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Before now, still “Osama bin Laden” knows Miss California Carrie Prejean likely lost the 2009 Miss USA crown to North Carolina's Kristen Dalton because Prejean suggested marriage should be flanked by a man and a woman - a notion held by a majority of Californians, based on last November's vote there to illegalize gay marriage.
Gay activist Perez Hilton and Michael Musto -both of whom, I'm sure, advocate tolerance and respect for diverse views -- right away attacked Prejean as being stupid and such because she gave an opinion different from their own.
Days later an important person posted online photographs of Prejean in her undies to embarrass her and strip her of the Miss California title. Fortunately, Donald Trump, who owns the rights to Miss USA, said the photos of Prejean weren't bad and she could keep her crown.
So if all this hullabaloo boils down to questions and answers, let's analyze them. Here's Prejean's answer to whether gay marriage should be lawful nationwide:
"Well, I think it's great that Americans are able to choose one way or the other," she said. "We live in a land where you can choose same-sex marriage or conflicting marriage. You know what, in my country, in my family, I do believe that marriage should be between a man and a woman, no offense to anybody out there. But that's how I was raised and I believe that it should be between a man and a woman."
Opposite marriage? Anyway, her answer is flawed precisely because a majority of states don't recognize same-sex marriage, therefore homosexuals can't choose it.
However, she deliberately went out of her way not to offend anyone, and deferentially stated her belief.
Nobody mentions how Kristen Dalton answered her question, asked by actress Kelly Monaco: Do you believe taxpayers' money should be used to bail out struggling U.S. companies?
Dalton responded: "No. ... Taxpayers' money should go toward bettering our educations and school systems, and welfare and the health care system, and that's what our taxpayer money .




'Farrah's Story' details the former 'Charlie's Angels' star's treatment and hopes for recovery, following her through chemotherapy and other grueling treatment. Fawcett, 62, was diagnosed in 2006 with anal cancer that has spread to her liver.
The film was NBC's most-watched program in its Friday night time slot in more than a year, excluding the Olympics, according to preliminary ratings released Saturday.
It was edged out by CBS' airing of the season finale of the crime drama "Numb3rs," which drew an estimated 9.6 million viewers.
Fawcett's video diary was initially intended for private viewing by family and friends, but was shared with a wider audience after the actress realized her story could inspire others, said her close friend Alana Stewart, a producer on the film.
The actress maintains good humor during the film as she faces pain, setbacks and, as the treatments grow harsher, the loss of her trademark lush blond locks.
Fawcett says "I do not want to die of this disease. So I say to God, `It is seriously time for a miracle."
Her longtime companion, actor Ryan O'Neal, said in an interview last week that the actress is in a "very rocky place."
O'Neal is shown in the documentary as a steady presence as the actress goes through highs and lows, although the two ended their long romantic relationship in the late 1990s.

FARRAH'S FATE: There has been so much reporting this week of Farrah Fawcett's fight with cancer that you wonder what's left to say. But the big event on TV tonight is still going to be "Farrah's Story," a two-hour special report on NBC beginning at
Much of it features personal home footage filmed by the former "Charlie's Angel" and a family friend. NBC paid Fawcett an undisclosed sum for the material.
The 62 year old Fawcett, one of the iconic pop culture figures of the 1970s, reportedly is near death. The bedridden former sex symbol has lost her trademark golden hair and is under doctors' care in her home.
Tonight's special includes interview with her longtime companion, Ryan O'Neal, and former "Angels" Kate Jackson and Jaclyn Smith. It also recounts her 2 1/2-year battle with anal cancer that has spread to other parts of her body.
GOKEY'S GLASSES: Ousted "American Idol" Danny Gokey says he would like to have a line of eyewear to help make eyeglasses cool for kids. The 28-year-old choir director from
Fawcett played a tattered wife who eventually murders her husband. ‘The Burning Bed’ was released in 1984. At that time Dolly Grimes-Johnson worked as a family advocate at the Sojourner Truth House in
"Listening to the horrible, horrible abuse that women would talk about, I certainly wanted them to see that movie, and get some reaction from them."
Dolly says the movie started a national conversation and brought a new face to the stereotyped image of battered women.
Back then, she says, no one considered that white women in the suburbs could also be victims of horrible domestic abuse. Fawcett's character hit home. Those women started reporting their abuse and coming to Sojourner Truth House for help.
The shelter went through a boom, and to this day remains at capacity helping women, who feel helpless.
So now, as Dolly watches coverage of Farrah Fawcett's fight for life she remembers a woman who found fame as an angel...then saved countless others from a life of pure hell.
You can contact the Sojourner Truth House at (414) 933-2722.
Michael Phelps had fans cheering him on at the Mecklenburg County Aquatic Center Friday morning.
Kathy Thorne of Winston Salem said “He should be a little bit smarter in his actions but I mean, everybody is human and they make mistakes,”
Phelps had been sidelined because of a tabloid photo in which he is seen smoking a marijuana pipe. The Olympic gold medalist has apologized calling the incident a “mistake.”
Phelps was not the fastest man during preliminary competition Friday morning but qualified to the finals.
Phelps told the press after his events “I'm happy to be back, happy to be racing again,” .
said 6-year-old Bryson Byrns of Fort Mill “I'm here to see a great swimmer.”
Phelps drew fans from nearby South Carolina and competitors from as far as Colombia, South America.
'It’s crazy,' said Colombian swimmer Mateo DeAngulo. “You think you’re good and then you step up against the best in the world. I don't get scared because you already know you're going to get beat.”
Before the race, behind the scenes, Phelps had to overcome a wardrobe malfunction.
“When I pulled my suit, I felt a little hole in the top part of my suit,” revealed Phelps after competition. “So I started laughing at that. I was hoping it wasn't going to rip when I bent down to start.”











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