• Most Popular
  • Most Shared
Beyonce performs "Single Ladies"  at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards in New York, September 13, 2009.     REUTERS/Gary Hershorn

Pictures of the year: Entertainment

A look at the year's best entertainment photos.   Slideshow 

    Pamela Anderson campaigns for seals in Paris

    PARIS
    Thu Feb 14, 2008 5:09pm EST

    PARIS (Reuters) - Former Baywatch star Pamela Anderson followed in the footsteps of French actress Brigitte Bardot on Thursday by campaigning in Paris for the protection of baby seals.

    Entertainment  |  People  |  Green Business

    Anderson was to perform a burlesque striptease later at the Crazy Horse cabaret to the tune of 'Harley Davidson', a song written by Serge Gainsbourg and sung by Bardot in the late 60s.

    Anderson said she would deliver a letter from Bardot to the Canadian ambassador to France urging him to stop seal hunting around the Arctic.

    "It sickens me not just as a Canadian but as a human being," the 40-year-old actress told a room crammed with photographers shouting for her attention at Bardot's animal rights foundation.

    Anderson also called on fashion designers and consumers to boycott pelts and seal products, which Canada defend as a traditional source of trade that helps balance the ecosystem.

    "The hunt was dead for 20 years, and has been revived not to honor local customs or conserve cod stocks but because new markets for fur have opened up in Russia and China," she said.

    Anderson played a short video that showed hunters yelling before clubbing seals and dragging bloodied bodies across the ice while a woman sobbed on the soundtrack.

    Bardot, 73, wished her luck via speakerphone from her home in the southern resort city of St. Tropez.

    "You are my Valentine, I kiss you," Bardot said.

    Anderson's Crazy Horse act, originally planned for two nights but reduced to one, involves a Harley Davidson motorcycle.

    Reuters/Nielsen



    More from Reuters

    An an exit sign is pictured in New York City October 14, 2006.  REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
    Interview:

    No stimulus exit in sight

    The man who predicted the fallout from the property bubble says it's still too early to talk about exiting easy money policies. In fact, more stimulus is on the way.  Full Article 

    A long-range, improved Sejil 2 missile is test-fired in the desert at an unknown location in Iran in this Iranian military handout distributed by Fars news agency on December 16, 2009.

    Iran tests upgraded missile

    Hardline rulers send uncompromising signals to foes at home and abroad, testing a missile that could reach Israel and warning of legal action against opposition leaders.  Full Article | Video