WoW ! Cameron Diaz says she doesn’t want kids of her own

Our world is framed by the choices we make, when a woman who can have kids says she doesn’t want them, I see that as a tough choice to make. Actress Cameron Diaz, 41, told the August edition of Esquire Magazine that kids were not on her agenda. “It’s so much more work to have children.

To have lives besides your own that you are responsible for – I didn’t take that on. That did make things easier for me. A baby – that’s all day, every day for 18 years. Not having a baby might really make things easier, but that doesn’t make it an easy decision’

WoW ! Cameron Diaz goes nude for first time

Cameron Diaz is feeling fearless, she goes nude for the first time CNN reports

“With her 42nd birthday approaching on August 30, the actress is dismissing Hollywood’s obsession with youth and embracing growing older with pride and an eagerness to try something new.
“I like being 41. I love it,” Diaz tells Esquire magazine in its August issue, on sale July 8. “So much s*** just falls away. Fear, mostly. It’s the best age. That’s when a woman knows how to work things, or she doesn’t care about that
anymore. You just stop being afraid.”

….You don’t worry about what men think. You just don’t worry that time registers anything awful.” Perhaps it’s that perspective that helped lead Diaz to the July 18 comedy “Sex Tape,” in which she and Jason Segel play a couple who accidentally share a home video of their intimate moments for all to see. Obviously, neither Diaz nor Segel could be shy about showing some skin with a plot like that, but in fact, Diaz isn’t just
showing some skin. She’s showing
everything. “It’s a first for me,” she says of the nude work in the comedy. “But Jason (Segel) gets naked, too. It’s just a part of the role.”

….So I did it. I mean, you see everything.” While Diaz is still conquering career firsts, in her personal life she’s content with where she is. When the topic veers toward her decision not to have kids, Diaz
explains, “it’s so much more work to have children.” “To have lives besides your own that you are responsible for — I didn’t take that on,” the actress continues. “That did make things easier for me. A baby — that’s all day, every day for 18 years. Not having a baby might really make things easier, but that doesn’t make it an easy decision.”

….”I like protecting people, but I was never drawn to being a mother. I have it much easier than any of them. That’s just what it is. Doesn’t mean life isn’t
sometimes hard. I’m just what I am. I work on what I am.
“Right now, I think, things are good for me. I’ve done a lot. And I don’t care anymore.”

Cameron Diaz

Cameron Diaz

WoW ! ‘The Other Woman’ a dimwitted faux- feminist comedy, reviews say

April 25, 2014 , 10:27 a.m.
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‘SCANDAL’
‘The Other Woman’ a dimwitted faux-
feminist comedy, reviews say
131
In the new revenge comedy “The Other Woman,”
Cameron Diaz, Leslie Mann and Kate Upton play a trio
of scorned women seeking to give their cheating
mutual beau ( Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) his
comeuppance. According to film critics, though, they
would have been better off directing their ire at the
movie itself, for its lazy cliches and pseudo-feminist
slant.

The Times’ Betsy Sharkey calls “The Other Woman”
the “quintessential anti-date movie” — ironic, as it’s
directed by Nick Cassavetes, who did “The Notebook”
— and says it’s “out of control and intent on running
down a certain kind of male.”
She continues, “Slyness, slapstick and sex can often
be mixed to amusing effect whatever the specifics —
the original ‘Hangover,’ for example, did a credible
job of it — but ‘The Other Woman’ is ultimately
undone by its indecision. … Eventually the getting
even and dumbing down gets tiresome. Somewhere
along the way, ‘The Other Woman’ forgets how to
have fun with a bad romance.”
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In a particularly scathing review, NPR’s Linda Holmes
describes the movie as “a conceptually odious,
stupid-to-the-bone enterprise” and “the most
grotesque pantomime of girl power.”
Holmes adds, “It may also occur to you just how bad
— how bad — it is that this is what we have to offer
Mann and Diaz, who show themselves in these
moments to be really able comic actresses: a story in
which they play idiots with no interests of any kind
except bickering over an utterly charmless man and
then satisfying themselves that giving him explosive
diarrhea and prominent nipples constitutes
satisfying revenge for his having apparently robbed
both of them of whatever souls and outside interests
they once possessed.”

Ty Burr of the Boston Globe agrees, writing, “‘The
Other Woman’ is one of those loud, cringe-y female-
empowerment comedies that feels like it was made
by people who hate women. It’s about a trio of
heroines who free themselves from their three-timing
man by obsessing about him constantly and plotting
revenge with laxatives in his cocktails and Nair in his
shampoo.” Burr adds, “It’s as though [the
filmmakers] conspired to come up with a movie
specifically designed to flunk the Bechdel Test: 109
minutes in which the women do nothing but talk
about a man.”
PHOTOS: Box office top 10 of 2013
The Washington Post’s Ann Hornaday calls “The
Other Woman” an “unpromising screenwriting
debut” for Melissa Stack that “seems to have been
cobbled together from any number of other, not
necessarily better, movies, resulting in a tonal mish-
mash of scatology, physically contorting pratfalls
and, only occasionally, genuinely observant
behavioral comedy.”
Stephen Holden of the New York Times also finds the
film overly familiar. He writes, “This female revenge
comedy is so dumb, lazy, clumsily assembled and
unoriginal, it could crush any actor forced to execute
its leaden slapstick gags and mouth its crude,
humorless dialogue.” Eventually, “‘The Other
Woman’ settles into being a rip-off of the infinitely
superior but still minor ‘First Wives Club.'”
Not every critic has panned the film. The San
Francisco Chronicle’s Mick LaSalle, for example, says
it’s “Far from a silly romance” and finds Mann “in her
deepest and funniest role to date.”
He continues, “Written on the knife edge between
farce and naturalism … it’s directed with precision
and balance by Nick Cassavetes and put over
expertly by the cast. The advertisements might look
dumb, but the movie isn’t.”

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