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And we never listened to “Greased Lightning” the same way again. John Travolta was slapped with a lawsuit in May alleging sexual assault and battery against an anonymous masseur, who claimed that the actor made a pass at him after hiring him for a massage. In what initially sounded like an awkward "SNL" skit, the suit alleged that Travolta took off his clothes, began rubbing the masseur’s leg, and touched his genitals. Travolta allegedly apologized after making the alleged advances, but continued to pressure the masseur to have sex with him and an actress who was also in the building, according to the suit. A second anonymous masseur came forward a day later, and a third suit was filed within a week. The third came from a Royal Caribbean cruise worker who also alleged that Travolta had taken off his robe and solicited him for sex. The first two suits were later dropped, but that wasn’t the end of the actor’s legal woes. He was sued again in June, this time for libel by a man who wrote a book about his alleged gay encounters with the actor. Robert Randolph alleged that Travolta was spreading false statements about his mental health in order to discredit him and discourage people from buying the book. The case was later dismissed by a judge.
Ever since Grammys weekend 2009, Chris Brown has been inextricably associated with the vicious beating of his then-girlfriend Rihanna—but that hasn’t stopped both Brown and Rihanna from trolling the universe all through 2012. They started off the year by setting the rumor mill abuzz almost three years after the night Rihanna was beaten by supposedly spending four hours alone together in Brown’s dressing room before the Grammy Awards. Little more than a week later, Rihanna dropped a remix to her song “Birthday Cake” featuring Brown and a lot of sexually explicit exchanges. The rest of the year was filled with speculation about their rekindling romance, as photos of the two partying together cropped up and Rihanna gave an emotional interview to Oprah Winfrey in which she called Brown the “love of my life,” despite Brown’s relationship at the time with aspiring model Karreuche Tran. The Karreuche problem appeared to go away in October, however, when Brown announced that he was ending his relationship because he didn’t “want to see her hurt over my friendship with Rihanna.” A day later a video titled “The Real Chris Brown,” showed an apparently drunk Brown musing on his relationships with Rihanna and Tran. “Is there such thing as loving two people? I don’t know if that’s possible but for me, I feel like it is,” Brown drawls from the back of a taxicab. November slapped us with photo after Instagram photo of the pair backstage, lounging around, or, in one case, snuggling. And we can’t neglect to mention Rihanna’s single “Nobody’s Business,” a duet with Brown from her newest album—called Unapologetic because, get it? Rihanna is unapologetic about every god-awful decision she’s made this year. (Evan Agostini/ AP Photo) See the Full Story at The Daily Beast
And we never listened to “Greased Lightning” the same way again. John Travolta was slapped with a lawsuit in May alleging sexual assault and battery against an anonymous masseur, who claimed that the actor made a pass at him after hiring him for a massage. In what initially sounded like an awkward "SNL" skit, the suit alleged that Travolta took off his clothes, began rubbing the masseur’s leg, and touched his genitals. Travolta allegedly apologized after making the alleged advances, but continued to pressure the masseur to have sex with him and an actress who was also in the building, according to the suit. A second anonymous masseur came forward a day later, and a third suit was filed within a week. The third came from a Royal Caribbean cruise worker who also alleged that Travolta had taken off his robe and solicited him for sex. The first two suits were later dropped, but that wasn’t the end of the actor’s legal woes. He was sued again in June, this time for libel by a man who wrote a book about his alleged gay encounters with the actor. Robert Randolph alleged that Travolta was spreading false statements about his mental health in order to discredit him and discourage people from buying the book. The case was later dismissed by a judge.
The world trembled in fear every time Amanda Bynes drove a car in 2012. The “retired” actress started things off with a bang, getting charged with a DUI in June—and turning to President Obama for help. “I don’t drink,” she wrote in a tweet addressed to @BarackObama. “Please fire the cop who arrested me. I also don’t hit and run. The end.” Bynes had been seen attempting a three-point U-turn while texting at a Los Angeles intersection, which resulted in her reportedly backing over a curb, holding up traffic, and sideswiping another vehicle. Bynes was arrested again in August for allegedly pulling another hit-and-run (she was also rear-ended that same month) and was photographed driving while allegedly smoking marijuana. Finally, after racking up six tickets (and not paying a single fine), the former Nickelodeon star got her license revoked and her car impounded. And the world felt safe at night once more.
Fred Willard’s unlucky night came in July, when the comedian was allegedly caught at the Tiki Theater, a seedy Hollywood porn theater, committing a “lewd act.” Poor Willard was caught and arrested only 23 minutes into the movie—but, at least according to him, he didn’t miss out on much. “Wait til you hear my version; much more PG. and my review, lousy film, but theater would make at terrific racquetball court,” the actor tweeted in the days after his arrest. Too bad his employers at PBS, where Willard had recently been hired as the host of a new competitive antiquing show, "Market Warriors," didn’t share his sense of humor. They fired him after learning about his alleged public act.
The divorce that launched a thousand conspiracy theories came in July, when Katie Holmes filed for divorce from her husband of five years, Tom Cruise. Was it because of Scientology? Who would get custody of Suri? Would Scientology leaders resort to dubious methods to keep Holmes from spilling secrets? Was Holmes part of a “wife auditions” process through which Sea Org heads supposedly chose a mate for their marquee devotee? Most of these questions remain unanswered, but the two actors reached a divorce settlement within two weeks, with Holmes retaining primary custody of 6-year-old Suri.
It was a Twihard’s nightmare come to life. "Twilight" couple Kristen Stewart and Robert Pattinson broke up in July after photos emerged of Stewart canoodling with her married, 41-year-old "Snow White and the Huntsman" director, Rupert Sanders. Fans immediately called the legitimacy of the photos into question—but those theories were debunked when Stewart herself issued a heartbroken public apology to Pattinson: “I’m deeply sorry for the hurt and embarrassment I’ve caused to those close to me and everyone this has affected. This momentary indiscretion has jeopardized the most important thing in my life, the person I love and respect the most, Rob. I love him, I love him, I’m so sorry,” Stewart said in a statement. Sanders also issued an apology, saying: “I am utterly distraught about the pain I have caused my family. My beautiful wife and heavenly children are all I have in this world. I love them with all my heart. I am praying that we can get through this together.” Though Liberty Ross, Sanders' wife, has since been seen out and about without her wedding ring, Stewart and Pattinson were reconciled by mid-September.