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    British group Radiohead performs during 'Just a Fest' music festival in Rio de Janeiro March 20th, 2009.

    GOOD WEEK/BAD WEEK

    Bill Murray

    The Caddyshack star was victorious at the Pebble Beach National Pro-Am golf tourney

    Tiger Woods

    The stumbling PGA pro was fined after spitting on the green during the final round of the Dubai Desert Classic

    MARKETING

    Slim Cola

    Diet soda got a Fashion Week makeover when Pepsi unveiled a svelte can at the New York City event. Though the cola company calls it a "celebration" of "confident women," scarily skinny soda doesn't seem to jibe with high self-esteem.

    BOOKS

    Ghosting Assange

    Julian Assange's memoir is bound to be a best seller; now there's a good chance it might also be well written. Scottish novelist Andrew O'Hagan has been tapped to help the WikiLeaks founder write his book. Celebs have long used ghostwriters, but choosing a literary type like O'Hagan is less common. Still, O'Hagan is no stranger to channeling others. His last novel was written in the voice of a terrier.

    Kaffi, 5, is an Icelandic sheepdog

    CELEBRITY

    Friends in High Places

    They never really went away. But after years of so-so work, five-sixths of the former Friends finally seem to be getting their mojo back.

    LISA KUDROW

    The Comeback P.S. I Love You

    Web Therapy (Internet series)

    MATT LEBLANC

    Joey Episodes

    MATTHEW PERRY

    Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip

    Mr. Sunshine

    DAVID SCHWIMMER

    Madagascar Madagascar 2

    JENNIFER ANISTON

    Derailed • Rumor Has It ... Friends with Money • The Break-Up Marley & Me • Love Happens The Bounty Hunter • The Switch

    Just Go with It

    COURTENEY COX

    Dirt

    Cougar Town

    VERBATIM

    'Stay off the crack. Drink chocolate milk. Enjoy every moment. That's all I got.'

    CHARLIE SHEEN, offering some practical advice to the UCLA baseball team. Sheen's substance-abuse problems have led his show, Two and a Half Men, to go on hiatus

    INTERNET CAUSES

    Rallying for RoboCop

    In the 1987 dystopian sci-fi flick RoboCop, the title character protected a crime-ridden Detroit. Appropriately, the city is now rallying to his defense. When Detroit Mayor Dave Bing politely declined a request via Twitter that the city erect a statue of the mechanized hero, he set off a minor Internet storm. As of Feb. 16, a website set up to raise money for the statue had surpassed its funding goal of $50,000 in pledges toward a plan to house RoboCop on a parcel of private land in a city park. Bing seems to have softened his position: a spokesperson said the mayor's office would consider erecting donated "public art." As for the person whose tweet started the whole affair, he later said it was only a joke.

    MEME ALERT

    Hipster Ariel

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