Shay Mitchell
Thursday, October 22, 2015
Tyga: I Would NEVER Smoke Weed Around King!
Sources close to Tyga say he would never, ever put son King in harm’s way or risk his health, and that includes leaving him in the vicinity of marijuana.
While it’s lit, anyway. He looks to have done so here:
Kylie Jenner’s boyfriend is in hot water after a video of Tyga’s son next to a pile of weed surfaced this week on Snapchat. He took it down ASAP.
Tyga, obviously, was shocked at people criticizing him.
The mediocre rapper is incredulous that peeps would call him out for questionable parenting, because s–t, he didn’t even know that was there.
Note the lack of denial that it was there. Just saying.
Tyga is a great dad, he maintains, noting that were a lot of people in the room, including his mom, and he has a strict “no blazing” rule around King.
The 25-year-old star says he would never do drugs around his kid, or allow anyone else to, for that matter, and always treats King like … well, a King.
Still, for a man in a custody fight for the three-year-old from his relationship with Blac Chyna, he may want to clean up before posting more Snaps.
Otherwise, he’s going to have his hands full with much bigger problems than Blac trolling Kylie and haters calling him out for dating a teenager.
Some free advice from all of us at THG, T-Raww.
Cruel Intentions Remake: Coming to NBC?!
Television networks are searching for proven brands, looking to harness nostalgia among angsty 30-somethings and resigning themselves to an utter lack of ideas.
The result? Remakes galore!!
Case in point of the day: NBC is working on a small screen of Cruel Intentions, a longtime fan favorite of Millennials and Slightly Older Than Millennials.
These days, with the Internet’s proliferation and shows like Gossip Girl, sex, lies, backstabbing, girl on girl action and bullying are the norm on teen dramas.
In 1999, the Ryan Phillippe, Reese Witherspoon and Sarah Michelle Gellar drama was boundary-pushing, and damned if it’s not still sexy as f–k.
A seminal film, if you will. In more ways than one. Anyway, the Cruel Intentions TV series, if it gets the green light, will center around Bash Casey, 16.
He’s the son of Phillippe and Witherspoon’s characters from the original film, Sebastian and Annette, and the show will be set in the present day.
After finding his father’s journal, Bash learns of a family legacy he wasn’t aware existed, and sets off looking for answers, intrigued to say the least.
He swaps his small-town Kansas upbringing (!?) for a scholarship to Brighton Prep in San Francisco, and you can imagine what he discovers there.
Basically, the youngster will be balls deep in sex, money, power and corruption and have to navigate that world without losing his soul in the process.
Cruel Intentions is just the latest in an endless string of reboots, although this season’s remakes and revivals have debuted to mixed results.
Fox’s Minority Report was not the hit the network imagined, and NBC’s Heroes reminded us why the show got so bad it had to be canceled initially.
On the flip side, CBS’ Limitless follow-up has done fairly well, and Netflix has probably struck gold with its upcoming Gilmore Girls revival.
Marty McFly and Doc Brown to Jimmy Kimmel: 2015 Sucks!
As anyone with an Internet connection and/or knowledge of an iconic movie knew this week, yesterday marked Back to the Future Day.
That"s because Marty McFly (Michael J. Fox) and Doc Brown (Christopher Lloyd) time-traveled to October 21, 2015 in Back to the Future Part II.
And where did they land? On the set of Jimmy Kimmel Live!
In a hilarious bit on Wednesday night, Fox and Lloyd reprised their beloved characters, showing up alongside the comedian and asking many questions about the year and the world around them.
Is there peace in the Middle East yet? Are there hoverboards? Flying cards? No, no and no.
So.. what is there? What has mankind achieved? The cronut and the selfie, pretty much.
Watch McFly and Brown act very discouraged by the apparent laziness of their fellow human beings, and very depressed by this lame future, now: