Bono (Musician)

Penelope Cruz: Almodovar's Like Family, and Bono Was With His Family


In Vogue's holiday issue, actress Penelope Cruz unloads on the paparazzi that fueled the story that she and U2's Bono were having an affair:  read more »

Alicia Keys Dates Herself at Rock 'n' Roll Benefit

Padma Lakshmi, Leigh Blake, Ali Hewson, Bono and Alicia Keys
Getty Images
Padma Lakshmi, Leigh Blake, Ali Hewson, Bono and Alicia Keys

Last night at the Hammerstein Ballroom, where celebrities converged for Conde Nast's Black Ball to benefit Keep a Child Alive, singer Alicia Keys was decked out in head-to-toe Armani and a lot of black patent leather. She told she was taking a very special date to the Bungalow 8-themed, Amy Sacco-designed after-party ...  read more »

More Rumors for Schnabel's Village Palazzo

We were surprised to see more speculation in this morning's Post about tenants in Julian Schnabel's Palazzo Chupi on West 11th Street. This time it’s Richard Gere and wife, Carey Lowell, who have reportedly been seen in the West Village building “numerous times in the past few days”.

This may be the case, but the Post’s claim that Mr. Gere will first have to sell his Sullivan Street townhouse to buy one of Mr. Schnabel’s condos is way off base. Mr. Gere’s already sold that townhouse for a record $12.85 million, and we reported on the sale in June (and also in May, before it closed).

There is no end to the rumors about Schnabel’s pricey digs. The Post also mentions the reports from The Villager newspaper that Bono has purchased a place in the building. As we reported earlier this week, no city records show evidence of that sale.

In fact, there's been one official sale in the Palazzo Chupi. Read about it here.

The Complicated Business of Caring About Africa

Bono.
Getty Images
Bono.

I’d been living in Africa for all of five days when I had my first run-in with a celebrity. It was a good sighting: Bono himself.  read more »

Bono, Graydon, Annie To Make 20 Covers For July Vanity Fair

MemoPad is reporting that the Bono Vox guest-edited July issue of Vanity Fair, with its theme of Africa, will up the ante on that whole "collect-'em-all" cover trend:

"Sources close to the title said it could publish as many as 20 different covers, all shot by Annie Leibovitz."

Insiders seem to be telling MemoPad good things about Bono's editing abilities, though we can't help but wonder what's going on between the lines here:  read more »

Revolt of the Page-Slaves?

Jim Spanfeller.
Courtesy of Forbes.com
Jim Spanfeller.

Forbes.com counts Bono as an investor, but some of the many who’ve recently fled cite ‘page-view sweatshop’ conditions.  read more »

Bono’s Man Spends $3.25 M. on East Side Spread

It may not be as grand as Bono’s I.M. Pei–designed duplex across the park, but U2’s longtime manager, Paul McGuinness, and his wife Kathy have bought a fifth-floor, six-room apartment at 40 East 62nd.  read more »

In This Week's Observer...

Come Back to San Gennaro: The Mob is Deeply Missed
City officials have since strived to cleanse San Gennaro of certain less than desirable elements: No more gambling. No more booze-slinging street vendors. And, if you believe the current organizers, no more Mafia involvement. Mob mentality, though, still has its place. Go to story by Chris Shott.  read more »

Bono's African Hunger Tour on NBC

We're pathetic. Brian Williams is in Africa for NBC Nightly News to report on the AIDS crisis and the focus of his piece is Bono of U2, his visit. What a great man he is, what an investment he's made in Africa. Act I. Bono in his black shirt and rockstar spectacles, thumbwrestling with an African child. Act II. Williams and British Treasury Minister Gordon Brown—whom Williams touts as the likely successor to Tony Blair—are standing around being lectured by the pierced and piercing Bono on the appeal of Islamic fundamentalism for starving Africans. Act III. Bono's black shirt now sweated through, he collapses on the plane, with just, Williams informs, three hours sleep.

This isn't about Bono. He's a good guy. More power to him. It's about Americans. Can we care about anything without a celebrity attached? Global Warming, brought to you by Al Gore. Literature, sponsored by Oprah. African Hunger, presented by Bono. And now George Clooney brings us—genocide.