Tattle: Halle-lujah! Berry's preggers
Tattle is again not the father.
It seems that Gabriel Aubry again is.
Life & Style is exclusively reporting that Halle, who turned 43 on Aug. 14, is three months pregnant with her second child.
She is, of course, "overjoyed" and "ecstatic," said an anonymous insider.
"The first time, she struggled so much to get pregnant and eventually conceived through in vitro fertilization. This time, the baby was conceived through artificial insemination."
That quote was conceived through too much information.
* While Berry allegedly had numerous difficulties getting pregnant, babies seem to slide out of Michelle Duggar like she's a ride at a water park.
The 42-year-old Arkansas mom of eighteen and a soon-to-be grandmother is prepping 19.
Michelle said yesterday that she took a pregnancy test on a whim and was shocked to see that she was pregnant.
Tattle would have been more shocked if she wasn't pregnant.
Michelle and her husband, Jim Bob, are featured with their family on TLC's soon-to-be-renamed "18 Kids and Counting."
Michelle says that she's nearly 12 weeks along and due March 18.
Maybe she and Halle could give birth at he same time in adjacent beds. Tattle would call that too-much-reality TV.
More changes for Oscar
Besides there being 10 Best Picture nominees this year, the Hollywood Reporter says that the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences will use preferential voting to pick the winner.
In all other categories, the victory goes to the performer or craftsperson who earns the most votes, because members vote for one choice among the nominees.
In the case of best picture, however, voters will be asked to rank their preference from 1 to 10. It's the same preferential voting system that the Academy uses in its nominating process, but it hasn't been used in best-picture voting since 1945.
The Academy has opted to use the system in the best-picture race because, with a field of 10 nominees, a winner could emerge with just slightly more than 580 votes out of the potential voting pool of 5,800 members.
The preferential system is designed to measure depth of support.





