” an insider reveals.

“Angie said she wouldn’t be surprised if Jen was sitting right next to Courteney when he called!” the tipster adds. Brad’s mistake wasn’t calling Courteney but rather telling Angelina about it.

“When Brad heard that Courteney and David had split up, he thought is was natural to reach out. He called Courteney and told her, ‘I’ve been there. I know the pain you’re feeling’,” says the same source.

“He said all the things you say to an old friend who’s going through a breakup. But his mistake was bringing it up to Angie,” the spy explains.

When he saw how Angelina (over)reacted, Brad tried to reason with her. As shocked as he was by the accusations made about him, he tried to convince her that he was only being a good friend to Cox.

“But Angelina can’t bear the thought of Brad having any communication at all with Jen – even if it was just to console her best friend over a marital split,” the tipster dishes.

“Angelina is convinced that Courteney has been bad-mouthing her for years in an attempt to protect Jen’s reputation. It’s all very high school, but when it comes to her rivalry with Jennifer, there’s no getting through to Angie,” the same source adds.

Taylor Swift Dodges Questions About Jake Gyllenhaal on Ellen

Earlier this week, word got out that cutie country singer Taylor Swift was now dating “Prince of Persia” star Jake Gyllenhaal. If she is, she’s certainly not saying anything to Ellen DeGeneres on her show.

As MTV’s Hollywood Crush also points out, Ellen is one of the few people in the media with a free pass to ask Taylor questions about her love life.

That’s not to say she will also answer them, though. While taping an interview which will air on Monday, Taylor found herself dodging questions about rumored beau Gyllenhaal and rumored ex-beau John Mayer.

“I’m always optimistic about love... always, sometimes,” Taylor said when Ellen asked her if she was feeling optimistic “about love right now.”

It’s easy to see what Ellen was driving at, but Taylor’s response hinted she wasn’t going to say more. Still, Ellen pressed her.

“But right now you are [optimistic]?” she asked. “Well, why wouldn’t anyone be?” Taylor responded, answering a question with a question in a bit to deflect it.

“Especially if your boyfriend is Jake Gyllenhaal, because he is very handsome. Y’all are just hanging out though right?” Ellen quipped, clearly not satisfied with what she’d gotten by being subtle.

“You have a picture of us on the screen, don’t you?” Taylor replied, again refusing to take the bait and answer the questions coming at her at rapid speed.

Ellen took that as a “yes” and started to explain how she (and Taylor too, probably) saw the blossoming romance.

“Right. But it’s just y’all hanging out – this does not prove anything. I’m just saying he’s adorable, and I like him very much, and so if that is the case that he’s your boyfriend, I think that’s fantastic,” Ellen said.

She then joked, “Wouldn’t he be nervous if anything goes wrong?” again trying to get Taylor to talk about her love life by hinting at the song “Dear John.”

“Dear John,” as fans must know, is one of the tracks included on the album “Speak Now,” which was reportedly written after she broke up with John Mayer because he’d broken her heart.

‘Welcome to the Rileys’ Reviews: Kristen Stewart Shows Serious Acting Skills

Much has been said about “Twilight” star Kristen Stewart and whether she can do more acting than just her hallow-eyed, absent-minded impression of Bella. “Welcome to the Rileys,” her latest film, should answer all those questions.

The star, whom many stars identify with the mortal girl in the immensely successful “Twilight” movie franchise, caught between the affections of a vampire and a werewolf, takes on an entirely different character in “Rileys.”

The film, which premiered at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, also stars James Gandolfini and deals with the story of a “working girl” slash exotic dancer (Kristen) who is “adopted” by grieving parents the Rileys.

Though the film is receiving mixed to negative reviews, primarily because of how certain elements in the plot are dealt with and because of Jake Scott’s direction, the actors in it are getting mostly praising reviews.

Gandolfini’s accent is a little too much to take, most critics seem to agree, as the LA Times sums up, but his presence is very strong onscreen – and, most importantly, very convincing.

Stewart also does her best, thus managing to convince even the most skeptic of critics that there’s more to her acting skills than what she lets show in “Twilight.”

She has depth and, above all, she has that special ability to go to some deep, dark place inside of her (that no one even knew existed) and bring out the tormented little girl who has to sell herself to survive.

“Stewart gives the kind of raw performance those of us who’d practically fallen asleep during her comatose Twilight line readings forgot she was capable of. Perhaps her experience as a child actor was fraught with equivalent perils, but whatever she’s tapping into here, it clearly hits her nerves, and ours,” E! says in a review of the film.

“Much of the pleasure of the film is watching Gandolfini and Stewart navigate a minefield pocked with stopped toilets, no electricity, arrests and even angry johns,” Los Angeles Times’ Betsy Sharkey says.

“What keeps the film’s fragile realism intact are actors who can make even small moments count,” Manohla Dargis of the New York Times also says.

As is usually the case, not all critics are convinced by Stewart’s good acting. Village Voice critic Dan Kois, for instance, only takes from “Rileys” the conclusion that Stewart gives her best performance when she’s not in front of the camera.

“Try as Stewart might, she can’t turn this Manic Trixie Nightmare Girl into a real person. And so the best moments of ‘Welcome to the Rileys’ don’t include its most bankable star at all. Well played, Kristen Stewart. An anti-star is born,” Kois says.

“Welcome to the Rileys” is out in select US theaters since yesterday, October 29.

Friday, October 29, 2010

Lindsay Lohan Leaked Tape Used as Lure in Facebook Scam

Facebook scammers are promising a Lindsay Lohan leaked tape to trick users into completing surveys and spamming their friends.

It's been a while since we haven't seen the name of a celebrity being abused to push malware or scam people, but sooner or later it had to happen again.

This time, it's American actress, pop singer and model, Lindsay Lohan, who scammers envision in an adult tape leaked onto the Internet.

Some messages associated with this scam even imply that there were more than two protagonists in this embarrassing homemade video.

Spammed links take users to a Public Event on Facebook, who's info reads: "Guys... dont ask how I have this video. THIS IS ONLY BEING LEAKED ON FACEBOOK."

An included shortened URL directs visitors to yet another Facebook page, called "HD Video Player," which has nothing to do with Lindsay Lohan.

It seems that whoever started this scam mixed up the landing pages. It reads "Shocking McTruth, the most talked about video on the Internet. You'll never believe this!!!" and is probably intended for one of those "You will never eat again at McDonalds after seeing this" kind of scams.

Nevertheless, the rumors of a tape featuring herself being leaked on Facebook appear to reached Ms. Lohan's ears.

According to celebrity gossip site TMZ, which claims to have asked her closest friends about it, the celebrity denied the existence of any such video.

Interestingly enough, even though this scam has been going around for at least 24 hours, the landing page is still online. So much for Facebook's crack down on spam.

As we previously suggested, Lohan is not the first celebrity to be targeted by scammers. At the beginning of August, we reported about several scams using Justin Bieber as lure.

Monday, October 18, 2010

Taylor Swift Confronts Mayer, Laments Lautner In New Album

Whatever the reactions to Taylor Swift's third full-length album, Speak Now, might be, there are two critics whose responses we can easily pin down in advance.
Taylor Lautner is going to love it.
John Mayer? Not so much.
The hotly anticipated album, which comes out Oct. 25, has been held tightly under wraps until now, with only a handful of songs made available for advance listening even to journalists who have been doing interviews with Swift. Now that her label is finally starting to play the album for select critics, it's easy to fathom why its contents have been closely guarded, all fears of leakage aside. Some of the lyrics are startlingly candid, even by the standards of Taylor "Naming Names, Taking No Prisoners" Swift.
And listening to "Dear John," the scorching song that is-from all appearances-aimed at Mayer, all we can say is: Joe Jonas, you got off easy.
When I talked with Swift last month after hearing a few of the new songs, she didn't hesitate to frame Speak Now as her diary of the last two tumultuous years. The general public might have to guess which relationships or incidents most of the songs are about, but the subjects of the lyrics will quickly recognize themselves, she feels confident.
"They're all made very clear," Swift told me. "Every single song is like a roadmap to what that relationship stood for, with little markers that maybe everyone won't know, but there are things that were little nuances of the relationship, little hints. And every single song is like that. Everyone will know, so I don't really have to send out emails on this one."
But, I said, by necessity of her fame and that of her recent boyfriends, she is past the point of using proper names in the lyrics now.
"Um," she responded, "there's still names that I used. Wait till you hear those."
Actually, there's only one actual name called out anywhere in the 14 songs. So if you were thinking that "Dear John" takes its title strictly from the old expression "a dear John letter," you might want to think again. Swift is nothing if not extremely literal.
With most serious singer-songwriters, it might seem voyeuristic to speculate on the personal situations being reflected upon in song. But Swift has lived her life as a fairly open book, all but inviting her fans to relate her well-known relationships to their own as she evidences a gift for writing in both autobiographical and universal terms.

And it might seem sensationalistic to focus on "Dear John" at the expense of the rest of the album if it didn't feel like it might be her masterpiece to date, or at least the most bracingly, joltingly honest song you've heard any major performer have the nerve to put on record in years. Maybe not since John Lennon took on estranged partner Paul McCartney in "How Do You Sleep" has a major pop singer-songwriter so publicly and unguardedly taken on another in song. But while Lennon's song came off as mean-spirited, Swift was motivated by vulnerability and woundedness, which makes her song far braver... and more cutting.
The first chorus begins: "Dear John/I see it all now that you're gone/Don't you think I was too young/To be messed with/The girl in the dress/Cried the whole way home/I should've known." A second version of the chorus includes the lines: "It was wrong/Don't you think nineteen's too young/To be played/By your dark, twisted games/When I loved you so."
When rumors of a Mayer/Swift romance broke, some of us had a hard time imagining it, because of his rather famously ruinous reputation in matters of love and her ever-present, protective mom. "Dear John" addresses that: "My mother accused me of losing my mind/But I swore I was fine..." And: "You'll add my name to your long list of traitors who don't understand/And I'll look back in regret I ignored what they said/'Run as fast as you can'."
Swift, who turns 21 in December, won't outrightly acknowledge the subjects of these songs-except for "Innocent," the one written to Kanye West-so we have to allow that maybe "Dear John" is about some other much older man her mother warned her about who is known for "all the girls that you run dry," and not the 32-year-old Mayer... Like, the late John Forsythe, maybe? Hmm. Gonna have to stick with our original educated guess on this one.
There may be those who'll accuse Swift of exploiting her own romantic travails in this and other songs. But the extended bridge section of "Dear John" (and, at six and a half minutes, the entire song is fairly extended) packs such a cathartic punch, it really does transcend any tabloid associations. When Swift sings "I'm shining like fireworks over your sad, empty town," anyone who ever felt manipulated or used and found the strength to move on may be cheering like it's the 4th of July.
"Dear John" is the most powerful song on the album, but hardly the only vivid or emotional one. It's not all vituperation, though. The apologetic "Back to December" can't be about anyone but Lautner, and to our ears, so are several of the other new tracks-none of them about revenge, all of them about fondness for the admittedly brief time spent together. While Swift was writing these songs, Lautner's pointy werewolf ears must have been burning nonstop, to the point of spontaneous combustion. He has to be as flattered as Mayer should be flabbergasted.
While you wait for Speak Now's release on Monday, here's a bible on what to expect from the hour-plus album, from first track to last.
MINE
The opening track and first single is already practically a standard, having been rush-released way back on August 4, in response to a leak. Who's it about? Definitely not one of Swift's longer-term steadies, but a shorter-lived crush. (If you had to attach a name to it, it could be Glee actor Cory Monteith, whose are-they-or-aren't-they-dating friendship early in 2010 never seemed to amount to much. Or, it could be about an infatuation so short-lived we never got to hear about it.)
I asked Swift how "Mine" fit with the true confessions theme of the album, since the bits about marriage clearly go beyond the sphere of sheer autobiography.
"It actually is a confession of some sort," she responded, "because this is a situation where a guy that I just barely knew put his arm around me by the water, and I saw the entire relationship flash before my eyes, almost like some weird science-fiction movie. After I wrote the song, things sort of fell apart, as things so often do. And I hadn't talked to him in a couple months. And the song came out, and that day I got an email from him. And I was like"-she claps her hands-" ‘Yes!' Because that one was sort of half-confession, and half-prediction or projection of what I saw. And the fact that it came across so clearly to that guy that he would email me meant that I had been direct enough."
How did the fellow in question take to realizing that their brief flirtation had resulted in an entire fantasy of togetherness, arguing, falling apart, and married reconciliation-ever-after? Swift suddenly became coy. "Um... I don't know. I didn't really respond. But he was sort of like, ‘I had no idea... I realize I've been naïve.'"
SPARKS FLY
"Sparks Fly" is apparently the oldest song on the album, having been performed live-and leaked to the web via a crude concert recording-back in 2008. So hardcore Swift fans are familiar with the bones of this song, if not yet the revised lyrics and arrangement. The chorus is still the same as in the live bootleg that's circulated among fans for a couple of years, but some of the verses have been changed. Among the new lyrics: "My mind forgot to remind me you're a bad idea." Some of the changes make the protagonist of this upbeat song a bit cockier than before. A line that once went "Something that'll haunt me when you're not around" has had a role-reversal switch, so that she now promises to give her b.f. "something that'll haunt you when I'm not around." Apparently she's a little more confident of her charms than she was two years ago.
BACK TO DECEMBER
This song, which was already released on iTunes, doesn't leave many doubts about who it's addressed to, since Swift broke up in Lautner last December. It's been widely noted that it's her first "apology" song. She is, after all, known more as the singer of "Picture to Burn" than for writing songs acknowledging that maybe it's her picture that should've been burned. But she emphasizes that, for her, repentance was no mere lyrical exercise.
"I've always sort of felt like I try to write songs that the people that they're about deserve," she told me. "And up until now I haven't really felt like I really, really needed to apologize to someone and someone deserved that from me. It's just necessary. From knowing the situation and writing honestly, I can't leave that part out, and I don't think I should. And I think that you should be able to say that you're sorry to someone, and sometimes the best way I know how to say anything is in a song... I think that for me, especially playing that song for the first time for people around me, like my family and my friends, they made that point right away-like, ‘You realize you've never done this before. You've never really apologized to someone in a song.' I guess I wasn't conscious of that when I was writing it, because it just was exactly what I needed to say. It wasn't like ‘Oh, I haven't covered this emotion yet.' It was just a new emotion for me to feel."
SPEAK NOW
Also already released on iTunes, the title track is the frothiest song on the album, at least sonically, with Swift trying out an uncharacteristic vocal style that's closer to Feist than her usual, more conversational approach toward singing.
"The song was inspired by the idea of bursting into your ex-boyfriend's wedding and saying ‘Don't do it'-which was originally inspired by one of my friends and the fact that the guy she had been in love with since childhood was marrying this other girl," she explained to me. "And my first inclination was to say, ‘Well, are you gonna speak now?' And then I started thinking about what I would do if I was still in love with someone who was marrying someone who they shouldn't be marrying. And so I wrote this song about exactly what my game plan would be...
"When titling an album," she explained last month, "for me the first step is I go down the titles of the songs I have so far, and see any of those titles could be the recurring theme throughout the entire record. At this point I had probably 70% of the songs that ended up being on the album. And I just kept going back to ‘Speak Now,' because I think it's such a metaphor, that moment where it's almost too late, and you've got to either say what it is you are feeling or deal with the consequences forever. And I feel like that's such a metaphor for so many things that we go through in life, where you can either say what you mean or you can be quiet about it forever. And this album seemed like the opportunity for me to speak now or forever hold my peace."
DEAR JOHN
"The girl in the dress wrote you a song..." Yes, she did. (See introduction.)
MEAN
By far the country-est song on the album, not to mention by far the country-est tune she's ever done, with an abundance of mandolin and banjo. It's easy to imagine this becoming a theme song or rallying cry for the growing anti-bullying movement. Verses like "Calling me out when I'm wounded/You, picking on the weaker man" and "You have pointed out my flaws again, as if I don't already see them/I walk with my head down, trying to block you out" leading to a triumphant we-shall-overcome-the-mean-girls-(and-boys) chorus.
Said chorus could count as a case of backwards projection, flashing back to Swift's pre-fame life: "Someday I'll be living in a big old city/And all you're ever gonna be is mean." But there is a definite allusion to recent controversies when, toward the end of the song, she adds: "And I can see you year from now in a bar talking over a football game/With that same big loud opinion, but no one's listening/Washed up and ranting about the same old bitter things/Drunk and talking all about how I... can't... sing." Snap!
THE STORY OF US
Early fan speculation, based in preliminary teases about the content of the tune, was that this one was about Joe Jonas. But she wrote about Joe on her last album, in "Forever and Always." Do we think she's going to devote a song to him at this late date any more than the New York Times is going to feature on-the-scene reporting from the Spanish Civil War?
"That was the last song that I wrote on the record," she told me, "because it happened most recently. It was at an awards show, and there had been a falling out between me and this guy, and I think both of us had so much that we wanted to say, but we're sitting six seats away from each other and just fighting this silent war of ‘I don't care that you're here.' I don't care that you're here.' It's so terribly, heartbreakingly awkward."
Obviously, the wound was fresh, so even though Swift did run into Jonas at a couple of awards shows this year, it seems much more likely to place its setting as the People's Choice Awards in January, where Swift and Lautner were reported to have successfully avoided each other, just three weeks after breaking up. Key lyrics: "I'd tell you I miss you but I don't know how/I've never heard silence quite this loud." Also: "I would lay my armor down, if you would say you'd rather love than fight."
NEVER GROW UP
No, this isn't another song about Kanye West. (Good guess, though.) Though this one could also be called "Innocent," it's sung to an actual baby. "Never Grow Up" is a sweet lullabye with an undercurrent of sadness or even wary adult bitterness, as Auntie Taylor advises the infant whose nightlight she's turning on: "To you everything's funny/You've got nothing to regret/I'd give all I could, honey/If you could stay like that."
ENCHANTED
The most unabashedly romantic song on the album, and also one of the best, "Enchanted" describes the aftermath of meeting a special someone without knowing whether the instant infatuation is at all reciprocated.
"That song is about pining away for if you're ever going to see someone again-walking away too early," she explained. "It was about this guy that I met in New York City, and I had talked to him on email or something before, but I had never met him. And meeting him, it was this overwhelming feeling of: I really hope that you're not in love with somebody. And the whole entire way home, I remember the glittery New York City buildings passing by, and then just sitting there thinking, am I ever going to talk to this person again? And that pining away for a romance that may never even happen, but all you have is this hope that it could, and the fear that it never will.
"I started writing that in the hotel room when I got back. Because it just was this positive, wistful feeling of: I hope you understand just how much I loved meeting you. I hope that you know that meeting you was not something that I took lightly, or just in passing. And I think my favorite part of that song is the part where, in the bridge, it goes to sort of a stream of consciousness of ‘Please don't be in love with someone else/Please don't have somebody waiting on you.' Because at that moment, that's exactly what my thoughts were. And it feels good to write exactly what your thoughts were in a certain moment."
Apparently, nothing came of this enchantment, except for the song. At least that's the impression given by how Swift acknowledges the guy in question hasn't heard it yet, though she expects him to recognize that it's about their brief encounter when he does hear it. "I think so," she said with a slight laugh. "Using the word ‘wonderstruck' was done on purpose," she added (referring to the line "I'm wonderstruck, blushing all the way home"). Because that's a word which that person used one time in an email. And I don't think I've ever heard anybody use that term before, so I purposely wrote it in the song, so he would know."
(And now every guy who ever ran into Taylor Swift at a social event in New York is thinking: "I did say 'wonderstruck,' right?")
BETTER THAN REVENGE
A fast-paced rocker in the tradition of vengeance songs like "Picture to Burn," but aimed at a Mean Girl. "She underestimated just who she was stealing from..." Indeed. "I think her ever-present frown is a little troubling/She thinks I'm psycho because I like to rhyme her name with things." Speaking of rhymes, the chorus rhymes "she's an actress" with "better known for the things she does on the mattress." Parting thought: "You might have him, but haven't you heard?/You might have him, but I always get the last word." Oh, we imagine "she" heard, whoever she might be.
INNOCENT
Swift premiered this song about Kanye West at the scene of the crime-the MTV Music Video Awards. "I think a lot of people expected me to write a song about him. But for me it was important to write a song to him."
Judging from how flawlessly Swift pulled off her subway performance of "You Belong With Me" shortly after the Kanye incident, it was easy to surmise that she just brushed it off like the preternatural pro she is. But that's hardly the case. "The fans in the subway know exactly what happened that night. It's something I'm never gonna forget. And I'm always going to look back and smile on how they really, really helped me through that.... I'm so emotional and human.
"You have to try really hard to regulate what you feel, what you let in, and what you don't. Because things like criticism, you are told to be very thick-skinned about things like that. But then when it comes to making an album, if you make everything general and kind of gloss over your actual raw feelings, that doesn't benefit anyone... As far as what to feel and what level to feel it, I can't really control any of that. It's just how things hit you, and what you let in is definitely something you've got to find a balance for."
HAUNTED
The most musically dramatic song on the album has effervescent-oops, make that Evanescence-qualities, with strings bumping up against squalling guitars, to underscore the romantic obsession being described. "Something's gone terribly wrong/You're all I wanted," she sings, demanding at one point late in the song: "Finish what you started!"
LAST KISS
A much more tender post-breakup song than the desperate one that precedes it in the lineup. Best lines: "All I know is, I don't how to be something you miss." And: "So I'll watch your life in pictures/Like I used to watch you sleep..." Now, that's haunted.
LONG LIVE
Hard to imagine there's any way the closing number isn't about Lautner, if the ongoing affection she's publicly expressed for him is true (not to mention the remorse heard earlier in the album in "Back to December"). She describes herself and her paramour in heroic terms: "The crowds in the stands went wild/We were the kings and the queens/And they read off our names..." That may strike some listeners as self-important for a celebrity to have written, but later in the song, Swift describes things more in the terms of a homecoming king and queen than Hollywood royalty, saying: "You traded your baseball cap for a crown/And they gave us our trophies/And we held them up for our towns."
Taken at its word, the song would seem to have been written during this moment of mutual triumph, but the conquistador attitude occasionally gives way to bittersweet prophecy, as Swift sings, "If you have children someday, when they point to the pictures, please tell them my name..."
Somehow, we have a feeling the guy's kids aren't going to have a hard time deducing on their own who the blonde girl is. If there was any doubt, Speak Now helps ensure she'll have a spot in the history books and not just a faded teen-pop photo album.

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Kim Kardashian: Do My Assets Look Big?


17 Oktober 2010 | 02:58 WIB
If youve got it, flaunt it: Kim Kardashian checked out her famous curves in the mirror as she shopped for a dress for her 30th birthday celebrations

When shopping for the perfect outfit for a milestone birthday celebration, most women would opt for a dress that doesn't make their bottom look big. But not Kim Kardashian, who made sure that her curvy derriere was the main attraction as she shopped for a dress for her 30th birthday.

The reality TV star was snapped in Las Vegas, checking out her curves in a white Hervé Léger dress in a dressing room mirror. And she made sure that the dress fitted snugly round her bottom and and bosom as she admired herself in the mirror.

But despite the dress fitting the star in all the right places, she settled for a very short and very tight metallic silver dress that did exactly the same thing.

Kim, who turns 30 next Thursday, was in the Nevada city to celebrate her milestone birthday when she and her sister Kourtney hit the shops. They visited a series of high-end stores hours before heading to a party in her honour at the popular TAO nightclub.

Wearing a similar black and white outfit to the one she travelled to Vegas in the day before, Kim visited the pool at the Venetian hotel and was greeted by a crowd of fans and photographers. Later she and Kourtney enjoyed lunch with friends around the pool in one of the hotel's private cabanas.

The Kardashian sisters' celebrity continues to grow as they take on more projects, but one thing Kim says she regrets is posing for Playboy in 2007. In an interview with Harper's Bazaar she recently said she was 'sorry' she bared all in a raunchy cover story for the men's magazine.

Despite her penchant for living her life in the spotlight, she claims that what you see isn't really what you get. She told the latest issue of W magazine: 'I'm not a drinker, and when I'm up on the table dancing, it's for the picture'.

'Then I sit right back down. I play into the perception of me, but it's not really me. And the show reveals that.' Kim's entire family were all at her bash last night, the night appeared to go smoothly - unlike her last birthday. Last year Scott Disick - Kim's sister Kourtney's partner - drank too much, went on a violent rampage and ruined Kim's 29th birthday celebration.