First, if you are a blood-soaked commie butcher, you probably have to pay at least a million bucks for even a hand job.
Second, what does he care? He stole all that money anyway.
Third, she sure is pretty.
But nobody's that pretty.
Third, she sure is pretty.
But nobody's that pretty.
From ABC via Yahoo! News:
Movie Star Allegedly Made $1 Million Per Night as Hooker
The Chinese actress who starred in "Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon,"
"Memoirs of a Geisha" and "Rush Hour 2" has angrily denied selling her
sexual favors to a disgraced official of the ruling Chinese Communist Party for $1 million per night.
A story in the Hong Kong tabloid newspaper Apple Daily alleged that Zhang Ziyi provided her sexual services in exchange for close to $1 million U.S. dollars a night to former Commerce Minister Bo Xilai and other clients. The Apple Daily,
Hong Kong's second-best-selling paper and a frequent critic of the
Chinese regime, also alleged that Ziyi had earned $110 million over four
years via prostitution.
Ziyi, whose absence from last week's Cannes premiere of her latest
movie, "Dangerous Liaisons," was noted by the international media, has
issued a heated denial of the charges.
According to the Apple Daily, Zhang Ziyi's main client was Bo Xilai,
who allegedly had sex with her 11 times between 2007 and 2011. The
report alleges Ziyi amassed 110 million dollars from these and trysts
with other clients arranged by a prominent billionaire businessman, Xu
Ming.
On Tuesday, a Hong Kong law firm representing Zhang Ziyi dismissed the report.
"Your allegations concerning our client are completely untrue and
constitute a grave libel upon her," said the firm's statement to the
Apple Daily. The firm demanded a full and prompt retraction and apology
and reserved the right to legal action.
Zhang Ziyi's
publicist issued a stern statement vowing accountability. "This time,
we are telling those rumor-makers that we will respond. We will prove
our side of the story; we'll seek legal justice; we'll find you in the
darkest corner and go after you," the online statement read."
Bo Xilai, though the scion of a family prominent in the Chinese Communist Party,
has been hit with a series of scandals involving corruption and abuse
of power in recent months leading to his highly unusual dismissal from
the party. The most recent scandal involves accusations that his wife
orchestrated the murder of a British businessman, Neil Heywood, because
of a conflict of interest. Bo became head of the Communist Party in
Chongqing in 2007 after serving as Commerce Minister. He was fired as
local party chief in March 2012 and suspended from China's ruling
Politburo in April.
Xu, a long-standing associate of Bo, is also reportedly under investigation in China for corruption.
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