UMMM WHAT IS WRONG WITH THIS PICTURE?? WE ALL KNOW THAT ROB KRISTEN AND THE TWILIGHT SAGA SHOULD HAVE BEEN TOP 3 RIGHT???
Thursday, July 29, 2010
Rob and Kristen's Famous Fans!!
Ed Westwick and Matt Lanter are famous fans of Robert Pattinson and Kristen Stewart,
ROBERT PATTINSON, the aftermath. HIS SMILE. by @melarimo
HE’s BEAUTIFUL. HE’s SEXY. HE’s CHARMING and CHARISMATIC. HE’s HUMBLE.
HE’s ADORABLE. HE’s GOOFY. HE’s WITTY and UNFILTERED. I could go on for
days, months pROBably, about all of the things I LOVE about ROB. He makes me
smile. He makes me laugh. Sometimes he makes me cry. The passion he brings
to a character does this, but this is not what I refer to.
ROBERT PATTINSON IS A HUMAN BEING. He is a person, like anyone else. He
breathes. He eats. He sleeps. He wakes up every morning and starts his day. He
goes to work, doing something he loves, something that gives us all tremendous joy.
He hopes. He dreams. He wants. He needs. He loves. He’s no different from any of
us. HE FEELS. This is where the tears come. HE HURTS. HE’s a MAN, not a machine.
Everyone has their limit, their breaking point of how much they can take. He has been
pushed to his, PUSHED HARD, yet he still manages to maintain HIS DIGNITY and
CLASS. HE’s ADMIRABLE.
He deserves his personal space. He deserves to feel a sense of security, a sense
of calm. HE DESERVES TO BREATHE. He deserves to have his rights as a human
being RESPECTED. HE DESERVES TO BE HAPPY.
We ADORE this beautiful man. Sadly, this adoration is a double-edged sword for him.
Our need for him is precisely what has turned his life into chaos. Do we want to see
him? YES. Do we want to see him at any cost to his privacy, his safety, HIS HAPPINESS?
I’ll speak for myself when I say ABSOLUTELY NOT. I have a greater need than just to see
him. I need to see him HAPPY.
I could go on for days, months pROBably, about all of the things I LOVE about ROB...
but the thing I LOVE THE MOST...is HIS SMILE.
Thanks To @melarimo
OMG this is so beautiful I have no words on how good this is
EW Sexy Beast showdown » round two
Things are starting to get ugly in EW.com’s Sexy Beasts summer showdown! Yes, folks, as we enter round 2 of our single-elimination tournament, we’re pitting characters from True Blood, X-Men, and Twilight against their own franchise teammates.
Currently
Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson), 'Twilight'/'Eclipse' 51%
Emmett Cullen (Kellan Lutz), 'Twilight'/'Eclipse' 49%
BestWeekEver: Rob Listed as the #6 Most Unwashed Celeb
Included on the list alongside Kristen Stewart, Brad Pitt, Johnny Depp and Adam Sandler, perhaps being ‘unwashed’ is what makes an actor successful. Then again, maybe not… Ron Jeremy, Amy Winehouse and Spencer Pratt are also on the list. I tried. lol.
Celebrities are a revered group of people whom we regard as living Gods. But, in the immortal words of our most revered celebrity, Martin Lawrence, “some of you don’t wash your ass.” Here are the 30 Most Unwashed Celebs.
6. Robert Pattinson
‘Robert Pattinson’ Revealed as Diablo Cody’s Talk-Show Sidekick *Updated w/ Video*
Starts @10:09
Like every great chat show host, Diablo Cody has revealed the Ed Sullivan to her Johnny Carson, the Paul Shaffer to her David Letterman — and it’s none other than Robert Pattinson.
Kinda.
For the second installment of her mobile chat show, “Red Band Trailer,” the screenwriter features comedian Chelsea Handler. After downloading with the E! star about booze and boys, Cody retires to her trailer couch and reviews her day with a body pillow featuring Pattinson’s brooding face.
“Well, Robert Pattinson, I think we both learned a thing or two today,” Cody waxes. …
“One, that Chelsea is a wonderful and hospitable human being, and I’m not that bad myself.”
We wonder if body-pillow Rob has to fight as hard to resist Cody’s intoxicating scent? The Ministry also appreciates Cody’s new mantra, used to button up her wholesome webisode:
“Until next time, take care of yourself. And it’s not your fault.”
We believe her.
Robert Pattinson Glamour Magazine (UK) Interview
COPIED AND PASTE
Q: What made you say yes to Remember Me; you are in the position to say yes or no to a director to choose which movie you want to be in or which movie you don't want to be in?
A: Kind of. You get certain offers and stuff, but with this, it was before Twilight came out, and I read the script and I wanted to do another job before Twilight came out. I didn't end up doing one, but that was one of the things I read. So with this, usually every single young guy who is a lead is often such a stock character. But Tyler wasn't really coming from an obvious place and wasn't ending up in an obvious place either, so it gave you much more to work with, and it could be more of a character piece. There are certain things about generic films where you have to do certain things and perform in a certain way, and it doesn't really make sense. I think that's why this is kind of a little bit weird in that respect, it doesn't really fit what you'd expect from this kind of drama.
Q: With Remember Me, were there certain aspects of the character you could empathize with? He's a guy who likes to do his own thing…
A: Yeah, in a lot of ways, I saw right from the beginning that he was quite similar to me, and I kind of tried to tailor it to be even more similar, but then the more I tailored it, the more it became a fictional creation. But yeah, I've been saying there's a kind of moment where, I think it's the end of the adolescent period, where you think that you have to be an individual so much and you want to stamp your identity on everything. I mean, you get to your early 20s and you are much more accepting of being part of the world, and not wanting to drive everything away from you all the time, and I kind of had that when I was in my early 20s.
Q: Would you ever stand up for yourself to the point where you are going to fight with authority, like the character?
A: I know, that's what one of the main things I liked about it; there are certain things which are like fantasy scenes of mine. It was quite satisfying, even the way he fights. It was all in the script, it said he fights like a pitbull, and I was just like, 'Yeah, I want to fight like a pitbull!'
MORE AFTER THE JUMP
Q: What made you say yes to Remember Me; you are in the position to say yes or no to a director to choose which movie you want to be in or which movie you don't want to be in?
A: Kind of. You get certain offers and stuff, but with this, it was before Twilight came out, and I read the script and I wanted to do another job before Twilight came out. I didn't end up doing one, but that was one of the things I read. So with this, usually every single young guy who is a lead is often such a stock character. But Tyler wasn't really coming from an obvious place and wasn't ending up in an obvious place either, so it gave you much more to work with, and it could be more of a character piece. There are certain things about generic films where you have to do certain things and perform in a certain way, and it doesn't really make sense. I think that's why this is kind of a little bit weird in that respect, it doesn't really fit what you'd expect from this kind of drama.
Q: With Remember Me, were there certain aspects of the character you could empathize with? He's a guy who likes to do his own thing…
A: Yeah, in a lot of ways, I saw right from the beginning that he was quite similar to me, and I kind of tried to tailor it to be even more similar, but then the more I tailored it, the more it became a fictional creation. But yeah, I've been saying there's a kind of moment where, I think it's the end of the adolescent period, where you think that you have to be an individual so much and you want to stamp your identity on everything. I mean, you get to your early 20s and you are much more accepting of being part of the world, and not wanting to drive everything away from you all the time, and I kind of had that when I was in my early 20s.
Q: Would you ever stand up for yourself to the point where you are going to fight with authority, like the character?
A: I know, that's what one of the main things I liked about it; there are certain things which are like fantasy scenes of mine. It was quite satisfying, even the way he fights. It was all in the script, it said he fights like a pitbull, and I was just like, 'Yeah, I want to fight like a pitbull!'
MORE AFTER THE JUMP
News Video: Fans Already Waiting For Robert Pattinson In Tennessee
IM GOING TO MISS HIM IN LA BUT HE NEEDS A BREAK FROM HERE :(
SOURCE
SOURCE
“Eclipse” Themed Cinema Giftcards Available in UK Stores
Cineworld have just launched a set of “Eclipse” Team Edward, Team Jacob and Team Bella giftcards available in several UK stores. You can check out the pictures below to see the ones that I spotted in WHSmith today. What a great gift for your fellow Twilight fans!
SOURCE
SOURCE
Robert Pattinson Talks to Glamour Magazine About “Remember Me,” Fame and Fans
Q: What made you say yes to Remember Me; you are in the position to say yes or no to a director to choose which movie you want to be in or which movie you don’t want to be in?
A: Kind of. You get certain offers and stuff, but with this, it was before Twilight came out, and I read the script and I wanted to do another job before Twilight came out. I didn’t end up doing one, but that was one of the things I read. So with this, usually every single young guy who is a lead is often such a stock character. But Tyler wasn’t really coming from an obvious place and wasn’t ending up in an obvious place either, so it gave you much more to work with, and it could be more of a character piece. There are certain things about generic films where you have to do certain things and perform in a certain way, and it doesn’t really make sense. I think that’s why this is kind of a little bit weird in that respect, it doesn’t really fit what you’d expect from this kind of drama.
Q: With Remember Me, were there certain aspects of the character you could empathize with? He’s a guy who likes to do his own thing…
A: Yeah, in a lot of ways, I saw right from the beginning that he was quite similar to me, and I kind of tried to tailor it to be even more similar, but then the more I tailored it, the more it became a fictional creation. But yeah, I’ve been saying there’s a kind of moment where, I think it’s the end of the adolescent period, where you think that you have to be an individual so much and you want to stamp your identity on everything. I mean, you get to your early 20s and you are much more accepting of being part of the world, and not wanting to drive everything away from you all the time, and I kind of had that when I was in my early 20s.
MORE AFTER THE JUMP
A: Kind of. You get certain offers and stuff, but with this, it was before Twilight came out, and I read the script and I wanted to do another job before Twilight came out. I didn’t end up doing one, but that was one of the things I read. So with this, usually every single young guy who is a lead is often such a stock character. But Tyler wasn’t really coming from an obvious place and wasn’t ending up in an obvious place either, so it gave you much more to work with, and it could be more of a character piece. There are certain things about generic films where you have to do certain things and perform in a certain way, and it doesn’t really make sense. I think that’s why this is kind of a little bit weird in that respect, it doesn’t really fit what you’d expect from this kind of drama.
Q: With Remember Me, were there certain aspects of the character you could empathize with? He’s a guy who likes to do his own thing…
A: Yeah, in a lot of ways, I saw right from the beginning that he was quite similar to me, and I kind of tried to tailor it to be even more similar, but then the more I tailored it, the more it became a fictional creation. But yeah, I’ve been saying there’s a kind of moment where, I think it’s the end of the adolescent period, where you think that you have to be an individual so much and you want to stamp your identity on everything. I mean, you get to your early 20s and you are much more accepting of being part of the world, and not wanting to drive everything away from you all the time, and I kind of had that when I was in my early 20s.
MORE AFTER THE JUMP
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