TMZ said its source was two clerks at the Bexar County Courthouse who said the case had been filed and sealed by a judge.
Maybe it was a different Tony Parker and Eva Longoria.
Hooray for Dollywood
Dolly Parton said yesterday that winning the
2010 Applause Award for her Tennessee theme park, Dollywood, is like winning "the Oscar of the business."
"I'm just honored and proud," she told the Associated Press. "I'm excited that this is our 25th anniversary for Dollywood, that we won it this year, and that I had a chance to be here."
Parton said that although country music "has allowed so many of my dreams to come true, you don't have to be a country-music fan to come to the park . . . There's something for everyone."
Dollywood beat out Alton Towers, of Great Britain, and Phantasialand, of Germany. Previous U.S. winners include Disney's Magic Kingdom, Nashville's Opryland, HersheyPark, Universal Studios Florida and Busch Gardens in Virginia.
Potter's field?
With a name common to humans and to wizards, Pvt. Harry Potter was an 18-year-old British soldier killed in 1939. His grave is now helping draw tourists to the backwater Israeli town of Ramle.
There really must be nothing to do in Ramle.
Tour guides and the municipality say the tombstone in the town's British military cemetery has become a popular attraction, largely for domestic travelers.
"There is no connection with the Harry Potter we know from literature, but the name sells, the name is marketable," said Ron Peled, a tour guide who said he has brought dozens of groups to the grave.
Ramle said people began inquiring about the grave about five years ago, and the city listed it on its tourism website at the start of the year.
Nothing to do. Nothing at all.
One recent day, a group of Israeli visitors led by a microphone-wielding guide scoured the cemetery looking for Potter's tombstone. Once they found it among the 4,500 graves, they huddled behind it and snapped photos.