Reese Witherspoon Opens Up About Arrest, Kesha Sues Producer

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title: Reese Witherspoon Talks About Her Arrest

text: She may be proudly "Wild" in her new film but she's still explaining her run-in with the law last year.

"I think it was a moment where people realized that I wasn't exactly what they thought I was," Witherspoon said at a London press conference for her latest film, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

"I guess maybe we all like to define people by the way the media presents them, and I think that I showed I have a complexity that people didn't know about. It's part of human nature. I made a mistake. We all make mistakes. The best you can do is say sorry and learn from it, and move on."

She originally apologized for her behavior on "GMA" last year, before pleading no contest to the charge and paying a $213 fine.

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title: Kesha Sues Her Producer, Claims Abuse

text: Pop singer Kesha has filed a lawsuit against super-producer Dr. Luke, accusing him of being "sexually, physically, verbally and emotionally" abusive to the point that she "nearly lost her life."

For more on the lawsuits, click here.

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title: Mrs. Clooney Goes to Work

The British barrister has changed her name to Amal Clooney on her law firm's biography page.

After a short honeymoon, Mrs. Clooney has gotten back to work on her latest high-profile, international legal dispute. She is working to try to get Greek marble statues sent back to their homeland after they were taken by a British earl in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

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title: WHO Warns of Ebola Rise

text: The Ebola epidemic could get dramatically worse, with the rate of infection soaring to 10,000 new cases every week unless drastic measures are taken within the next two months, the World Health Organization said Tuesday.

That staggering figure was approximately 10 times higher than the current rate of infection, but WHO Assistant Director General Dr. Bruce Aylward said that it could easily get that dramatic if steps are not taken now.

"A lot more people will die," Aylward said, if more on-the-ground prevention measures are not put in place in the next 60 days.

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