What was Steven Bochco’s Net Worth? Steven Bochco, an American television writer and producer, had a net worth of $150 million at the time of his death. Bochco was the creative force behind successful television series such as “Hill Street Blues,” “L.A. Law,” and “NYPD Blue.”
He won multiple Emmy Awards and Peabody Awards for his work on those shows. Bochco also created the TNT series “Raising the Bar” and “Murder in the First.
Singer Teyana Taylor and basketball star, Iman Shumpert, began dating in 2014. They were friends before they became involved romantically, and the relationship flourished after Teyana went through a breakup. Iman was having surgery in 2014, and she made sure to be by his side, so they became more than friends.
In 2015, the couple revealed that they were expecting their first child together. That November, Iman proposed to Teyana at her baby shower.
Costume & cultureFashion This article is more than 10 years oldBurlesque: The erotic art of keeping clothes onThis article is more than 10 years oldBurlesque is not defined by nakedness, but by the prolonged tease – burlesque dancers reveal that the promise of nudity is more powerful than nudity itselfBurlesque dancer, Elsie Diamond, photographed by Ksenia Burnasheva, performs Dubstep Turandot’ in an extravagant oriental-inspired costume. Image courtesy: Elsie Diamond/ Ksenia Burnasheva "
Courtenay Semel recently lit Casey Johnson’s hair on fire.
In Semel’s defense, her ex-girlfriend did have the nerve to show up at her house.
According to Page Six, Johnson got into a fight with her current partner earlier this week. Seeking comfort and/or cunnilingus, she headed over to Courtenay’s. Big mistake.
“Casey went to Courtenay’s house, and Courtenay proceeded to beat the crap out of her, and then she lit her hair on fire.
Radwaniya, Iraq – The canals branching out of the Tigris river and into the adjoining farmlands are empty and dry. Devoid of water, the rice, wheat and barley fields are left without vegetation.
The Tigris today is far shallower than it was a year ago, and for farmers in Iraq, this is a catastrophe.
Omar Di’ibil, 35, has been a farmer in Radwaniya, on the outskirts of the capital, Baghdad, all his life – just like his father and grandfather were before him.