Paris gets made up!

This pro makeup person swung by the Hilton family’s Bel Air mansion yesterday, so it looks like the ex-con will be caking on the foundation, shoveling on the shadow and gluing on the wonky-eyelashes.
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This pro makeup person swung by the Hilton family’s Bel Air mansion yesterday, so it looks like the ex-con will be caking on the foundation, shoveling on the shadow and gluing on the wonky-eyelashes.

Paris Hilton gets out of jail on Tuesday and she won’t be on the cover of US Weekly on Friday? How, short of the Apocalypse, is this possible?
“When it came down to it, the staff and I felt what I believe a lot of people in America are feeling. Which is just enormous Paris fatigue,” US Weekly Editor Janice Min told The Associated Press on Tuesday.
As a result, Hilton not only won’t be on the cover, there won’t even be a mention of her in the magazine.
“I don’t think,” Min joked, “we even mention the city of Paris.”

Paris Hilton might be serious about turning her life around, but she’s going to look good doing it.
Hilton, 26, who was released at 12:01 a.m. from Los Angeles’ Century Regional Detention Facility, had a 9:30 at-home appointment this morning with DreamCatchers Hair Extensions, according to The Insider.
And just what was Hilton getting? “Full length, 20 inches of extensions….blonde, of course,” the DreamCatchers rep told The Insider. When the show asked if Hilton would be taking her new locks out on the town tonight, the rep replied, “wouldn’t you?”
The hair-fix house-call contradicts what Hilton told Barbara Walters at the start of her sentence. “I’m not that superficial girl,” she said. “I haven’t looked in a mirror since I got here. My purpose in life is to be where I am.”
Now that “where she is” has changed, we guess her purpose in life is to look, if we may borrow her expression, hot?
Regardless, none of it is what Usmagazine.com readers had hoped Hilton would do upon her release. When asked what the ex-con heiress’s first move should be, over 6,000 of you said “go into hiding.”

Before Paris Hilton was released from Lynwood this morning, her lawyer, Rich Hutton, slipped Harvey Levin a personalized sketch and note from the heiress herself.
The drawing, a self-portrait of Hilton at a pay phone inside the jail, features Paris in her jail issue with an incredibly accurate depiction of our fearless leader hosting “Larry King Live” on television in the background.
Beaming for the cameras, Paris Hilton walked out of jail Tuesday morning after serving what she has called a life-changing sentence for violating probation in an alcohol-related driving case.
Shortly after midnight, a smiling Hilton – her hair in a long ponytail and wearing an olive jacket, white shirt and jeans – was escorted by deputies out of the jail complex’s door. She waved to a crowd of nearly 200 reporters, photographers and others, and walked up to a waiting Escalade carrying her parents.
“Mom!” she said as she embraced her mother at the car. (See a YouTube clip here.)
After she got in, the chauffeured car then drove off with a swarm of photographers in its wake.
Her release was broadcast live by cable news networks and local stations.
Before leaving the jail building, she had gone into a public restroom to change into her street clothes, said sheriff’s spokesman Steve Whitmore.
Barbara Walters reveals that she turned down the first post-jail interview with Paris Hilton because her story is not “important” enough.
Walters, 77, tells the New York Post’s Cindy Adams that, though she had already prepared to interview Hilton, her conscience drove her to change her mind at the last minute.
“Look, I’ve done prison interviews before, but people like the Menendez Brothers were really important news stories,” said the creator and cohost of The View. “This wasn’t. And even though I’d already written my questions, when all that pay-for-play stuff happened, I suddenly felt this was not up to my standard. It…felt…sort of …tawdry.”
“The whole thing somehow was beneath me,” she added.
Walters revealed that it was ABC, not she, who initially wanted the interview. “For them it was ratings. For me it was respect,” she says. “I’m fortunately at a point in my life where I can choose what I want, and this was solely my decision.”
The television news veteran also noted that ABC responded in a “classy” manner by not forcing her into the interview or threatening to give the exclusive away to another newscaster.
“They respected my decision and walked away,” she said. “Some agreed with my decision, some didn’t. For me it was just a question of respect.”
Incarcerated PARIS HILTON will give her first live interview following her release from prison on Tuesday (26June07) to talk show host LARRY KING. The socialite will appear on CNN show Larry King Live to give a one hour talk on her experiences in prison. And the hotel heiress is thrilled she will be giving the interview to the award-winning American broadcaster. She says, “I am thrilled that Larry King has asked me to appear on his programme to discuss my experience in jail, what I have learned, how I have grown and anything else he wants to talk about. Larry King is not only a world-renown journalist, but a true American icon. It will be an honour to do his show.”
