This day and age there is no way of keeping bad behavior out of the press if you are a celebrity of any stature. If a major news outlet isn’t going to cover your antics you can be rest assured a privately owned blog is going to bash you for your stupidity. Therefore, Lindsay Lohan really needs to take a close look at what she does while in the limelight because she is going to take it from both ends, and I mean that in an entirely non-sexual way.
Already taking a lashing from James G. Robinson, CEO of Morgan Creek Productions, William H. Macy and an anonymous representative of the Disney company Lindsay Lohan is once again taking it on the chin as Oscar-winning actress Jane Fonda praises Robinson’s scolding of the young starlett.
MSNBC carries the story in which Fonda says the following:
I think every once in a while, a very, very young person who is burning both ends of the candle needs to have somebody say, ‘You know, you’re going to pay the piper, you better slow down.’ So I think it was good… She’s in the magazines, so you always know what she’s doing because you can just read about it in the tabloids… She parties all the time … And you know, she’s young and she can get away with it. But, you know, it’s hard after a while to party very hard and work very hard. She learned that, I hope.”
I can only wonder if Lohan looks at something like this and scoffs or if she actually sits back and evaluates it for what it is worth. If Sumner Redstone considers Tom Cruise’s antics career suicide you can only feel the same way about Lohan’s activities considering the names that have come out against the actress as of late.
Fonda, however, doesn’t seem to be down on Lohan as much as she seems concerned. She finished her statement off with the following:
I just want to take her in my arms and hold her until she becomes grown-up… She’s so young and she’s so alone out there in the world in terms of structure and, you know, people to nurture her. And she’s so talented.”
Can’t help but wonder what Mommy Lohan thinks of that.
Lohan and Fonda star together in Georgia Rule, which is directed by Garry Marshall and is currently without a distributer.