e-mail address:
password :
new user? register


PETA2 Daily Blog

Aguilera Fakes It December 13, 2006

Posted by Patricia | Permalink | Comments ( 2 ) | TrackBack


Christina%20resized.jpg
Oh, the glamour!
I, for one, think Christina Aguilera's new look is to die for (it almost was, literally). I'm so happy with her transformation, it's like she was a scantily-clad, fashionably challenged caterpillar who blossomed into this glorious old Hollywood glam style butterfly ... love it! And I knew that she was animal friendly, dotes on her doggies, and wears fake fur, so I was, shall we say, oh, well, furious, when I heard that Roberto Cavalli told Women's Wear Daily that he made her a real fur stole to wear on her "Back to Basics" tour. It seems she hired Cavalli—you remember that pelt pushing minion of Satan, right?—to design all of her costumes for the tour and she told him that she only wears fake fur, but he sent her one made from real, dead white foxes. PETA's Dan Mathews emailed the item to Aguilera, along with a link to Stella McCartney's fur farm expose. Dan instantly received a response saying that she is "very upset" because the singer "only ever wears fake fur" and that she's already replaced Cavalli's faux-pas with a faux fur stole. Thanks, Christina! All hail the diva with a heart.

XOX

Patricia

Posted by Patricia Patricia

Post this story to: tagFacebook tagDigg tagdel.icio.us tagNewsvine tagMySpace
tagStumbleUpon More:

Comments

=D I am so happy!

Posted by: Luke (AKA Ligar) at December 13, 2006 10:45 PM
                                                               

She's so nice. she cares about animals!:-)

Posted by: ahine at December 16, 2006 12:19 PM
                                                               

Post a comment










Remember personal info?




Heads up: By signing up here and giving us your details, we're taking that as acknowledgment that you've read and agreed to our privacy policy.


e-mail this page peta2 enews privacy policy donate now contact us petaDishoom peta2.de United Kingdom peta