Greg Oden is a 22-year old center for the Portland Trail Blazers.
He was the first overall pick in the 2007 NBA Draft, but missed his entire rookie campaign due to an injury and was sidelined again for this year with a knee injury in December.
So, what's a bored NBA seven-footer gonna do with his free time but take naked photos of himself on Twitter?
Oden might be a professional star, but he looks to be playing in the bush leagues below... if you know what we mean!
The late Brittany Murphy's husband, Simon Monjack, was shrouded in mystery and suspicion from the moment they wed in 2007 until his own death this year.
Now new allegations are flying about her controversial spouse, whose business manager, Jeffrey Morgenroth, says liquidated a majority of Murphy's accounts.
Six months after the 32-year-old actress's death in December from pneumonia, anemia and multiple-drug intoxication, Monjack had withdrawn 80 percent.
His own death from anemia and pneumonia in May ended this sad saga on a tragic note, likely relegating any ulterior motives he had to speculation alone.
Where is the money? What was he doing with it? One person it matters deeply to is Brittany's mom Sharon, 57, who faces financial uncertainty as a result.
"There were huge amounts of money in [Brittany's] pension and bank account, and all of that's gone," says Morgenroth. "I would see it on the statements."
"There was money being withdrawn by Simon, hundreds of thousands."
Even in the wake of Monjack's death, trouble followed. Jeannette Bycott, an assistant to Morgenroth, says she witnessed a scene in which Monjack's mother Linda ordered Sharon Murphy to leave the couple's Hollywood Hills house.
Both Murphys and Monjack lived in the house, and Brittany's mother spoke fondly of Simon, at least in public, in the wake of her daughter's tragic passing.
"Linda basically started acting like everything belongs to her," says Bycott. "Before Sharon could say anything, Linda stated the house was now hers."
Linda Monjack, also grieving the loss of her child, denies any wrongdoing by Simon. "If there is money missing I have no idea where it is," she said.
"He didn't get much, maybe a few hundred, and he paid off debts with it. He was scrying his eyes out most of the time. He was in a terrible state."