Archive for the ‘Romantic Relationships’ Category

Kris Humphries Reacts to Kim Kardashian and Kanye West: Is It Real?

Kris Humphries still doesnt care about Kim Kardashian and Kanye West.

An insider confirms to Radar Online that the power forward is unconcerned about the new relationship from a personal standpoint. But from a monetary one? As someone looking to milk as much as possible out of his ex-wife?

Humphries believes he can use the fact that Kim and Kanye filmed their recent night out in NYC as evidence that Kardashian only dates – or, in his case, marries – for the sake of publicity.

The crux of Kris case for annulment is that Kim married him under fraudulent pretenses and did it for her reality show, a Team Humphries source says, adding that his lawyers wonder:

When did Kim develop romantic feelings for Kanye and why after publicly stating she wouldnt feature any future romantic relationships on her reality shows, did she do a complete 360?

The mole adds that Kris and Kim havent talked in months. Which makes perfect sense. Why would they? No cameras have been around.

Did Brad Pitt’s proposal kill the romance with Angelina Jolie?

Oh, here we go. Even the happy news of Angelina Jolie and Brad Pitt’s engagement is occasion for the tabloids to stir up rumors of strife. The first salvo was thrown by OK! magazine — which claims the power couple are already feuding about who will attend the wedding and when and where it will take place. (Apparently, they’re all set on why and how.)

You’d think them finally getting engaged would have them high on love, but since Brad’s proposal, “the shine has worn off,” a pal of the pair allegedly confided. “Of course that’s mainly down to them having to agree on the nitty-gritty details of the wedding, including the prenup, and they’re both quite horrified to discover there are loads of things they do not agree on.”

Please! Like they never discussed any of this in the seven years they’ve been together?

Old-fashioned couple

At long last, Britney Spears and Jason Trawick are legally joined together! No, no, they’re not married yet — but the pop star’s fiance and former agent now has been approved as a co-conservator over her.

Britney’s dad and fellow co-conservator, Jamie Spears, is “thrilled” about the news, his attorney declared after the judge’s ruling, adding that the “Femme Fatale” singer, and not her father, was the one who sought the status change.

Jason will not control his future wife’s finances; he’s only involved in the aspect of the conservatorship concerned with her well-being. And although Jamie has technically been in charge of Britney’s affairs since 2008, after she famously suffered a psychological breakdown, a source tells People magazine that at this point, the conservatorship is primarily a formality.

Still and all … A father transferring legal control over his daughter to her husband-to-be? Talk about taking it back to the old school!

Suspicious Kris

The public is curious about whether Kim Kardashian’s relationship with Kanye West is just a publicity stunt … but nobody is more curious than Kris Humphries, according to Radar Online. The basketball player allegedly believes he was used by the reality star as fodder for her E! show, and thinks Kanye may now be hooking up with his ex due to a shared love of the spotlight.

“The crux of Kris’ case for annulment is that Kim married him under fraudulent pretenses and did it for her reality show,” an insider explains. “Team Humphries wants to know if producers of the Kardashian reality shows were in contact with Kanye West prior to the new couple dating or going public with their relationship and what those conversations consisted of. When did Kim develop romantic feelings for Kanye and why after publicly stating she wouldn’t feature any future romantic relationships on her reality shows, did she do a complete 360?”

Why? Really? Clearly this supposed inside source has never actually met Kim … or seen her on TV, for that matter.

California Assembly committee kills teacher-student trysts legislation

On the same day that 18-year-old Jordan Powers disclosed that she has reunited with former teacher James Hooker, legislation to ban such romantic relationships in the future was killed by an Assembly committee Tuesday.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Powers love affair with a 41-year-old instructor at her Modesto campus, Enochs High School, made national headlines and sparked the bill by Assemblywoman Kristin Olsen to ban sex acts and lewd communications between students and employees of the same campus.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Democrats killed Assembly Bill 1861 Tuesday in the Assembly Public Safety Committee, saying that too many constitutional and other questions surround the measure.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Im very disappointed that predators and union bosses won today, instead of our children, said Olsen, R-Modesto.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Powers and Hooker had claimed that she was 18 before their relationship became romantic, making it legal as private activity between consenting adults.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Although theyre 18 years old, theyre still a kid, theyre still easily influenced by these teachers, said Tammie Powers, mother of Jordan Powers, referring to high school seniors.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;The controversial Modesto couple separated this month after Hooker was arrested on suspicion of engaging in a sex act 14 years ago with another girl, who was 17 at the time. But Powers was spotted at Hookers apartment Tuesday and she told a reporter that they were seeing each other again, the Modesto Bee reported.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Though the affair involving Powers and Hooker prompted AB 1861, it would not be affected by it, because the relationship preceded the bill.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Opponents of Olsens measure contend that banning sex acts and inappropriate communication amp;#x96; lewd, lascivious or sexual messages amp;#x96; could violate constitutional rights to free speech and free assembly.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;We have to protect free speech even if we dont like it, said Assemblyman Tom Ammiano, D-San Francisco, who chaired the committee.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;AB 1861 would have made it a felony for a teacher or any school employee to have sex or engage in lewd communication with a student amp;#x96; regardless of age amp;#x96; in elementary, middle or high schools.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Because state law already bans adults from having sex with or attempting to seduce minors, the key impact of AB 1861 would have been to crack down on affairs between teachers and 18-year-olds.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Besides incarceration, Olsens measure called for offenders to be stripped of their right to a public pension.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Valerie Small Navarro of the American Civil Liberties Union said the ban on sexual messages was overly broad and could chill discussion of The Great Gatsby, The Color Purple or other novels.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Olsen countered that she would be willing to amend AB 1861 to address curriculum concerns.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;Assemblywoman Holly Mitchell, D-Los Angeles, said she opposed singling out one group of public employees, school workers, for potential loss of pension rights.lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;My concern here is that this could begin a ripple effect, she said. lt;/pgt;lt;pgt;lt;emgt;To read more, visit lt;a href=http://www.sacbee.com/ target=_blankgt;www.sacbee.com.lt;/agt;lt;/emgt;

Why romantic relationships are driven by women – Lifestyle News

Based on evidence from mobile phone calls and texts, a new study has found that women drive the formation of romantic relationships. According to a study of mobile phone calls, women call their spouse more than any other person, but that changes as their daughters become old enough to

have children, after which they become the most important person in their lives.

It also shows that men call their spouse most often for the first seven years of their relationship and then they shift their focus to other friends.

The results come from an analysis of the texts of mobile phone calls of three million people.

Robin Dunbar, the co-author of the study from Oxford University, UK, said that the investigation shows that pair-bonding is much more important to women than men.

“It’s the first really strong evidence that romantic relationships are driven by women,” the BBC quoted him as saying.

“It’s they who make the decision and once they have made their mind up, they just go for the poor bloke until he keels over and gives in!” he said.

But the data shows that women start to switch the preference of their best friend from about the mid-30s, and by the age of 45 a woman of a generation younger becomes the “new best friend”, according to Dunbar.

“Human societies are moving back to a matriarchy.

“What seems to happen is that women push the ‘old man’ out to become their second best friend, and he gets called much less often and all her attention is focussed on her daughters just at the point at which you are likely to see grandchildren arriving,” he said.

The aim of the project was to find out how close, intimate relationships vary over a lifetime.

The team wanted to find out how the gender preference of best friends, as defined by the frequency of the calling, changed over the course of a lifetime and differed between men and women.

They found that men tend to choose a woman the same age as themselves which the researchers presumed to be their girlfriend or wife as a best friend much later in life than women do, and for a much shorter time.

This occurs when they are in their early-30s, possibly during courtship, and stops after seven years or so.

Women, however, choose a man of a similar age to be their best friend from the age of 20. He remains for about 15 years, after which time he’s replaced by a daughter.

The researchers say that a woman’s social world is intensely focussed on one individual and will shift as a result of reproductive interests from being the mate to children and grandchildren.

According to Dunbar, the data suggests “at root the important relationships are those between women and not those between men”.

“Men’s relationships are too casual. They often function at a high level in a political sense, of course; but at the end of the day, the structure of society is driven by women, which is exactly what we see in primates,” he added.

The study has been published in the journal Scientific Reports.

A ‘Five-Year Engagement’ Leaves A Bitter Taste

There are many dramas and comedies in which career trajectories take couples to different corners of the country, complicating or ending romantic relationships. There will be many more, at least until someone invents a teleportation machine. Whats different about each work is how the problem gets interpreted.

In The Five-Year Engagement, a new mating comedy from the Judd Apatow factory, the interpretation is reactionary, told largely from the perspective of a man victimized by feminism. Up-and-coming chef Tom, played by Jason Segel, and British social psychology grad student Violet, played by Emily Blunt, become engaged as fireworks erupt over San Francisco Bay. The coming nuptials are celebrated at a country inn with the usual nutty family toasts; Violet searches for a wedding venue; and then, suddenly, comes news that shes been accepted into a prestigious program at the University of Michigan. Drinking heavily to ease her jitters, she tells Tom her mother gave up a career to follow her father who later took up with a 20-something woman. Violet doesnt want that to happen to her. Tom, the menschiest top chef ever, swallows hard and says, Lets both go to Michigan.

What follows is the long decline in his manhood in Middle America, which is not portrayed as a bastion of culture. Trudging through the cold with his resume, this onetime culinary superstar is laughed at by proprietors of Ann Arbor restaurants, who cant believe he left a dining mecca like San Francisco. He has to take a job at Zingermans Deli making sandwiches. After a faculty party at which he mostly talks to other spouses, Violet playfully proposes they leap onto a mound of snow. Tom initially hedges because of the weather, decides finally to jump and then lands on a hidden fire hydrant.

You cant get much more direct: Moving to the Midwest with his fiancee has reduced Tom in all senses.

Theres something else important in that scene. Violets trying. Shes not a stereotypical emasculating female its the situation thats the problem. She wants the Michigan position, but just as important, she wants to do what her mother didnt. The Five-Year Engagement has another couple for contrast Alison Brie as Violets excitable sister, Suzie; and Chris Pratt as Toms juvenile-minded San Francisco assistant, Alex.

Although Suzie initially finds Alex repulsive, they drunkenly sleep together at Tom and Violets engagement party, she gets pregnant, and they end up, like the protagonists of Apatows Knocked Up, in a happy union. She didnt sweat the small stuff, like a career or the suitability of her mate!

You might be thinking, But is the movie funny? Much of it is. At two-and-a-quarter hours, its too long, but thats mainly because director and co-screenwriter Nicholas Stoller is indulgent: He gives his supporting actors lots of room to show off their tricky rhythms.

Brie, whos Trudy Campbell on Mad Men and Annie Edison on Community, has a high adorable-ditz quotient, and Chris Pratt of Parks and Recreation enough sweetness to compensate for his bad-taste lines. A low-key Rhys Ifans is amazingly charming as Violets lady-killing Welsh professor, who presides over her silly experiments and tells her, with regard to her fiance, that its OK to be selfish. (We see where thats going.)

To prove her rom-com bonafides, Blunt chatters dizzily and pulls faces, and she has a wonderful face to pull. Segel has said that studio execs ordered him to lose weight so the pairing wouldnt seem completely implausible, but his still-big body moves slowly, giving us the sense that it cant keep up with his emotions hes unusually likable for a man of non-action.

The Five-Year Engagement is a crowd-pleaser, but for me it still left a bitter taste. In spite of the naughty words, Stoller and co-writer Segel and producer Apatow have engineered a scenario so simplistic and retro that you wonder about their larger agenda. Do they want women to be more like the main characters sister, for whom getting knocked up in a drunken one-night stand is a blessing in disguise?

‘The Bully Society,’ by Jessie Klein



Bully. Such a poisonous word for those of us who endured one. “Tormentor” feels more appropriate. What drives a person to torture another? To make life intolerable, until the bullied, dreading the thought of one more vicious homeroom encounter, can only wonder: Why is he doing it? When will it end? Will I make it through high school alive?

THE BULLY SOCIETY

School Shootings and the Crisis of Bullying in America’s Schools

By Jessie Klein

305 pp. New York University Press. $29.95.

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    Bullies | School Shootings

Jessie Klein, an assistant professor of sociology and criminal justice at Adelphi University, seems a good candidate to address this scourge on American schools. She has labored for decades in the field, as a high school teacher, a social worker and a conflict resolution coordinator. For her new book, “The Bully Society,” she conducted over 60 interviews and reviewed mountains of press accounts. And she gets her victims, exuding empathy, insight and a rare ability to inhabit the teenage psyche.

“The Bully Society” vividly recounts story after story of kids mired in high school hell and struggling to cope. Refreshingly absent are lapses into plodding, imperial professorial lingo. Klein writes in a crisp, engaging voice. Yet her painful scenes of bullying, misery and hopelessness fail to cohere into a satisfying whole. Victims are whisked on and off the page to amass a huge volume of testimony, but with almost no recurring characters, no narrative evolution, no sense of progression. Klein rightly gives voice to the throttled victims — their moment is overdue. But her examples pile up, relentlessly, for over 200 pages. What’s missing, astonishingly, are the bullies’ perspectives. What drives them?

Klein ticks off obvious factors like race, class and sexuality, but the root of all evil, and her primary concern, is masculinity and the imperative to prove it. (The phrase “gender policing” appears repeatedly.) “Instead of the range of emotions (marginally) available to girls,” Klein writes, “boys are permitted to feel only anger and are encouraged to control their other feelings,” to present a mask of masculinity.

Her argument amounts to Proof by Anecdote. She tells stories of bullied children, identifies commonalities in the victims and extrapolates motivations to the bullies. That’s an odd leap. It’s like studying robbery by compiling statistics on the targets, discovering they tend to be older, poorer and darker-skinned, and concluding that robbery is driven by animosity toward old, poor, dark-skinned people.

Klein’s observation that boys feel pressured to display “flamboyant heterosexuality” is quite interesting, but the causal link to bullying is elusive. Are the bullies nursing secret insecurities, or are they so hopped up on masculinity that they’re offended by weaklings who aren’t? Or is it a little of each? Or are there two classes of bullies operating from opposite masculinity-induced drives? No clue in this account.

Klein takes a great deal at face value. Mean girls dismiss outcasts for failing to wear Coach or Prada, and Klein dutifully classifies the motive as economic. Is it really about the Coach bag, though, or are the bullies just exploiting fashion inferiority to ridicule a girl they’ve already marked for exclusion? There is a class component, surely — this stuff is complicated. Yet Klein settles for simple, overt answers. She trusts the bullies to understand their own motives and divulge them openly with each insult.

The book swerves further out of the field of logic when Klein conflates the motivations of bullies and school shooters. Her argument is grounded in a powerful truth: a bona fide link between bullies and many school shooters. In recent years, two exhaustive studies of shooters were conducted by the F.B.I. and a joint project of the Secret Service and the Department of Education. The Secret Service study found that 71 percent of shooters had been bullied, threatened, attacked or injured. But the report also found that far more shooters had experienced a profound sense of failure or loss — a staggering 98 percent. This included the loss of loved ones or romantic relationships (51 percent) and “loss of status” (66 percent). It is possible these losses coincided with bullying. Klein, however, claims “nearly all” the shooters she studied were “reacting to oppressive social hierarchies.” I found this puzzling, until I discovered her heavy reliance on press reports.

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Dave Cullen is the author of “Columbine.”

Kesha speaks on Royce’s relationship

Despite her beau sending inappropriate text messages to his ex, Royce Reed hasnt kicked Dezmon Briscoe to the curb, at least not yet.

Theyre working on it, talking about it at the moment, Kesha Nichols told S2S. Shes going through it, but shell be fine.

Kesha and Royce became friends during season 4 of Basketball Wives. While it seems many of the relationships on the show have suffered recently, Kesha and Royce are still close.

I have a great relationship with Royce. I think well be friends long after this is over, she said.

The two dancers have a lot in common, but Kesha said she wouldnt follow Royces lead and ever introduce viewers to her real-life love interest.

I dont have any interest in having my relationship being in the public eye. As reality personalities, we do have the right to keep some of our lives private. I want to keep that close to my heart and not have anyone elses opinion on it, she said.

Royce has been sharing her romantic relationships with viewers for several seasons of Basketball Wives. However, her relationship with Dezmon seemed the most promising. The two even discussed engagement rings on a recent episode.

Kesha said thats when the haters usually pop out.

As soon as you see Royce with an awesome scene, people want to ruin that, Kesha said. People want to tear you down.

Kesha does have a boyfriend, but he will not ever be on the show, she said.

As for Royce, Kesha didnt share her personal opinion on whether her friend should stay with Dezmon or just move on.

I think they both just need some time and people out of their business, so they can really focus on whats important, she said.

Click on the thumbnails below for larger images of Kesha and Royce.

Tracy L. Scott

Do you think reality stars would be better off if they kept their romantic relationships private? If they did, would you still watch? Leave your comments below.

Heres more:
Kesha Nichols denies special treatment
Tami Roman calls out Kesha Nichols
Kesha Nichols defends herself
Kesha Nichols finds Basketball Wives scary
Royce Reed speaks on sexting drama

Why doesn’t he call? Women drive romantic relationships, study finds

Its the first really strong evidence that romantic relationships are driven by women, co-author Robin Dunbar, a professor at Oxford University, told the BBC.

As women age, however, their grown-up daughters become the people they most frequently contact, replacing their spouses as their best friends.

What seems to happen is that women push the lsquo;old man out to become their second best friend, and he gets called much less often and all her attention is focused on her daughters just at the point at which you are likely to see grandchildren arriving, Prof. Dunbar said.

BBC reports that mens phone contact with their spouses also declined over time. Men called and texted their spouse most frequently during the first seven years of their relationship, then shifted their attention to other friends. (Of course, one could arguably interpret this another way: If youre spending a lot of time with your spouse, youre probably not contacting them via mobile phone.)

The researchers, who had access to the age and sex of the mobile phone users, said they based their findings on the assumption that mobile-phone communication reflects the most important relationships in peoples lives and the level of closeness of those relationships.

Who calls or texts more often: you or your partner? Does your phone use reflect whos most important in your life?

Caring, Romantic American Boys


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Sophie Casson

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WHY are boys behaving more “like girls” in terms of when they lose their virginity? In contrast to longstanding cultural tropes, there is reason to believe that teenage boys are becoming more careful and more romantic about their first sexual experiences.

For a long time, a familiar cultural lexicon has been in vogue: young women who admitted to voluntary sexual experience risked being labeled “sluts” while male peers who boasted of sexual conquests were celebrated as “studs.”

No wonder American teenage boys have long reported earlier and more sexual experience than have teenage girls. In 1988, many more boys than girls, ages 15 to 17, told researchers that they had had heterosexual intercourse.

But in the two decades since, the proportion of all American adolescents in their mid-teens claiming sexual experience has decreased, and for boys the decline has been especially steep, according to the National Survey of Family Growth by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Today, though more than half of unmarried 18- and 19-year-olds have had sexual intercourse, fewer than 30 percent of 15- to 17-year-old boys and girls have, down from 50 percent of boys and 37 percent of girls in 1988. And there are virtually no gender differences in the timing of sexual initiation.

What happened in those two decades?

Fear seems to have played a role. In interviewing 10th graders for my book on teenage sexuality in the United States and the Netherlands, I found that American boys often said sex could end their life as they knew it. After a condom broke, one worried: “I could be screwed for the rest of my life.” Another boy said he did not want to have sex yet for fear of becoming a father before his time.

Dutch boys did not express the same kind of fears; they assumed their girlfriends’ use of the pill would protect them against fatherhood. In the Netherlands, use of the pill is far more common, and pregnancy far less so, than among American teenagers.

The American boys I interviewed seemed more nervous about the consequences of sex than American girls. In fact, the 2002 National Survey of Family Growth found that more than one-third of teenage boys, but only one-quarter of teenage girls, cited wanting to avoid pregnancy or disease as the main reason they had not yet had sex. Fear about sex was intensified by the AIDS crisis and by sex education that portrayed sex outside of heterosexual marriage as risky. Combined with growing access to pornography via the Internet, those influences may have made having sex with another person seem less enticing.

Fear no doubt has also played a role in driving up condom use. Boys today are much more likely than their predecessors to use a condom the first time they have sex.

But fear is probably not the only reason for the gender convergence. While American locker-room and popular culture portray boys as mere vessels of raging hormones, research into their private experiences paints a different picture. In a large-scale survey and interviews, reported in the American Sociological Review in 2006, the sociologist Peggy Giordano and her colleagues found teenage boys to be just as emotionally invested in their romantic relationships as girls.

The Dutch boys I interviewed grew up in a culture that gives them permission to love; a national survey found that 90 percent of Dutch boys between 12 and 14 report having been in love. But the American boys I interviewed, having grown up in a culture that often assumes males are only out to get sex, were no less likely than Dutch boys to value relationships and love. In fact, they often used strong, almost hyper-romantic language to talk about love. The boy whose condom broke told me the most important thing to him was being in love with his girlfriend and “giving her everything I can.”

Such romanticism has largely flown under the radar of American popular culture. Yet, the most recent research by the family growth survey, conducted between 2006 and 2010, indicates that relationships matter to boys more often than we think. Four of 10 males between 15 and 19 who had not had sex said the main reason was that they hadn’t met the right person or that they were in a relationship but waiting for the right time; an additional 3 of 10 cited religion and morality.

Boys have long been under pressure to shed what the sociologist Laura Carpenter has called the “stigma of virginity.” But maybe more American boys are now waiting because they have gained cultural leeway to choose a first time that feels emotionally right. If so, their liberation from rigid masculinity norms should be seen as a victory for the very feminist movement that Rush Limbaugh recently decried.

When I surveyed the firestorm of objections that followed his use of the word “slut” to pillory a law school student who advocated medical coverage for birth control, men were among his most passionate detractors.

Perhaps we shouldn’t be surprised. The image of male sexuality Mr. Limbaugh perpetuates is hardly something to be proud of. And it sells the hearts of men, as well as women, short.

Amy T. Schalet is an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, and the author of “Not Under My Roof: Parents, Teens and the Culture of Sex.”

Kim Kardashian Romantic Relationships, Controversies

Kim Kardashian the reality star has allegedly been into multiple romantic relationships linked with several controversies during her relationships.

The 31-year-old ‘Keeping Up with Kardashians’ star Kim Kardashian is currently facing a disastrous year, amid her divorce proceedings from Kris Humphries. However, before getting married to Kris, the reality star was reportedly involved in multiple romantic relationships which lead to controversies. But before that, need to know about Kim becoming famous. Check out how she became a famous socialite.

Kim was first introduced by her friend Paris Hilton to the socialite stream and became famous, after her racy video with singer Ray J in 2003. It was released as a movie with the title ‘Kim Kardashian: Superstar’ by Vivid Entertainment, after it bought the rights for $1 million. However, Kim filed the suit against the Vivid over ownership issue, but dropped the suit settling with Vivid Entertainment for $5 millions.

Kim Kardashian reportedly involved in multiple romantic relationships with Ray J, Reggie Bush, Miles Austin and Gabriel Aubry. Firstly, Kim Kardashian married Damon Thomas a recording producer in the year 2000 and the couple was together for four years, before they got divorced in 2004. As per the reports, Kim with the real name Kimberly Noel Kardashian was in involved in a romantic relationship with the singer Ray J. Kim Kardashian and Ray J dated for almost two years.

Kim Kardashian and Ray J romantic relationship turned out to be a controversy, as the 31-year-old ‘Everything You Want’ singer revealed that, the nature of their relationship was just physical in his book ‘Death of a Cheating Man: What Every Woman Must Know About Men Who Stray’. Ray J revealed that, Kim Kardashian cheated her first husband Damon Thomas with him, when she was still technically married with him.

After the relationship ended with Ray J, she was linked to Reggie Bush who also dated for almost two years. However, the couple parted their ways after their split, as Reggie Bush did not like to get attention from paparazzi and want to have a low key life. He also wants to Kim to give up her reality TV career, but she was not ready to do that lead to their split. However, rekindling of Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush romantic relationship reports are making buzz, since Kim has filed for divorce from Kris Humphries.

However, ‘In Touch’ magazine claimed posted on its cover page saying that, Kim Kardashian and Reggie Bush are planning to elope to get married. However, the magazine also featured Reggie is ready to marry Kim Kardashian, only if she agrees to his three conditions of not seeking the publicity, giving up her reality TV career and finalizing her divorce from Kris Humphries as soon as possible.

After all the failure romantic relationships with Ray J, Reggie Bush and Damon Thomas, Kim Kardashian married Kris Humphries with huge publicity, as their wedding ceremony was aired on E!. However, their short-lived marriage relationship came to an end, after just 72 days of their wedding, citing irreconcilable differences. Kim filed for divorce from Kris in October 2011. After filing for divorce, Kim asked the court to order Kris to pay his own legal expenses. However, Kris on December 1, 2011 filed his response to Kim’s petition, requesting an annulment on the grounds of fraud or if the court would not grant annulment, which would be a decree of legal separation instead of requested divorce by Kim Kardashian.

Eventually, all the aforementioned situations and the respective consequences, which means Kim Kardashian romantic relationships and controversies gave her a life without peace, because of which she is facing huge critics.

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