l predict he’ll come out by the end of the year.

What network reality star who is now on a different show than the one he is usually on was all set to come out of the closet this year until the Oscar winning mogul and collector of women told him to stay in the closet because he still wants him to star in the Broadway musical version of that classic movie musical he’s bankrolling (which I’m still confused as to why they’re doing it at all, because it flopped bad in its previous Broadway incarnation several decades ago).

What about the names that are scribbled out

Sure, there are lots of big names on this Actress’ list of conquests. But what about the names that are scribbled out? We know who they are and there definitely appears to be a pattern with them! Here are a few: A famous Director who has been known to hook up with actresses. He had a significant other at the time of their affair. A big-name Producer who has financed more than one award-winning film. He had a significant other at the time of their affair. A good-looking Actor 1 whose films have won major awards. He had a significant other at the time of their affair. A good-looking Actor 2 who is best known for his starring role in a popular film series. He had a significant other at the time of their affair.

Blind item about a philandering movie producer

When gossip columnists get a juicy tip but the sourcing is problematic, there’s a tradition called the blind item, in which the subjects are described in detail but not named. As in: What married media duo could not stop bickering during a two-and-a-half-hour interview with a reporter? George Rush and Joanna Molloy have written a book drawing from their years of gossip columns for The Daily News and The New York Post. That, at any rate, was what George Rush and Joanna Molloy were doing one day last week. These cohabitants and co-authors of the Rush & Molloy column — which from 1995 to 2010 in The Daily News covered everything from the breakup of Tom Cruise and Nicole Kidman to the breakdown of Britney Spears — were sitting in their TriBeCa loft discussing an eyebrow-raising morsel in their new memoir, "Scandal: A Manual." It involved the alleged extramarital activities of a movie producer who is not named in the book, but who is described in some very specific (as well as borderline offensive) terms.