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JULY SARAH PALIN, long a crossover star between the worlds of politics and pop culture, resigns as governor of Alaska, a move that baffles many but frees her to spend time on her upcoming book, "Going Rogue." And there is a rare and fascinating sighting at Jackson's star-studded memorial service in Los Angeles: 11-year-old PARIS MICHAEL JACKSON, previously only seen in paparazzi shots, her face covered by a veil. "Ever since I was born, Daddy has been the best father you could ever imagine," she says into the microphone. A child who had seemed, with her siblings, a mere oddity is revealed to be a lovely, self-possessed young girl. AUGUST Chilling news for reality television: Ryan Jenkins, known as a sweet-talking contestant on VH1's "Megan Wants a Millionaire," hangs himself days after his ex-model wife's body is discovered, mutilated and stuffed into a suitcase. The case of Jenkins, who had been charged in the death, leads to calls for stricter background screenings of reality show contestants. SEPTEMBER What do a South Carolina congressman, a bad-boy rap singer and the world's top women's tennis player have in common? They are all really rude in September. For SERENA WILLIAMS, it's a profane outburst at a lineswoman
-- unfortunate but much more common than, say, heckling a sitting president as he addresses Congress. REP. JOE WILSON'S outburst
-- "You lie!" -- has historians scratching their heads for comparisons. As for KANYE WEST, his ill-received dissing of Taylor Swift at the VMA awards leads to some emotional self-analysis on the couch
-- Jay Leno's couch. OCTOBER ANDRE AGASSI had so cleaned up his bad-boy image over the years that it's a shock to hear him admit, in a new book, that he used crystal meth, lied to wriggle out of a failed drug test, and even hated tennis. But this is really the month of RICHARD HEENE'S brazen and misguided attempt to use his 6-year-old son as a means to a reality show gig. The nation is unified and transfixed as it watches the silver balloon, perhaps carrying Falcon, float across Colorado. Then it's disgusted. NOVEMBER What a month in pop culture. Ordinarily we'd give it to PALIN for the enormity of the crowds at her book tour. Or to WINFREY, who announces she's leaving her talk-show perch
-- well, in 2011 -- for unspecified ventures in cable. Or to LAMBERT again, whose over-the-top sexual gestures at the American Music Awards anger ABC and many fans. But no, this month belongs to a socialite couple from Virginia, TAREQ and MICHAELE SALAHI, who manage to breach vaunted White House security with no weapons other than very nice clothes and a heavy dose of social ambition. Michaele had been in the running to be a "real housewife" on Bravo. Something tells us she doesn't need the publicity now. Four days after the state dinner debacle, a strange accident happens in an upscale Florida gated community. Golfer TIGER WOODS drives into a fire hydrant and a tree ...
DECEMBER And the fallout seems to know no bounds, as tabloids come out with new reports daily of women claiming to have had sex with the golfer, including at least one former reality cast member. Weeks after the accident, WOODS remains out of sight, trying to salvage his marriage and image. But things are sure looking good for BOYLE, whose album, "I Dreamed a Dream," debuts at No. 1. And that's not all
-- her YouTube videos from the show are the most-watched all year, with more than 120 million views. Coming in second: that little boy who's just left the dentist and is feeling a bit woozy. The 7-year-old star of DAVID AFTER DENTIST then asks his Dad a rather prescient question for the age of reality TV: "Is this real life?"
[Associated
Press;
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