Al Gore's masseuse to sell her sex story for $1 million
Submitted by Seher Dhillon on Sat, 06/26/2010 - 04:21A long time after making headlines, the masseuse of Al Gore has decided to sell her sex story with Gore for $1 million.
The Oregon women, who had accused Gore of making her a ' crazed sex poddle' has said that she is ready to reveal her identity and that she would publicly reveal herself.
This would bring more embarrassment for the former Vice President candidate and now looked up as a person who is fighting for the environment, for the seven-figure money.
National Enquirer Did Not Shell out for Al Gore’s Molest Account
Submitted by Shamsher Singh on Fri, 06/25/2010 - 10:30The Executive Editor of the National Enquirer says that the Oregon masseuse, who made a sexual attack accusation against Al Gore asked for $1 million from the tabloid, but the Enquirer did not disburse her or anybody else in accounting the story.
Barry Levine said in an interview on Thursday that the woman proffered to vend her account through her legal representative, but that no financial dealing took place and the paper carried out only a short meeting with her.
An Affair Lead to Al Gore’s Divorce
Submitted by Shamsher Singh on Wed, 06/16/2010 - 08:55It is being speculated than an affair is the cause of the recent split between Al Gore and his wife. The separation between the Gores after 40 years of marriage has come as a big shock to everyone, including close friends and family members.
Some are claiming that the former Vice President is having an affair with Laurie David. Both of them share a lot of similarities. Al Gore and Laurie are both environment lovers and this is a common link. Laurie also helped in the production of Al Gore’s ‘An Inconvenient Truth’.
Satellite TV Battle to Emerge Soon
Submitted by Seher Dhillon on Sat, 05/01/2010 - 20:01MultiChoice is reported to have attacked the incoming satellite TV provider, On Digital Media, by unveiling its latest product, DSTV Lite, at R99 per month.
Former US vice-president Al Gore, whose production firm Current TV will be offering the content for the new service, boosted the benefits of competition.
"Competition forces organizations to rethink their business models. This is what makes the launch of TopTV so important for South Africa," he quoted.




























