News and Events => Arts & Entertainment News => Topic started by: Shana A on April 24, 2011, 08:33:54 AM Return to Full Version
Title: '->-bleeped-<-' taunts fail to dent Lynch twins chart hopes
Post by: Shana A on April 24, 2011, 08:33:54 AM
Post by: Shana A on April 24, 2011, 08:33:54 AM
'->-bleeped-<-' taunts fail to dent Lynch twins chart hopes
By Lorna Nolan
Saturday April 23 2011
http://www.herald.ie/entertainment/around-town/->-bleeped-<--taunts-fail-to-dent-lynch-twins-chart-hopes-2628115.html (http://www.herald.ie/entertainment/around-town/-%3E-bleeped-%3C--taunts-fail-to-dent-lynch-twins-chart-hopes-2628115.html)
SINGER Edele Lynch has vowed that she and her twin sister Keavy won't let cruel claims that they look like transvestites stop them in their quest for chart success. The Dublin sisters, who are best known for their days in Nineties pop group B*Witched, have undergone a dramatic image overhaul for their vampy new double act, The Barbarellas.
But according to Edele (29), not everyone has embraced their Lady Gaga-inspired look, with many criticising them for looking too manly. "We've been called transvestites, ->-bleeped-<-s, the whole lot, since we started back," Edele told the Herald.
By Lorna Nolan
Saturday April 23 2011
http://www.herald.ie/entertainment/around-town/->-bleeped-<--taunts-fail-to-dent-lynch-twins-chart-hopes-2628115.html (http://www.herald.ie/entertainment/around-town/-%3E-bleeped-%3C--taunts-fail-to-dent-lynch-twins-chart-hopes-2628115.html)
SINGER Edele Lynch has vowed that she and her twin sister Keavy won't let cruel claims that they look like transvestites stop them in their quest for chart success. The Dublin sisters, who are best known for their days in Nineties pop group B*Witched, have undergone a dramatic image overhaul for their vampy new double act, The Barbarellas.
But according to Edele (29), not everyone has embraced their Lady Gaga-inspired look, with many criticising them for looking too manly. "We've been called transvestites, ->-bleeped-<-s, the whole lot, since we started back," Edele told the Herald.