September
18, 2008 -- The Mirror (UK)
Sir Paul McCartney gushes about new love Nancy at London Fashion
Week

At the grand old age of 66, Sir Paul McCartney's not our usual fodder.
But there was no way we were going to turn down the chance to sip champers with a Beatle.
And we weren't disappointed as Macca was only too pleased to give us the lowdown on new love Nancy Shevell.
He was gushing with happiness when he talked about the stunning 47-year-old he's been dating since May.
"I'm so happy," he said. As we quaffed Moet and got stuck into vegetarian cannelloni with Macca he raved about their month-long 3,000- mile road trip across seven US states.
"We had a brilliant time in the US. We stayed mainly in hotels but did the whole Route 66 gig," he told us.
"It's an amazing thing to do - I would recommend it.
"It was great and we're so happy."
We met up with Macca at the exclusive 30 Days Of Fashion And Beauty bash at London Fashion Week.
Wearing a dapper suit and,
er, trainers, Paul looked on proudly as his photographer daughter,
Mary, auctioned off six framed portraits,
raising over £42,000 ($84,000) for the MacMillan cancer
charity at London's Natural History Museum. Mingling with celebrities
including Elle Macpherson, Erin O'Connor and Kate Hudson, he tucked
into veggie canapes including a
miniature courgette gratin from first wife, Linda's
range.
The singer cheered on as a photograph of his other daughter, fashion designer Stella, sitting on a horse, was sold for £8,500 ($17,000). Other works auctioned off included a portrait of supermodel Kate Moss and a photo of Oscar-winning actress, Tilda Swinton.
But there was no stopping Macca singing Nancy's praises. While his American socialite girlfriend chatted to mutual friends, he was overheard saying: "Things are going great. We enjoy one another's company and Nancy gets on brilliantly with the family.
"It is still early days but we are very much together. She is wonderful.
"Our American trip was great, I really enjoyed it. It was good to get away for a bit. We saw some places I'll never forget. But I must say it's nice to be back, too."
Leaving shortly before 9pm, Paul later hosted a dinner for family, friends and Nancy at nearby restaurant Establish & Sons.
Four months ago Macca's divorce from ex-wife Heather was finalised.
Sir Paul has
Nancy's backing on controversial mission to Israel
Facing the inevitable barrage of criticism from the Palestinian
lobby as he prepares to perform in Israel, Sir Paul McCartney has no more staunch a supporter for his mission
than his girlfriend, Nancy
Shevell.
"She was very keen from day one that he should go," says an associate of the former Beatle. "She plans to join him out there and is greatly looking forward to it."
This week, Miss Shevell, 47, told friends at a private view of Mary McCartney's new photographic exhibition at the Natural History Museum, in London: "Paul is really excited about playing at Tel Aviv, and so am I, as I'm Jewish." Sir Paul, 66, was banned by the Israeli government from performing in the country back in 1965 as it was believed that the Beatles' music would corrupt young fans. "I'm really looking forward to it," he told Mandrake at the party. "I'm sure it will be a great experience."
The musician has always been
willing to take advice from the women in his life: Linda McCartney impressed upon him the merits of vegetarianism;
and during his second marriage, to Heather Mills,
he took up her causes, such as the abolition of landmines.
Mandrake wonders if Miss Shevell may yet be able to convert Sir
Paul to Judaism if, as rumoured, he makes her wife number three.

September 17,
2008 -- Daily Mail
Macca's daughter Mary hosts star-studded art show as Gwyneth,
Kate Hudson and Elle make it a night to remember

The stars were out in force last night to support Sir Paul McCartney's daughter Mary at an exhibition of her photographs.
A-list stars including Gwyneth Paltrow, Kate Hudson and Elle Macpherson joined Sir Paul, his girlfriend Nancy Shevell and designer daughter Stella at the Natural History Museum in London.

And the starry guest list didn't
stop there, the McCartneys long-time friend Lulu turned up, as
well as pop star Jamelia, rock offspring Georgia May Jagger and
models Laura Bailey, Erin O'Connor and Jade Parfitt.
The event, entitled 30 Days Of Fashion, included 30 images taken
by Mary to celebrate British fashion and beauty and coincided
with London Fashion Week, which kicked off on Sunday.
Leaving her husband Alasdhair Willis in care of their three young children, Stella's date for the night was Hollywood pal Kate Hudson, who turns up in loose-fitting metallic number and high-heels.

Stella, 37, added a bit of colour to her plain black and white outfit with a pair of royal blue velvet heels.
Kate,
29, had flown in from Los Angeles earlier that day after attending
the U.S. premiere of her latest film My Best Friend's Girl on
Monday night.
The actress is set to spend a majority of the remainder of the
year in the U.K. as she films her role in upcoming movie musical
Nine, which also stars Nicole Kidman, Penelope Cruz and Daniel
Day-Lewis.
The event marked a big step in the burgeoning romance between Sir Paul and American heiress Nancy, who started dating at the end of last year.
Nancy's attendance at a family function shows she has been accepted by Sir Paul's children, who were reported to have had a troubled relationship with his ex-wife Heather Mills.
While the couple refrained
from posing together on the red carpet, they happily posed together
inside the event.
The exhibition included images of Kate Moss with cream crackers
and Branston pickle, sister Stella riding one of her beloved horses,
fashion queen Dame Vivienne Westwood and model Lily Cole.
Six of these images were auctioned off to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support, a charity close to the Mary's heart after her mother Linda McCartney died of the disease.
She said: 'Losing my mother prematurely has had a profound impact on my life in that it has made me appreciate the people around me.
'As a photographer herself,
she was my inspiration. I remember looking through her contact
sheets as a child and being fascinated. Our styles are similar.'
September
16, 2008 -- Contact Music
SIR PAUL McCARTNEY - MCCARTNEY'S FAMILY FEAR ISRAELI TRIP
Sir Paul McCartney's family
are reportedly fearful of his controversial trip to Israel and
are encouraging him to stay in the U.K.
The Beatles legend is due to play a show in Tel Aviv on September
25 - 43 years after a Fab Four concert in the country was scrapped
by officials amid fears it could corrupt youngsters.
He will be guarded by Israeli secret service agents at the historic
concert to ensure his protection following death threats by Muslim
extremists.
But McCartney's children - Mary, Stella, James and Heather - are said to be "racked with worry"
about the trip and do not want him to go.
A source tells British newspaper the Daily Express, "Paul's
family knows that he's not the type to back down but that doesn't
stop them being extremely worried about him.
"It's his kids who would prefer him not to do they show but
they also accept that their dad will do what he believes to be
right and won't be scared off.
September
16, 2008 -- The Telegraph
Sir Paul McCartney and girlfriend Nancy Shevell together in public
for first time
Sir Paul McCartney stepped
out with girlfriend Nancy
Shevell in the first public
event they have attended as a couple.

The former Beatle escorted Miss Shevell to an exhibition of photographs by his daughter, Mary, at the Natural History Museum in London.
While they took care to avoid the paparazzi flashbulbs on the red carpet by arriving separately, the couple were happy to be seen together inside the venue.
Stella McCartney, Sir Paul's fashion designer daughter, arrived with Hollywood actress Kate Hudson.
Miss Shevell's attendance at the high profile event, in the company of Sir Paul's children, was seen as a public sign that she has been accepted into the McCartney family.
The 47-year-old American heiress has been dating Sir Paul, 66, since last year. They have been photographed holidaying together, in the Caribbean and on a romantic road trip along Route 66, but have never attended an official engagement before.
Recent reports suggested that the musician was planning to make Miss Shevell wife number three. She is legally separated from her husband of 24 years, Bruce Blakeman, and they are said to be negotiating the final terms of their divorce.
Sir Paul's divorce from his second wife, Heather Mills, was settled in March.
Photographs from the exhibition, British Style Observed, raised £42,500 ($85,000) for Macmillan Cancer Support. Sir Paul's first wife, Linda, died from cancer in 1998.
The event was part of the National
Magazine Company's 30 Days of Fashion and Beauty celebrations.
Guests included Marie Helvin, Elle Macpherson and Beatles producer
Sir George
Martin.
September
16, 2008 -- Now Magazine
Heather Mills told Sir Paul McCartney
to choose between her and his kids
Former publicist Michele Elyzabeth says she hated her husband's family
Heather Mills hated Stella McCartney so much that she issued ex-husband Sir Paul with an ultimatum to choose between them, claims her former publicist Michele Elyzabeth.
'Away from the cameras Heather called Stella "that little bitch",' Michele tells the News Of The World. 'She said Paul's family wanted their father for themselves and were jealous of her.
'Heather put pressure on Paul to choose between them. She claimed that they couldn't work out their differences because Stella wouldn't get along with her.'
Michele, 58, says she can understand why 66-year-old Paul's family disliked Heather, 41.
She says she has only 2 real friends her sister Fiona and her personal trainer Ben Amigoni.
Renowned biographer Philip Norman has accused the late Beatle of having gay fantasies in his controversial new book John Lennon: The Life.
However in an interview, which you can listen to by clicking here, Paul says John never made a move on him - despite them sharing a bed many times while on tour.
Paul says: "I don't think (the gay claims) are true. John never ever tried anything, I slept with him a million times.
"I've seen him on tour roaring drunk, out of his mind in the early days before he sobered up and went to rehab. Roaring drunk and it was always with a female, never once.
"If you've got a little
gay tendancy and your roaring drunk I'd have caught him once."
September 16, 2008 -- The Jerusalem Post
Promoting Paul McCartney
When you're put on hold while waiting to speak to concert promoter Dudu Zarzevsky, the music playing on the phone in the background is The Beatles' "Help." Even though it's a John Lennon tune, the song is certainly appropriate, because the 46year-old Zarzevsky needs lots of help these few days before the biggest professional moment of his life - and perhaps the biggest cultural event in Israel's history - takes place: Paul McCartney's first concert in Israel.
ALL TOGETHER NOW. It is important for Paul McCartney that he appears for the people, not just the privileged, so massive screens are being imported from Europe to ensure clear views for everyone, explains Dudu Zarzevsky. The promoter had initially expected to be welcoming George Michael this summer.
"It's taking up all of my time. I'm going to sleep at 1 a.m. and praying that I'll sleep until 7. But usually I'm already up at 4 or 5 because I'm already thinking about what I need to do next," said the harried but convivial Zarzevsky, who took a few minutes out of the flurry of activity ahead of the former Beatle's September 25th performance at Hayarkon Park in Tel Aviv to talk to The Jerusalem Post.
"It's like giving birth," he said, describing the elaborate planning and complex logistics required to bring McCartney here. "It started slowly over a few months of negotiations. Now, we're beginning contractions, which will get bigger and bigger until show time."
A veteran promoter on the Israeli scene for over 20 years, Zarzevsky has been involved with the Eilat Jazz Festival, many classical music and world music shows, and events like the Tamar Festival at the Dead Sea during Succot, which is entering its ninth year. He also knows his way around a pop concert, having promoted shows over the last year by Lauryn Hill, Cypress Hill and Ian Brown. However, none of those endeavors has prepared him for the "to-do list" involved in the McCartney show.
"The quantity and quality of the equipment is amazing. The attention to detail is mind boggling. I don't remember a show like this ever being put on in Israel, and it's going to be only him and four musicians on the stage," said Zarzevsky, defending the hefty ticket price for the show.
The price is NIS 490, but there are many options. With Isracard, you can get a NIS 100 discount, and with different workers' committees and through organizations, you can also get between NIS 40 and NIS 100 off, he said.
"Ultimately, though, this is not a regular concert, I'm sorry. This is one of the most influential musicians of all time. I've heard claims on TV that the promoters stand to earn millions of shekels in profit. It's bullshit. Most of cost of the ticket sales is going into the production. The costs are terrific.
"Paul's requirements are that every person in the venue has to be capable of hearing and seeing him like they're right in front. And for that, we're bringing in a huge custom sound system from Europe and these huge LED video screens. Even in the back, people will be able to see exactly what he's doing. But all that equipment is so expensive, you couldn't imagine," he added.
WITH 200 people working on the preshow logistics and setup, which will rise to 1,000 workers the day before the show, Zarzevsky is involved in every aspect of the planning - even down to the material of the couches that will grace McCartney's personal tent backstage.
"I spent this morning at the show site. The backstage area is almost like a little city. There are going to be 20 different full-scale tent buildings - one for Paul, who demands his privacy, another for the international production staff, one for the local production staff, a communications center, dining room and so on," said Zarzevsky.
"And every tent is equipped with air conditioning, Internet and phone lines, furniture.
Paul is very green and very healthy. That means no fish or meat is allowed, not just for him, but for anybody in the whole backstage area. Even the furniture can't be made of leather, and must be designed with only natural materials."
It's a far cry from the demands of George Michael. The smooth British R&B crooner was the artist that Zarzevsky originally planned to bring to Israel this summer, before it fell through and McCartney landed in his lap.
"I work with an entertainment planning firm in London called Lilac Palm that alerts us about artists and availability. We were actually far along on a deal to bring over George Michael - we had done all the pre-production, and then he decided he didn't want to come to Tel Aviv at this point in time," said Zarzevsky.
"Lilac Palm told me they'll be in touch if anything else sounds promising. And a few weeks later they called and said, 'what do you think about Paul McCartney?' The rest is history." WELL, NOT quite. The exorbitant costs - estimated at over $4 million - and the elaborate banking requirements that McCartney's appearance required almost stopped the show in its infancy when Zarzevsky's original financial backer, Partner, dropped out.
"The negotiations were such a difficult process, and it took so much time to pin down, that Partner lost patience," he said. "At the beginning we agreed that we needed at least two months to plan for the show - if we didn't get confirmation by then, we wouldn't be able to do it. Then came the six-week mark, then five weeks."
Amid last-minute conference calls and attempts to meet McCartney's demands, Partner decided it was too close for comfort to the show date and backed out, a move which Zarzevsky said he understood and bore no grudge about.
"For me it was very disappointing, and I felt bad for them because they were involved from the very beginning and they did so much work," he said.
However, Zarzevsky was left in the lurch, and McCartney's people gave him only a few days to see if he could arrange for alternative financial support.
"I had meetings around the clock - with companies, sponsors and businessmen," recalled Zarzevsky, who might have been humming the McCartney tune "We Can Work it Out" to himself and his colleagues.
"It was at the very last minute that we found this wonderful, special guy Yakir Sha'ashua, who is an Israeli businessman who lives in London. He sat with us and said, 'guys, I'm with you.' So I and all the people in Israel must thank Yakir, otherwise this would have been the second time that Paul McCartney almost came to Israel," said Zarzevsky, referring to the now infamous attempt to bring The Beatles here in 1966.
WHILE MCCARTNEY is indeed arriving this time, it's unclear if his schedule will entail any sightseeing or, like U2 and Elton John in the 1990s, the superstar will simply jet in and out in a 24-hour period around the show.
"He's coming for the music, so it's unclear if he's going to take time to see the country. He's now busy rehearsing in London," said Zarzevsky, adding that the show, slated to begin exactly at 8 p.m., will be McCartney and only McCartney.
"There won't be any opening act. It's not the kind of concert that needs a warm-up. In any event, we need to finish by 11 p.m. according to police regulations, so it's going to start on time because he's been known to play up to three hours, and we don't want any problems near the end of having to cut him off," he said, adding that his personal favorite Beatles/McCartney song is "Let It Be."
According to Zarzevsky, it was due to McCartney's personal intervention that special VIP sections for the performance were moved from the front of the stage area to the sides.
"It was very important for Paul that he be able to appear for the people, not just the privileged. At the beginning, we planned to put the VIP seats in front of the stage, and we heard right away from them to move it, because he wants to feel and see the people standing next to him."
As D- day gets closer, Zarzevsky said he would be spending more time at the Hayarkon Park venue, and planned to move in for the three days prior to the show.
"I won't be sleeping anyway, so I might as well be there," he said, expressing no regrets at biting off such a big apple from the pop music tree.
"This is a very huge project
- totally irregular, out of the ordinary, any superlative adjective
you can think of. But for many Israelis my age, The Beatles were
a guide for our lives through music. So for them, this is going
to be the biggest concert ever."
September 15, 2008 -- World Net Daily
Expert: No
credible threat against Paul McCartney -- Terrorists say they
have never even heard of Beatles star
There is no credible threat against Paul McCartney
ahead of his concert this month in Tel Aviv, according to a terrorism
expert and author who called Palestinian terrorists about the
former Beatle today.
An Islamic militant leader in Lebanon had warned McCartney could be the target of a suicide bombing unless he canceled his first concert in Israel, scheduled for Sept. 25, Britain's Sunday Express reported this weekend.
But Aaron Klein, WorldNetDaily's Jerusalem bureau chief and author of the book "Schmoozing with Terrorists," said in response to the threat he called senior leaders from every major Palestinian terror organization, and not one had heard of McCartney or the Beatles.
Klein said he proceeded to sing to the terrorists top Beatles songs, including "Yesterday," "Let It Be" and "She Loves You," but the tunes didn't ring a bell for a single one.
"I don't know any of this," said Muhammad Abdel-Al, spokesman and senior leader of the Popular Resistance Committees terror group.
Abu Ahmed, a senior leader of Islamic Jihad in Gaza, told Klein, "We don't know these Beatles."
Ala Senakreh, chief of the Al Aqsa Martyrs Brigades in the West Bank city of Nablus, told Klein he, too, is unfamiliar with the star singer and his former group.
"Listen, I have a friend at the University [of Nablus]. I can call him. Maybe he knows of McCartney," Senakreh told Klein.
Senakreh recently was granted amnesty in a deal between Israel and the Palestinian Authority.
Klein said he also called members of Hamas, the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine and a lesser-known group, the Army of Islam. Those terrorists also drew blanks when asked if they were familiar with McCartney.
While the terrorists may not have heard of McCartney, Klein wrote in one chapter of his book Palestinian terrorists he interviewed all had recognized Madonna and Britney Spears. One terrorist threatened to "cut the heads" of Madonna and Spears for spreading Satanic culture. "If I meet these whores I will have the honor I repeat, I will have the honor to be the first one to cut the heads off Madonna and Britney Spears if they will keep spreading their satanic culture against Islam," said the Committees' spokesman Abdel-Al.
The threats against McCartney came from Omar Bakri, also known as Omar Bakri Mohammad, who was the leader of Al-Muhajiroun, a London-based Islamist organization with the stated goal of creating a worldwide Islamic state starting in Britain.
"If he values his life, Mr. McCartney must not come to Israel," Bakri was quoted as saying. "He will not be safe there. The sacrifice operatives will be waiting for him."
Bakri added: "Instead of supporting the people of Palestine in their suffering, McCartney is celebrating the atrocities of the occupiers. The one who is under occupation is supposed to be getting the help."
Bakri departed the UK for Beirut in 2005 after media reported the British government was planning to investigate high-profile Islamists. He then was banned from returning to the UK by British Home Secretary Charles Clarke.
Klein has interviewed Bakri numerous times. In 1999, Klein spent a weekend with Bakri and his group, penning an article entitled, "My Weekend with the Enemy," published in newspapers, including the Jerusalem Post and Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
Klein called Bakri a "notorious media attention seeker" who is "more talk than action."
He said Palestinian terror groups "pay little to no attention to anything Bakri says or does. They don't take Bakri seriously."
Bakri and his group has threatened many notables in the past, including Salman Rushdie and former Pakistani President Pervez Musharraf. Bakri has made numerous claims that did not come to fruition, such as previously telling the media Osama bin Laden provided him with a videotape to address British Muslims.
Meanwhile, McCartney has made clear his concert in Israel will go on as planned.
"I was approached by different
groups and political bodies who asked me not to come here. I refused.
I do what I think, and I have many friends who support Israel,"
McCartney said in an interview with Yedioth Ahronoth, Israel's
leading daily.
September 15, 2008 -- Undercover (edited for Paul
content)
Amy Winehouse, Leona Lewis, Sugababes and Paul McCartney Down
A Guinness Record
The 2009 Guinness Book of Records will feature new titles for Amy Winehouse, Leona Lewis, Sugababes and Sir Paul McCartney.
Sir Paul McCartney is listed as the 'Most Successful Songwriter Of All Time'. He has had 188 Top 40 hits, 91 of which have made the Top 10 and 33 that made it to number 1.
The 2009 Guinness Book of Records
will be released on September 17.
September 15, 2008 -- The Sun
Mossad gunmen for Sir Paul
Sir Paul McCartney will be
guarded by armed secret agents during his gig in Israel this month.
Politicians ordered the £1million ($2 million) Mossad operation over fears of an attack by Suicide Bombers.
Muslim fanatics are angry Macca, 65, agreed to the £4million ($8 million) Friendship First concert, to mark Israel' s 60th anniversary.
But an Israeli source said last night: "Anyone who tries anything will be meeting Allah sooner than they thought."
Exiled preacher Omar Bakri
said the ex-Beatle was the "enemy of Muslims."
September 15, 2008 --
People.co.uk
CAN'T BUY ME HOUSE
War of words still raging between Mucca and Macca Heather puts
£3million) ($6 million) home on market...
& then BANS Sir Paul from buying it...
Ranting Heather Mills has banned ex-husband Paul McCartney from buying her £3 million home - even though she's put it up for sale.
Sir Paul said he wanted to have it because their four-year-old daughter Bea loves living there.
But pals told how Heather blew her top at the suggestion and warned him: "Over my dead body."
And she furiously accused him of pushing her former PR Michele Elyzabeth into spilling the beans to a newspaper last weekend about her time working for Mucca.
Heather, 40, bought the spread in Robertsbridge, East Sussex, after splitting with the Beatle legend in 2006.
But a source close to the warring pair said: "She has always felt it wasn't quite right for her.
"Heather put it on the market three weeks ago but she didn't initially let Paul know what she was planning.
"When he found out he told her he wanted to buy it off her because Bea loves it there.
"But she was having none of it and said, 'You're trying to take my house.' He said he was just trying to buy it because of how much Bea loves it there.
"But Heather was furious and ranted, 'You'll get the house over my dead body'.
"She even had to send home some workmen in the yard because she was shouting so loudly and she didn't want them overhearing.
"She said there was no way she was going to sell it to Paul.
"The argument was ferocious and a lot of people were shocked about it."
The insider added: "Heather knows Paul is just trying to be nice by offering to buy the house from her.
"But it seems she won't sell to him out of spite."
Heather is also fuming with Sir Paul following last week's revelations by her one-time publicity chief.
The source told The People: "When Heather heard about it, she flew off the handle at Paul saying he had put Michele up to it to make her look bad.
"Paul replied saying he didn't know what she was talking about.
"It escalated from there and turned into World War Three.
"Paul has told Heather she needs to see a psychiatrist - which made her even more furious.
"She started swearing at him saying, 'What are you bloody talking about?' "Heather told him he wasn't allowed to see Bea, saying he's not fit enough to be her dad because he encourages people to sell stories slagging off her mum.
"She said she'd stayed away all summer to let everything die down and now everyone was saying horrible things about her again."
The source added: "The screaming phone calls have stopped but it all seems to be carrying on via texts.
"I think the battle is still far from over." Heather's mansion is a 30-minute drive from 66-year-old Macca's estate at Peasmarsh.
During their bitter High Court divorce battle earlier this year, Heather claimed the huge house wasn't grand enough for her and demanded a wad of cash to add a pool.
But judge Sir Hugh Bennett poured scorn on her complaint, saying that her house was even MORE luxurious than Macca's.
And he told the court: "The wife says she feels a prisoner there, as she puts it, in the middle of nowhere.
"I find that inconsistent with her having already spent on it £675,000 ($1.4 million) - and wanting another £400,000 ($800,000) to put in a swimming pool."
Meanwhile, Mucca is said to have set her sights on a huge house set in 17 acres in the quiet Kent village of Hawkhurst.
It was once a school and Heather
has told pals it is her dream home.
September 13, 2008 --
The Express (UK)
SIR PAUL: TERROR TARGET
Sir Paul is facing threats
Sir Paul McCartney has been threatened that he will be the target of suicide bombers unless he abandons plans to play his first concert in Israel.
Self-styled preacher of hate Omar Bakri claimed the former Beatle's decision to take part in the Jewish state's 60th anniversary celebrations had made him an enemy of all Muslims.
Sources said Sir Paul was shocked but refused to be intimidated.
In an interview with Israeli media yesterday he said: "I was approached by different groups and political bodies who asked me not to come here. I refused. I do what I think and I have many friends who support Israel."
Sir Paul, 65, should have gone to Israel with the Beatles in 1965 but they were barred by the Jewish nation's government over fears they would corrupt young people.
Yesterday a number of websites described him as an infidel and suggested he was going to Israel only because of the reported £2.3 million ($4.6 million) fee for the one-off concert.
A message posted on one website said: "Shame on you Paul McCartney for day trippin' to apartheid Israel" and vowed never to buy his music again.
Bakri, who made his weekly internet broadcast to fellow extremists from his home in Lebanon, where he has lived in exile since being banned from returning to Britain, said Sir Paul was "making more enemies than friends".
Syrian-born Bakri, 48, went on: "I heard today that the pop star Paul McCartney is playing as a part of the celebrations.
"If you speak about the
holocaust and its authenticity never being proved historically
in the way the Jewish community portray it, people will arrest
you. People will you say you should not speak like this. Yet they
go and celebrate the anniversary of 60 years of what?
"Instead of supporting the people of Palestine in their suffering,
McCartney is celebrating the atrocities of the occupiers. The
one who is under occupation is supposed to be getting the help.
"And so I believe for Paul McCartney, what he is doing really is creating more enemies than friends."
Explaining his comments, Bakri told the Sunday Express: "Our enemy's friend is our enemy.
"Thus Paul McCartney is the enemy of every Muslim. We have what we call 'sacrifice' operatives who will not stand by while he joins in a celebration of their oppression.
"If he values his life Mr McCartney must not come to Israel. He will not be safe there. The sacrifice operatives will be waiting for him."
Lawyer Anjem Choudary, who last week chaired a meeting in London at which extremists claimed the next 9/11-style atrocity would be in Britain, said Sir Paul had allowed himself to become a propaganda tool for Israel.
He added: "Muslims have
every right to be angry at Paul McCartney. How would the world
react if he wanted to have a
concert in occupied Kashmir?
"They would not allow it to happen but because it is Israel he can play. A country which, as the celebration indicates did not exist 60 years ago, only exists thanks to stealing and occupying another country's lands." Yesterday the comments drew condemnation from Palestinian sources and outsiders.
Omar Barghouti, of The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel, described the threat as "deplorable".
Patrick Mercer, the Conservative MP for Newark and a former Shadow Security Minister, said: "One could dismiss Bakri as a ranting extremist but history has shown that he has an ability to twist minds, so his comments should not be underestimated.
"If Sir Paul McCartney wants to play at the 60th anniversary then it is the worst form of illiberalism for Omar Bakri to restrict the artist's freedom in this way."
A spokesman for Sir Paul declined to comment on the threat, saying: "Paul's Friendship First concert is about his music. Paul's is a message of peace."
Tickets for the concert range from £70 ($140) to £230 ($460).
Last night Sir Paul performed
his first concert in the Ukraine, playing to tens of thousands
in the capital Kiev.
September 13, 2008 -- New York Jewish
Week
It took awhile... Paul McCartney in Israel
It's not a slow news time,
to be sure, but after a conversation with my sister a few days
ago, I know what the really big news story is in Israel. It's
not about Ehud Olmert, Tzippi Livni, or any other political or
religious figure; it's about Paul McCartney.
Yes, Paul McCartney, whose forthcoming concert in Park HaYarkon
on September 25 promises to be the biggest such event in Israel's
history.
As has been reported recently, The Beatles were supposed to visit Israel in the early sixties, but Yossi Sarid's father (how ironic is that!), who was then the Minister of Culture, vetoed the concert because the Beatles were considered to be a "bad influence" on the country's youth. It's straight out of "Footloose." Something of the anti-rock and roll sentiment from the Elvis years seemed to have rooted in Israel's socialist leadership back then, and they actually vetoed the concert. When you think about Israeli artists today like Aviv Geffen, it's hard to believe exactly how puritanical the country was back then. What a blown opportunity!
But in the spirit of "it's never too late" (although it obviously is, with two members of the band already dead), Paul is helping Israel redeem itself with a concert that has the country in a tizzy. My sister, whom I remember well having posters of the Fab Four on her bedroom wall when we were kids, informed me that she spent five hundred shekel for a standing room ticket! Five hundred shekel! For standing room! And there are expected to be countless thousands of people there, willing to pay that much and obviously much more.
Truth be told, were I there, I would pay it in a heartbeat. With all the issues facing Israel, one more existentially threatening than the other, with all the sorrows and all the disappointments, people like my sister will get to be teenagers again for a few spectacular hours. Already last Friday afternoon, one of the Israeli radio stations was playing a possible set list for the concert, fueling the frenzy.
September 11, Iran, political corruption, deep and painful worries about the future Hearing "She Loves You" can only be what the doctor ordered.
'My eye was drawn to this woman. Is she pensive, excited - or about to cry?'
I love people-watching. I've been taking pictures of well-known models and actresses for an ongoing project on British style, but I wanted to combine that with everyday British occasions and informal dress. So this summer I decided a day at the races would be perfect.
I
don't really understand horse racing, but I got a train to Cheltenham
and quickly got a feel for it, because there were people going
up and down the train carriage selling beers at 10.30 in the morning.
I didn't buy any - I don't have the stamina. And I was working,
of course. By the time I got to the racetrack, it was raining,
typically. I wandered around looking at people, who would see
me checking them out and think: "Why is she looking at me?"
I didn't know if I was going to find anything interesting, and
I almost got a bit negative, thinking, "Why did I come here?
I've gone through all the palaver, but am I actually going to
get anything?"
Then the first race started. Everyone stopped and focused on it. The energy is exciting. When they're all watching the race, I'm a bit more invisible and can look at the crowd.
Out of all the characters around me, I found this lady particularly interesting. My eye was drawn to her. That action of holding that booklet over her face, almost blinkering herself. It was intriguing. I wasn't sure if she was upset, pensive or just excited. She was doing it throughout the race, and looked as though she was going to start crying. She almost seemed as if she was worrying about something else. I couldn't tell. And I still don't know. But it was exactly what I was looking for.
Curriculum vitae
Born: London, 1969
Studied: "I did a really short course on how to use a camera at the University of Westminster. I didn't do a degree or anything."
Inspirations: "My mum, Linda McCartney, and a lot of the classic photographers - Julia Margaret Cameron, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Eve Arnold and André Kertész. Then some more modern people, like Richard Billingham."
Low point: "When someone hates having their photograph taken. One person who was nice but difficult was Lou Reed - I felt like I was torturing him. Each time I took his picture, I had to count, 'One, two, three,' to tell him when to open his eyes. And then he'd close them again. I think he just wasn't in the mood."
Pet hate: "Tripods."
Dream subject: "I would quite like to go to Nashville and take pictures of Dolly Parton. I'd quite like to check out her home. I imagine she's got lots of trinkets."
· Interview by Leo Benedictus.
Mary McCartney's work features in the 30 Days of Fashion and Beauty
festival.
Details: 30daysoffashionandbeauty.co.uk
September 12,
2008 -- Rolling Stone
"Guitar Hero World Tour" Adds Songs by Wings, Steve
Miller, Rise Against
New Guitar Hero World Tour
Songs:
Wings - "Band
on the Run"
Dream Theater - "Pull Me Under"
Filter - "Hey Man Nice Shot"
NOFX - "Soul Doubt"
Rise Against - "Re-Education (Through Labor)"
Steve Miller - "The Joker"
The Answer - "Never Too Late"
The Stone Roses - "Love Spreads"
Trust - "Anti-Social"
Sir Paul McCartney is said to be furious after a new book
he contributed to accuses John Lennon
of wanting a gay relationship with his fellow Beatle.
McCartney and Lennon's widow Yoko Ono, 75,
both reportedly agreed to be interviewed for author Philip Norman's
new biography, John Lennon: The Life.
But after learning the book claims Lennon lusted over McCartney
and fantasised about his mother, the pair are allegedly distancing
themselves from the project, with Ono withdrawing her endorsement.
A source tells Britain's Daily Mirror, "Both Sir Paul and
Yoko are extremely angry and upset."
Pro-Palestinian groups have frequently called on international academics and prominent cultural figures to boycott Israel over its occupation of the West Bank and blockade of the Hamas-controlled Gaza Strip.
Jewish groups have condemned cultural and academic boycotts as anti-Semitic.
McCartney will perform hits from his Beatles days and his solo career during a September 25 concert in Tel Aviv as part of a series of shows that has taken McCartney to cities he never visited before.
Asked about how members of the Beatles, one of the most popular bands in rock history, felt when the Israeli government scrapped their concert in 1965 on the grounds it could corrupt the nation's youth, McCartney said it was "a bit insulting, the thought we could corrupt the youth."
"The Beatles had a pretty positive influence on the world and only regimes that wanted to control their peoples were afraid of us. We mostly laughed at the Israeli government decision," McCartney said in comments translated into Hebrew.
Another account in Israel's Haaretz newspaper last month pinned the cancellation of the 1965 Beatles concert on a rift between two concert promoters.
McCartney said in comments published on his Web site last month he looks forward to this chance to perform in Israel. "I've heard so many great things about Tel Aviv and Israel, but hearing is one thing and experiencing it for yourself is another," he said.
The
rumour mill is on overdrive today following American reports Sir Paul McCartney is gearing up to propose to girlfriend
Nancy Shevell.
The heiress is close to finalising her divorce from estranged husband Bruce Blakeman, and there are whispers the Beatles star is planning to ask her to marry him after that.
Chicago Sun-Times newspaper columnist Bill Zwecker reports: 'It looks like the romance between Paul McCartney and wealthy New York socialite Nancy Shevell may be on the verge of moving up a notch. A source very close to the Beatles legend tells me Shevell may finally have worked out details of her divorce.
'When that happens, Sir Paul is expected to announce his engagement to his lady love - who would become his third wife.' (read Sun-Times article)
It follows reports that McCartney, 66, has been househunting in the same Manhattan neighbourhood as 47-year-old Shevell.
All you need is love: The pair have been dating since November
The pair have grown increasingly close since they began dating last November.
They enjoyed a romantic trip to Antigua in April and a road trip across seven US states last month.
And last week they were pictured having an intimate Japanese meal in the Hamptons on New York's Long Island.
Shevell, whose family has a multi-million dollar transport firm, is still to officially finalise her divorce from her politician husband of 23 years, Bruce Blakeman.
He is now reportedly in the running to become the next New York mayor.
Meanwhile, McCartney's former wife Heather Mills has reportedly been dropped from Donald Trump's reality TV show Celebrity Apprentice after she made 'ludicrous' contract demands.
Network NBC had her lined up to appear on the show but rejected Mills after she allegedly insisted on a clause in her contract to guarantee her a place in the final.
A representative for McCartney
did not return calls.
September
10, 2008 -- UPI
Lawyer says he is running for NYC mayor
A New York lawyer whose estranged wife is dating former Beatle Paul McCartney says he will run for mayor of the largest U.S. city as a Republican.
Bruce Blakeman told the New York Post that his models
are the current mayor, Michael Bloomberg, a Democrat turned Republican
turned independent, and his predecessor, Rudolph Giuliani, a Republican.
"I think there's a real desire for continuity," he said.
The 52-year-old Blakeman once served as presiding officer of the
legislature in suburban Nassau County. In 1998, he ran for state
comptroller, losing to Democrat Carl McCall.
Nancy Shevell, Blakeman's estranged wife, is a board
member of the MTA, the New York regional transit system. Last
year, she was reported to be involved with McCartney, who recently
shed his second wife in a nasty divorce case.
At least five others from both parties are reported to be contemplating
mayoral runs. To complicate things, Bloomberg has not ruled out
trying to change the city's term limits law to allow him to run
for a third term.
It looks like the romance between Paul McCartney and wealthy New York socialite Nancy Shevell may be on the verge of moving up a notch. A source very close to the Beatles legend tells me Shevell -- long separated from her rich financier hubby Bruce Blakeman -- may finally have worked out details of her divorce. When that happens, Sir Paul is expected to announce his engagement to his lady love -- who would become his third wife.
No comment from the official McCartney camp, but the signs have been pointing toward another McCartney wedding since the couple began dating last November -- after being good, non-romantic pals for quite a while.
After a few furtive dates in New York's Hamptons, the duo were spied smooching everywhere from out-of-the-way East Coast eateries to a posh Antigua resort (in March) to their much-publicized Route 66 tour taken this summer -- marking Sir Paul's own 66th birthday.
· If and when the nuptials take place, don't be surprised if Barbara Walters gets the first big TV interview: The creator of ''The View'' is Shevell's cousin.
· A major New York real estate source told me McCartney is looking at a number of eight-figure condos in Shevell's Upper East Side Manhattan neighborhood. ''He hasn't looked at anything more than three blocks from Nancy's apartment,'' said the source.
· Like Shevell, the music superstar has a home in the Hamptons -- where they first met.
· In addition, McCartney has long owned a New York apartment on the West Side, ''but he lived there with Heather [Mills, his ex-wife], and you've got to assume there's lots of bad karma there for him,'' said another McCartney friend. That apartment's privacy factor has been diminished; a recent addition to the Museum of Modern Art gives visitors a direct view into the ex-Beatle's digs.
· Speaking of Mills, it seems she's found a way around that gag order that was part of her $50 million divorce settlement with Sir Paul. The London Daily Telegraph reports Mills may get as much as a $2 million advance for a novel she's penning -- about a model who marries a rock star before their relationship turns sour. Of course ex-model Mills will claim it's pure fiction. Right...

Did you
ever think you'd learn yoga from Paul McCartney of The Beatles? Well thanks to YouTube, you can!
Here, Paul teaches us yoga exercises for your eyes, to improve
your eye health.WEBMASTER'S
NOTE: Or for better quality
video go to the Memory Almost Full ASK PAUL
page and type in "eye yoga"...
September 8, 2008 -- Daily Mail
Smitten Paul McCartney and Nancy Shevell enjoy dinner by candlelight
as their romance heats up
Paul
McCartney looked every inch
the man in love as he enjoyed a romantic candlelit dinner with
girlfriend Nancy
Shevell.
The 66-year-old appeared relaxed and happy as the pair dined at the exclusive Bamboo Japanese restaurant in the Hamptons on New York's Long Island.
Their display of love comes days after it was revealed that McCartney is searching for a New York City apartment near 47-year-old Shevell's home.
The former Beatle has reportedly been house-hunting in the area around her East 83rd Street residence.
McCartney has owned a property on West 54th Street since the 1980s, a home he most recently shared with his ex-wife Heather Mills.
But the Let It Be singer is now looking for a new home on the Upper East Side to be closer to Shevell, reports the New York Post.
McCartney, 66, and Shevell, 47, have been seeing each other with increasingly regularity since last November.
The pair enjoyed a romantic
trip to Antigua in April and a road trip across seven US states
last month.
MORE
September 8, 2008 -- The Mirror
Paul McCartney's romantic candlelit dinner with new love Nancy
There was no mistaking the close bond of affection between Paul McCartney and his new love Nancy Shevell as they enjoyed a romantic candlelit dinner.
She gazes adoringly and leans on his shoulder. He smiles contentedly to feel her next to him.
Sir Paul, 66, and heiress Nancy, 47, cosied up for meal at the exclusive Bamboo Japanese restaurant in the Hamptons on New York's Long Island, where they both have homes.
Later, Nancy and the former Beatle had drinks at the trendy Nichols bar.
Sir Paul and Nancy were first revealed to be an item last November when they were spotted kissing in a car in New York.
With his divorce from Heather
behind him, he has taken Nancy cruising on his boat named after
first wife
Linda and is said to have
been contemplating marriage for a third time. With a love like
this, Paul, you know you should be glad.
Last night her closest PR aide Michele Elyzabeth sensationally admitted: "That witch tricked me into spreading LIES about Paul. She's a bitch!"
We expose Mills' outrageous dirty tricks campaign against rock legend McCartney.
Top publicist and manager Elyzabeth spent four years championing the ex-porn star and defended her throughout the couple's multi-million pound divorce battle.
But last night she confessed: "Heather is a calculating, pathological liar and the biggest bitch on the planet. She not only misled me, she misled the entire world.
"At one stage we were so close I viewed her as the daughter I never had. Today I think of her as the witch I wish I'd never met."
READ: HEATHER MILLS' $1M VIDEO NASTY
Hollywood public relations executive Michele, 58, quit working for Mills-dubbed Mucca for her seedy past-just six weeks ago when she finally realised she too had been betrayed. In fury she told us how 40-year-old Heather:
* LEAKED false stories to blacken
husband Paul's name.
* BUGGED his private chats in a bid to dig dirt.
* VOWED to DESTROY the former Beatle.
* TRICKED the world into thinking she'd been dumped penniless
but secretly...
* BANKED £3million from her estranged hubby while dodging
bills and blagging freebies.
* DECEIVED the public over how much she gave to charity.
Foolish
Angry Michele admitted: "Heather used me as her mouthpiece for four years, and I'm ashamed to say throughout that time I simply told lies. As her friend I BELIEVED she was telling the truth, but now I realise she conned me. I was foolish and saw her simply as the devoted humanitarian, charity campaigner and protective mother she wanted the world to see. Now I want the public to know who the REAL Heather Mills is."
In October, 2006, Heather-who lost her lower left leg in a road accident-was determined to convince Michele that Macca, 66, was pushing her to the edge and called her to a meeting at his Beverly Hills mansion, after FORCING her way in and taking up residence.
Inside, ex-call girl Heather-who has consistently lied about her vice and porn shame- played a tape of a BUGGED conversation between Macca and daughter Stella discussing the split. Heather wore latex GLOVES as she handled the tape. Red with rage she screamed: "I'll destroy him!"
Michele said: "Heather and Paul had been apart for six months but she still demanded to stay in the house.
"Paul's security guard tried to get her to leave. But she threatened to call the cops if he touched her, and then defiantly declared, 'Let Paul get me out!' I guess Paul just let her have her way.
"We had a brief business meeting, before we went into her lounge where a specialist pain doctor treated her leg. Then all of a sudden Heather was acting very unusually, over the top-trying to make us intrigued.
"She said, 'I want you to listen to how Paul and Stella are plotting against me. Who knows what they're trying to do?'
"She pulled a cassette player out of a bag by the couch and said, 'I've been taping Paul for weeks.'
"Then acting anxiously, Heather put on these latex gloves in front of us. It was all very mysterious, but it was part of her plan to get us hooked. Naturally I asked, 'What are you doing?' As she pulled out a tape from the bag she replied, 'This could be evidence.'
"She said she didn't want her fingerprints on it at all, so they couldn't trace it back to her.
"I was mesmerised. I felt as if I was about to learn a huge secret. Heather played it brilliantly, like a cloak and dagger operation. She loved the drama.
"So she played it to both of us (Michele and the doctor) and I could clearly hear it was Paul's voice. Then I recognised Stella as well-I knew her voice from TV. I heard Paul say, 'Heather is really crazy, she's driving me nuts. She should be happy to get what she's getting she always wants more. She's never happy.'
"His tone made me feel that Paul thought she was being unreasonable. I didn't understand the exact nature of this conversation.
"They then talked about what she was putting them through. He spoke about her demands and how 'up the wall' he thought it was.
"Then Stella made a joke, something like, 'She doesn't have a leg to stand on!' I think they both laughed.
"As the 2 -minute tape played Heather sat looking at us with her eyes acting all astonished, even though she MUST have heard it before. I had mixed feelings about it. I knew Paul and Stella weren't being vicious but they WERE making fun of Heather. And at that time I was on her side and felt that wasn't fair.
"But I couldn't believe she was letting this 'top secret' play out in front of the doctor, a virtual stranger.
"Now I look back it feels like a set-up. And I don't know exactly how she got that tape.
"After it finished playing,
she looked all wounded and shocked then added, 'I know what he's
doing to me. Can you believe that bastard?' As we left the house
Heather told me she felt this would 'be enough to bring Paul down.'"
Tight
In his March judgement on the £24.3 million ($48.6 million) divorce, Mr Justice Bennett noted: "It is said that on June 25, 2006, the wife illegally bugged the husband's telephone, in particular a call in which Stella made very unflattering comments about the wife.
"It is further said that the wife leaked the intercepted material to the press to discredit the husband."
The judge added that none of Mucca's alleged leaks, lies or breaches of confidentiality played any part in the size of her payout.
Michele, who has 35 years experience promoting Hollywood celebs, told us: "I've asked myself many times what was Heather's motivation, but it all points to one thing-money.
"She's a gold digger. I'm certain her marriage to Paul was all about the money. I've spent hours with Heather, I've seen how tight she is with her cash, how she lied to me about Paul giving her money and experienced how she dodges bills-including my own fees.
"She's the tightest human being I know. I believe Heather felt the further she pushed Paul emotionally, the bigger the payout would be. In the two-year run-up to the divorce she openly told the world that Paul gave her nothing, but then the court papers revealed he'd supported her to the tune of over £3 million ($6 million)."
On GMTV last October hypocrite Mills insisted: "I have NEVER used the press for anything, except promoting my charity."
But in reality Mills manipulated stories to bring down McCartney's iconic stature in the eyes of the world. In August 2006 she gave unsuspecting Michele the green light to lie about Macca's financial contribution on American TV show Extra.
"I told millions of viewers Paul didn't give her any money at all," said Michele. "The media lapped it up. I even briefed reporters in England on the story. After every appearance Heather was encouraging me to keep up the fight. But she always added, 'Make sure you tell people it wasn't my idea.'"
Determined Michele even repeated the lie on her own website, and on YouTube. Michele was also battling breast cancer at the time but put aside her own problems to produce a series of videos defending Heather.
Michele said: "I stood up for her, insisting Paul wasn't paying her. But it was a pack of lies." And in March 2007 Heather herself kept up the pretence that Paul was mean, telling Sky TV: "It's like getting blood from a stone."
But Mr Justice Bennett concluded: "In interviews the wife lost her cool completely, went right over the top, and behaved in an erratic, out of control, and vengeful manner."
His divorce judgement noted: "In the light of the husband's generosity towards her I find the wife's behaviour distinctly distasteful. In any event it damages her overall credibility."
Michele and Heather first met at an Adopt a Minefield charity project in October, 2004. Within days Mills was using the star PR's expertise for free to further her own career in America.
Believing Mills's lies about being broke, Michele didn't charge her for 2 years. Then Mucca slipped up by splashing out £15,000 ($30,000) on a cruise at a charity auction.
Michele said: "I tackled her about it and she agreed to pay me £2,500 ($5,000) per month plus expenses. Heather had lied to me, but I was happy just to get money. It didn't last though. Next day I was told I'd get a thousand pounds less, but I'd be taken care of when she got the 'big settlement'. She often talked about 'the big settlement'.
"Heather promised verbally to look after me and I saw that as a binding contract, so I stuck by her. When they split Heather gave me a green light to get her business deals to raise cash. That way she could pay for my time with the deals we achieved.
"But once the money landed in her bank she coldly told me that she'd have to make cutbacks, and was unlikely to be able to pay my already reduced fee. I couldn't believe it. She wanted to cheat me and I was now being pushed out. I'd always felt sorry for her, letting her emotional outbursts make me treat our relationship as more than business.
"I threw parties at my home at my own expense for her to meet major businessmen and media people. I put her and her friends up, I even let it ride when she'd tag her mates along to drink my wine and eat my food.
"Never once did she stick her hand in her pocket at these business functions organised for her benefit. And at the time I didn't want her to, because I always thought she was broke.
"But she NEVER had cash on her. I always found myself spending MY money on her-whether it was drinks or lunches, I'd end up with the bill.
"In the first 2 years working together I forked out thousands on couriers, postage and taking out TV people to improve her image in the US.
"And it was hard work. Nobody liked her, and it cost me a lot in swish lunches and dinners to turn that opinion around. I was trying to get her work at HER request. Not once did she offer to pay me. What a leech!
"She had a credit card, but it must have had cobwebs on it. She once told me it was simply a little gesture from Paul for friends' lunches. Well I was her friend, and she rarely paid for me.
"She must have bought about six lunches in total out of the dozens we had-and they were always the cheap ones.
"Even when we met at her house for an important business lunch, we'd just be given a sandwich.
"In the early days I introduced her to my hairdresser David Paul to do her hair as a favour. But Heather just rocked up to his salon every two days when she was in Los Angeles.
"This went on for three years and not once did she offer to pay. David guessed, like the rest of us, that once the divorce was finalised we'd be repaid. But it never happened.
"Heather's method was
to get everything for free, relying on goodwill. But when the
subject of money came up, she'd drop people from her life and
deny they'd done anything for her. It became so predictable. I
call her 'The Black Widow' now to my friends.
Nasty
"I know now that even after they split Paul helped her out on some of her unpaid bills. There was a doctor in LA who looked after her leg and also security staff. Paul covered pretty much everything for her, although he didn't say anything publicly. But Heather just expected that of him."
The two women are now at legal loggerheads over a disputed bill for £168,000 ($236,000) from Michele. And Heather insists SHE fired Michele.
Michele revealed that Mucca's disloyalty to Paul extended even into their private love life. Heather would ridicule his performance between the sheets to amuse her friends in crowded restaurants and at David Paul's salon. Michele added: "Heather would say on TV how she still loved her husband then take the mickey when she was with her girlfriends.
"She'd run down Paul as a man and be very nasty about him. She was exceptionally dismissive about him, going into graphic detail about their love lives. She was very indiscreet.
"I witnessed this many times. I couldn't believe my ears the first time when she just rattled off all these insults in public, quite openly, to people she barely knew-really anyone who'd listen.
"I remember quite a few times when she'd sit down at my hairdressers, and just open up about Paul, without prompting. She often declared, 'If I had to do it again I'd never have married him.' And we all knew that days earlier she'd been on TV claiming she'd never attack the father of her child. She was such a hypocrite.
"But Heather had no interest in other men when she was married. I think her prime concern was getting hold of his cash, and that took up all her time and focus.
"She always made up that she was hard up with Paul. I remember once she told me, 'My husband is so cheap, if we go to lunch and there's a bottle of water left on the table, he'll take it away with him.
"I had a rude awakening when the divorce judgement came through. All her words were lies, her way of manipulating me.
"Since getting her hands
on the money she also got abusive towards me. Then in July she
threw a fit on the phone at me and I quit."
I'm fixer
for the Queen
|
DELUDED Heather bragged to Michele that she was a go-between for
the THE QUEEN.
The PR boss described how Mucca once insisted: "I know the Queen. I organise for celebrities to meet her."
Michele added: "It was
a very brief aside, which she just slipped into her conversation.
I was shocked and found it quite incredible.
Idea
"Heather added that she regularly took along famous names to meet her. She made out it was 100 per cent genuine.
"It's one of the strangest things I ever heard her claim, as I can't imagine the Queen would associate herself with an activist and campaigner like Heather.
"I told Heather to set me up a meeting the next time I was over. She thought it was a good idea.
"But I quit before I got
my chance."
Spend spend spend
PUBLICIST Michele Elyzabeth watched gobsmacked as tightwad Heather
suddenly turned into a spendthrift-in a vain bid to prove to a
judge she needed a megabucks divorce payout.
Mucca lashed out over £3 million ($6 million) of Macca's cash from October 2006 to December 2007 on Hollywood parties, private jets and helicopter taxis.
In his judgement Mr Justice Benett said he had seen through her bid to ramp up her living costs.
But in her infamous GMTV meltdown Mills lied again and DENIED blowing millions of Macca's cash. She moaned: "All I did was go to the hairdressers."
Aldo Zilli creates an entirely vegetarian menu for Paul McCartney visit
Paul McCartney, 66, got stuck into a massive five-course lunch at celebrity chef Aldo Zilli's restaurant yesterday.
Knowing Macca's strict diet, the staff at Signor Zilli in Soho, London, created an entirely vegetarian menu especially for him and the singer wolfed down all five courses.
Didn't fancy popping into Gordon Ramsay's, eh Paul?
The long and winding lunch
included avocado and mango salad, asparagus wrapped in leeks,
chargrilled veg with mozzarella and goat's cheese ravioli. Phew.
September
4, 2008 -- Daily Mail
Paul McCartney has a Monopoly on Beatles memorabilia

Sir Paul McCartney looks set for A Hard Day's Night playing
a new Beatles Monopoly boardgame.
The 66-year-old emerged from his offices in London's Soho Square yesterday with the Fab Four edition of the popular game.
McCartney's chauffeur popped the upcoming Beatles Monopoly game on the back seat of his car as the eternally youthful singer bounded outside.
Can't buy me Mayfair: Paul McCartney leaves Soho Square perhaps to play a spot of Beatles Monopoly at his St John's Wood home
With a roll of the dice, Macca may pass Penny Lane via Abbey Road on his way to Strawberry Fields during a quiet evening in playing the game.
Things are certainly looking up for McCartney recently.
He has been romancing New York socialite Nancy Shevell, 47, since last November.
The pair enjoyed a romantic trip to Antigua in April and a road trip across seven US states last month.
However, reports that McCartney is planning soon to make Miss Shevell his third wife are believed to be wide of the mark.
His adult children Stella, Mary and James are said to be completely against the idea of their father marrying for a very long time after his acrimonious divorce from his last wife, Heather Mills.
And Miss Shevell, whose family
has a £315 million ($630 million) transport firm, is still
to finalise her divorce from her politician husband of 23 years,
Bruce Blakeman.
September
4, 2008 -- New York Post
HELLO, GOODBYE
Paul McCartney is on the lookout for another New York City apartment - this time, closer to the Upper East Side apartment of his new flame Nancy Shevell.
Sources say the former Beatle, who has had a place on West 54th Street since the 1980s - where he and ex-wife Heather Mills last bunked together in Gotham - has been combing the area close to Shevell's East 83rd Street residence.
"He's been looking at eight-figure apartments," says a real-estate insider. "I think he just wants to rid himself of the Heather factor."
Plus, he reportedly lost much of his privacy a few years ago when the Museum of Modern Art added a glass facade that gives visitors an unobstructed view of his apartment. And he probably wouldn't mind adding more distance between himself and Mills' new downtown condo, which she recently bought at 173 Perry St.
McCartney's rep did not respond
to our inquiries.
September
4, 2008 -- Today Vegetarian Blog
Linda McCartney food range may be expanded
Via Ecorazzi
:
Linda and Paul McCartney's photographer
daughter,
Mary, revealed to the Scottish
newspaper Herald that "One of the projects that has been
occupying her and her family recently has been 'revitalising'
the Linda McCartney vegetarian food range, which was launched
in 1991.
Last year, the firm Hain Celestial bought the licence to the foods
and the McCartney family (who are all vegetarian) have since been
working with the firm, not only with photography and packaging
design, but with new lines.
"We're working with them now on coming up with ideas based
on the recipes that mum had and the way she cooked. We're very
hands-on. We want to do it or her, the way she would have wanted
it done."
Linda
McCartney Vegetarian Foods
Paul McCartney caused a buzz when he dropped by the Amagansett library with daughter Beatrice for the lecture "Eric's Big Bugs." He also encountered a librarian with a pun-ny bone: As the former Beatle walked past her, a spy tells us, "She whispered under her breath, 'That was the biggest bug of them all!'"
Nancy gets her song
Sir Paul McCartney has written a love song for his girlfriend Nancy Shevell.
The 66-year-old former Beatle feels so strongly about the US heiress he has put his emotions into music for Nancy, 48.
"The song Paul has written a song for Nancy looks set to be on his new album. Paul has long been inspired by the women in his life and Nancy is no different," a source revealed.
Earlier this year, it was revealed Paul had collaborated on a song about his ex-wife Heather Mills - who he divorced this year - with world music artist Nitin Sawhney.
"Paul has done a track about how he feels about Heather because no one has heard his side of it at all. It's a very emotional and very powerful song," the source said of the track.
Paul has also previously composed songs for his first wife Linda, who passed away after a battle with breast cancer in 1998, including "Maybe I'm Amazed" in 1970.
A number of Paul's songs for
The Beatles, including "And I Love Her"
and "Here, There and Everywhere" were said to be inspired
by his ex-fiancée, Jane Asher.
September 2, 2008 -- The
Sun
Macca kisses Nancy on a boat called Linda

It used to be Sir Paul McCartney's escape from chaos - a simple sailing dinghy
named after his first wife Linda.
Suddenly it's his love boat, carrying the ex-Beatle and new girlfriend Nancy Shevell as they share a romantic kiss.
The pair had eyes only for each other as they glided through the sun-kissed waters of The Hamptons on New York's Long Island.
And after the stormy seas of his divorce from second wife Heather Mills, Macca could hardly have looked calmer.

At the height of his troubles, he said of his Sunfish dinghy: "It's my antidote to chaos. I like the freedom, the peace."
Now Sir Paul, 66, has found all the peace he needs with 47-year-old American heiress Nancy, who has battled breast cancer - the disease that killed Linda in 1998.
The couple have been caught in a whirlwind romance since they were seen kissing in a New York car last November.
They were joined on their holiday by Paul's daughter Beatrice, four.
Nancy and her lawyer husband Bruce Blakeman are due to divorce after 23 married years.
It could soon be plain sailing
for Sir Paul and his new love.
September 1, 2008
-- Jerusalem Post
Palestinians to McCartney: Stay home
Not everyone is ready to let it be over Paul McCartney's upcoming show in Tel Aviv.
The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel (PACBI) has called on the former Beatle to cancel the show, saying that "Palestinian dispossession and Israeli apartheid are no cause for celebration."
In a press release, the PACBI added that "since the creation of this state 60 years ago, [Israel] dispossessed and uprooted hundreds of thousands of Palestinians from their homes and lands, condemning them to a life of exile and destitution."
"Performing in Israel at this time is morally equivalent to performing in South Africa at the height of the apartheid era... We strongly urge you to uphold the values of freedom, equality and just peace for all by joining this growing boycott against Israeli apartheid. Nothing less would do justice to the legendary legacy of the Beatles."
Another Palestinian lobby group - the Palestine Solidarity Campaign - has formulated a letter which it asks supporters to send to McCartney's management, asking him to reconsider performing in Tel Aviv.
"As I'm sure you are aware, the State of Israel continues to breach international and human rights law by its illegal occupation of the West Bank and Gaza and treatment of the Palestinian people. As well as the constant attacks by the Israeli army and armed settlers, Palestinian land is systematically stolen, houses demolished and crops destroyed," said the letter. "Your music has always been associated with hopeful and free aspirations; this reputation will undoubtedly be tarnished should this concert go ahead."
In a response to the two boycott attempts, the UK branch of Israel advocacy organization StandWithUs sent a letter to McCartney and his manager Stuart Bell, saying that the "blatant lies in the PACBI press release are simply beyond belief."
According to StandWithUs representative Joy Wolfe, "The more they call for boycotts, the more people want to come out to prove how fruitless they are and to demonstrate that it is by contact and dialogue, and indeed by staging concerts such as yours, that things may hopefully improve. At least when you appear in Tel Aviv you can expect to have a mixed audience of Jews, Muslims and Christians, something that would be impossible in any Arab country."
Regardless of the calls for McCartney to stay home, ticket sales for the show passed the 25,000 mark at the beginning of the week, according to the producers of the concert. And later this week, the first members of McCartney's technical staff will arrive in Israel to begin preparations for the show's infrastructure.