New York Daily News and FHM, Bai has said she is bisexual.[3]. Bai
Ling is currently dating Philadelphia businessman and scientist Scott
DeGirolamo.[citation needed] Bai lived in Singapore for the summer of
2006 and frequently patronised a now-defunct gay dance club called Happy
(now renamed "Play"). She was apparently performing research for her
upcoming film, an undisclosed film about the sex trade.[citation needed]
She is friends with Kimberly Stewart. She dated a play actor in the
mid-1980s in China, and music composer Qu Xiao-Song in the mid 1990s[4],
and Chris Isaak 1999-2001. She was briefly said to be romantically linked
to Backstreet Boy Nick Carter. Rumors spread that Bai was engaged to
him, but Carter denied the rumors, saying they were "just friends".[citation
needed] More recently, Ling has been linked to Dionne Warwick's son,
Damon Elliott, though the two are not currently dating.[citation needed]
She incorrectly predicted that Donald Trump would get his hair shaved
after the "Battle of the Billionaires" at World Wrestling Entertainment's
WrestleMania 23, saying "It will be nice to see him bald".[5]
With all the attitude that Joanna Krupa and her younger sister Marta
are spitting towards the Hilton sisters, we may be seeing a four-deep
Hollywood cat fight going down in the near future. There’s nothing quite
like seeing catfights in Hollywood on a Saturday night, especially when
they’re at some posh club like Element or Les Deux. With all the fake
plastic smiles around, sometimes it’s refreshing to see a little heat
explode between females. Twenty-six-year-old Polish supermodel Joanna
Krupa and her 22-year-old sister, Marta, have a lot to say about about
their experiences running into the infamous Hilton and Lohan girls.
Without any regard to reprercussions, these two ladies have no problem
telling it like it is when it comes to the Hollywood scene.
Former supermodel Janice Dickinson has confirmed she is addicted to
cosmetic surgery. The 53-year-old has spent $100,000 preserving her
youthful looks, but she has always denied being hooked on visits to
the surgeon's office. But the former "America's Next Top Model" judge
now admits it's an addiction. She says, "Believe me, I'm a 900-year-old
dinosaur and without 14 inches of make-up and 32 pounds of fake weave
I wouldn't look the way I do. I want to be the best-looking corpse there
is. "I'm honest about it, I haven't got a problem with it. I borrow
bits from everyone. Every six months I fly to Dallas to get Botox and
I also get collagen injections. I'm addicted to cosmetic surgery."
THE American fascination with self-improvement, inside and out, has been
documented in many variations. But the ardor for physical and aesthetic
enhancement was best captured this year by "Extreme Makeover," an ABC
reality program. In it, middleclass Americans - a police officer, a waitress,
a local radio D. J. - were transformed by plastic surgery, sometimes several
procedures at a time, from plain Janes and Johns into coiffed, glossed
movie-star lookalikes. Along with the approval of BOTOX® for wrinkle reduction
in 2002, the popular neurotoxin that has conquered wrinkles, the show
drew attention to the increasingly popular notion that plastic surgery
is not just for the vain or the wealthy. If cosmetic plastic surgery is
available to the average consumer - thanks in part to lending agencies
that specialize in financing cosmetic procedures - and no longer bears
the stigma of vanity, the question arises: Are we on our way to becoming
a nation of the surgically enhanced? If looking beautiful becomes as easy
as buying a car or a dress, will beauty - or an imitation of it - become
so commonplace as to be meaningless?