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"The only thing that gets wanting to be president out of your blood is . . ."

"The only thing that gets wanting to be president out of your blood is . . ."


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The day before the primaries that could spell the end for Hillary Clinton. All commentators say she needs to win - and win big - in Ohio and Texas tomorrow in order to stay viable. But like Commentator Steve Roberts said this morning, the only thing that gets the bug to be president out of some people is embalming fluid. Click here to hear the interview.

"The only thing that gets wanting to be president out of your blood is . . ."

Vic Ratner is flying with the Obama camp from Ohio to Texas today. The mood is upbeat and confident, as you might imagine. Campaigners aren't looking past Hillary Clinton yet, but they're smiling. Click here to hear the interview.

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"The only thing that gets wanting to be president out of your blood is . . ."

Simon Cowell won't get married because he's afraid of a divorce like Paul McCartney's. He and Terri Seymour have been together for five years. But, Simon tells the British paper, The Mirror, he doesn't "believe in marriage, certainly not in this business." He says "the truth is that you get married and in a year or two they clean you out! It's just not going to work." Simon doesn't say one way or the other if having a pre-nup to protect his millions would change his mind. But, he complains "there are contracts with artists that are 120 pages long and last five years. Then you go into marriage with no contract and the laws are a thousand years old. It doesn't work. It changes you. That whole culture just puts you in a very weakened position."

"The only thing that gets wanting to be president out of your blood is . . ."

Most females lie "more cleverly and successfully than men" about everything from cheating on their spouses and shopping binges to barhopping and face lifts, according to a new book published this week. "Women lie as a survival technique, but also to get what they want," Susan Shapiro Barash, author of "Little White Lies, Deep Dark Secrets: The Truth About Why Women Lie," told the New York Post. Barash interviewed 500 women nationwide and found 75 percent lie about how much money they spend, while more than 60 percent admitted to cheating on their husband. Motherhood came in second, followed by sex, their kids' accomplishments, love, family, addiction, work and infertility.

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