Friday, December 11, 2009

Holly Sampson linked to Tiger Woods

Latest Tiger Woods Update

Holly Sampson tells TMZ that she only slept with Woods once... at his bachelor party.

Holly Sampson is a porn_star and one of the women linked to Tiger Woods with details of having sex with Mr. Woods at his own bachelor party.

She goes on to claim that Woods had a thing for threesomes "He was rarely with just one girl. He usually wanted more. He liked three-ways."

Rumors of nude photographs of Tiger Woods and a phone sex tape have circulated recently, although the existence of any photographs or tapes has not been confirmed. REAL pictures and video are out there, it is just a matter of time before it ends up on the Internet.

Update Tiger Woods Lastest



Wednesday, December 9, 2009

11 Women Linked to Tiger Woods in Alleged Affairs

11 Women Linked to Tiger Woods in Alleged Affairs

Tiger Woods Mistresses are adding up to the double digits 11 women alleged to have an affair with the super star golf pro Tiger Woods. Mr. Woods has been married with a son Charlie and a daughter Sam for the last couple years Tiger Woods wife Elin Nordegren have been married since 5 October 2004.

11 women have claimed to have an affair with Tiger Woods during the last couple of years. Tiger Woods has been taken drugs like ambien and vicodin. Tiger Woods is a super star golf pro with reporting over $1 billion dollars from golfing tournaments count for 10% and sponsors count for 90%... Tiger Woods sponsor ads are not on any prime time spots for the foreseeable future...

11 Women and counting...

Tiger Woods Lastest

Tiger Woods is Here Today and could be Gone tomorrow as sponsors leave...

Tiger Woods is Here Today and could be Gone tomorrow as sponsors leave...

Tiger Woods has the best sponsors in the world believing in him and his ability to be the greatest golfer in history. With the recent 6 ex-girl friends coming out, his car accident and now 1 of the parents are hospitalized the timing for Tiger Woods could not be more ironic.

Some of Tiger Woods sponsors are Nike, Gatorade, Gillette, Electronic Arts, Pepsi and Buick but most recently Gatorade sponsor who's contract is set to expire has not been renewed today. All Prime time ads with Tiger Woods have been paused or removed from tv prime time line up. In the coming days and months Tiger Woods could be losing more sponsors to the ironic circumstance's surrounding him.


Tiger Woods latest
Tiger Woods update
Tiger Woods misstresses count
Tiger Woods wife
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Tiger Woods 2009

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Italy police seize secret stash of masterpieces

Italy police seize secret stash of masterpieces

ROME – Italian tax police said Saturday that they had seized works by Van Gogh, Picasso, Cezanne and other giants of art in a crackdown on assets hidden by the disgraced founder of the collapsed dairy company Parmalat.

Authorities estimated the 19 masterpieces stashed away in attics and basements were valued at some euro100 million ($150 million).

Parma Prosecutor Gerardo Laguardia said that, based on wiretapped phone conversations, officials believed at least one of the paintings hidden by Calisto Tanzi was about to be sold.

"We got lucky. We learned that there were negotiations under way to sell one of the paintings" and raid three apartments in the area of Parma, near Parmalat's headquarters, Laguardia said in an interview on Italy's Sky TG24 TV. He didn't identify the painting.

Bologna-based tax Police Col. Piero Iovino told The Associated Press by telephone that investigators believed the entire batch of paintings, watercolors and drawings were up to be sold. The prospective buyer was a Russian, possibly living in Italy, Iovino said.

No arrests were announced as part of the art seizure.

Tax police said Parma prosecutors are opening a probe into alleged concealing of assets in Parmalat's bankruptcy case.

Parmalat, the dairy conglomerate known for its long shelf-life milk grew from a small dairy distributor in Parma, into a diversified, multinational food company by 1990, but collapsed in 2003 under euro14 billion in debt — eight times what it had previously acknowledged — in what remains Europe's largest corporate bankruptcy. Many small investors who lost their life savings were among some 40,000 defrauded bondholders.

Italian courts have already ruled that Tanzi bore the brunt of responsibility for the collapse. Tanzi was convicted by a Milan court last year of market-rigging and other charges in one of multiple probes. He is currently on trial for alleged fraudulent bankruptcy.

Tanzi has blamed the banks for the labyrinth of deals that helped swell the company to a global empire with operations in more than 30 countries, but also led to the company's collapse.

For years after the collapse, Tanzi was rumored to have had a "hidden treasure" somewhere. On Nov. 29, a state TV show alleged that Tanzi had hidden a collection of artwork to try to shelter himself from the effects of looming collapse of Parmalat.

"I don't have any secret cache" of paintings, Tanzi told reporters the next day on the sidelines of his current trial in Parma, repeating his ongoing dismissal of reports that he had a so-called "little treasure" of assets squirreled away.

A lawyer who represents Tanzi and serves as his spokesman didn't answer his cell phone Saturday.

Police showed some of the paintings to journalists near Parmalat's headquarters Saturday.

After the TV show, "we tightened the screws" and zeroed in on Tanzi son-in-law Stefano Strini, Iovino said. "He told us that the paintings were Tanzi's" and led police to the apartments, he said.

As the corporate failure loomed, Tanzi moved to safeguard his wealth by hiding "property whose value endures through time," Iovino said.

Among the masterpieces was a pencil on paper portrait of a ballerina by Degas, two Van Goghs, including a depiction of a trunk of a willow tree and a still life, a watercolor by Cezanne and a pencil-work by Modigliani.

Tax police official Massimo said some of the paintings were carefully wrapped for protection, but that other paintings, including a Picasso, were left open in the store room.

Italy police seize secret stash of masterpieces

Apple’s Game Changer, Downloading Now

Apple’s Game Changer, Downloading Now

IAN LYNCH SMITH, a shaggy-haired ball of energy in his late 30s, beams as he ticks off some of the games that Freeverse, his little Brooklyn software company, has landed on the iPhone App Store’s coveted (and ever-changing) list of best-selling downloads: Moto Chaser, Flick Fishing, Flick Bowling and Skee-ball.

Skee-ball, Mr. Smith says, took about two months to develop and deploy and then raked in $181,000 for Freeverse in one month. The company’s latest bid for App Store fame? A game featuring a Jane Austen character in a lacy dress who karate-chops her way through hordes of advancing zombies.

“There’s never been anything like this experience for mobile software,” Mr. Smith says of the App Store boom. “This is the future of digital distribution for everything: software, games, entertainment, all kinds of content.”

As the App Store evolves from a kitschy catalog of novelty applications into what analysts and aficionados describe as a platform that is rapidly transforming mobile computing and telephony, it is changing the goals and testing the patience of developers, bolstering sales of the Apple motherships the applications ride upon — the iPhone and iPod Touch — and causing Apple’s competitors to overhaul their product lines and business models. It even threatens to open chinks in Apple’s own corporate armor.

Thanks in large part to the iPhone, introduced in 2007, and the App Store, which opened its doors last year, smartphones have become the Swiss Army knives of the digital age.

They provide a staggering arsenal of functions and tools at the swipe of a finger: e-mail and text messaging, video and photography, maps and turn-by-turn navigation, media and books, music and games, mobile shopping, and even wireless keys that remotely unlock cars.

“Apple changed the view of what you can do with that small phone in your back pocket,” says Katy Huberty, a Morgan Stanley analyst. “Applications make the smartphone trend a revolutionary trend — one we haven’t seen in consumer technology for many years.”

Ms. Huberty likens the advent of the App Store and the iPhone to AOL’s pioneering role in driving broad-based consumer adoption of the Internet in the 1990s. She also draws comparisons to ways in which laptops have upended industry assumptions about consumer preferences and desktop computing. But, she notes, something even more profound may now be afoot.

“The iPhone is something different. It’s changing our behavior,” she says. “The game that Apple is playing is to become the Microsoft of the smartphone market.”

The popularity of Apple’s app model has reached a fever pitch. Tens of thousands of independent developers are clamoring to write programs for it, and the App Store’s virtual shelves are stocked with more than 100,000 applications. Apple recently said that consumers had downloaded more than two billion applications from its store.

Major players like Research in Motion (maker of the BlackBerry), Palm (maker of the Pre), Google (maker of the Android mobile operating system) and Microsoft (maker of Windows Mobile) are taking note and scrambling to replicate the App Store frenzy.

App fever has even prompted cities like New York and San Francisco to open reservoirs of city data to the public to spur software developers to create hyperlocal applications for computers and phones.

One need not look further than the lobby of Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, Calif., to see that the iPhone and applications that run on it are centerpieces of the company’s mobile strategy. Planted squarely in the lobby of the main office, at 1 Infinite Loop, is an impressive, 24-foot-wide array built out of 20 LED screens populated with 20,000 tiny, brightly colored icons.

As Philip W. Schiller, head of worldwide product marketing at Apple, describes how the wall works — each time an application is purchased, the corresponding icon on the electronic billboard jiggles, causing its neighbors to ripple in unison — he, too, becomes animated.

Normally reserved and on message, Mr. Schiller waves his hands back and forth and allows his voice to ascend into giddy registers as he speaks about the potential unleashed by the App Store.

“I absolutely think this is the future of great software development and distribution,” Mr. Schiller says. “The idea that anyone, all the way from an individual to a large company, can create software that is innovative and be carried around in a customer’s pocket is just exploding. It’s a breakthrough, and that is the future, and every software developer sees it.”

APPLE cloaks most of its inner workings in a shroud of secrecy — a tactic that has helped preserve the company’s mystique and generate intense interest in its product rollouts.

But the App Store relies on vast cadres of outside developers to populate its virtual shelves with products, leaving Apple in the unfamiliar and at times uncomfortable position of having to collaborate with folks who haven’t drunk the company’s corporate Kool-Aid.

This has led Apple to be deeply supportive of developers once shunned by big telecommunications companies, while also frustrating many of them more recently with what developers see as the company’s inscrutable and arbitrary process for accepting programs into the App Store.

Apple frames the issue differently.

Apple’s Game Changer, Downloading Now

Why Small Business Won't Be Hiring

Why Small Business Won't Be Hiring

With funding still scarce, demand down, and temp workers readily available, small companies aren't ready to expand payroll

If the 10% jobless rate is to continue falling, economists say small businesses need to begin hiring. But a surplus of underutilized workers and tepid entrepreneur sentiment suggest small businesses will be unusually timid about bringing new employees on board.

To be sure, the worst of the small business job losses seems to be over. According to Automatic Data Processing's (ADP) National Employment Report, companies with fewer than 50 workers slashed just 75,000 jobs in October, down from 288,000 in March. Midsize companies also shed 75,000 jobs in October, while big companies cut 53,000.

Small companies historically begin hiring first in a recovery. But this time many economists expect any pickup to be belated and weak. One big reason is the credit crunch's outsize impact on entrepreneurs. Douglas Duncan, president of Anaheim Hills (Calif.)-based Almond Hill Enterprises, a two-person software company, wants to hire, but, he says, "I can't get the funding."

Other small companies have plenty of slack. The average paycheck for the 25,000 small business clients of payroll processor SurePayroll fell 7.3% for the year through October, says President Michael Alter. That reflects, in part, a heavier reliance on independent contractors, he says. Cuts in workers' hours are also helping shrink small-company paychecks. When demand picks up, entrepreneurs will pile more work on existing workers rather than hire. "I think you'll see a jobless recovery," says Alter.

One reason could be business owners like Daniel W. Glier, president of Glier's Meats, an 18-person, $3 million sausage maker in Covington, Ky. He's keeping headcount down by restoring some workers' hours that got cut earlier this year. He's also using temps so that if he has to let them go, his unemployment insurance premiums won't rise. "I'm not going to stick my neck out right now and hire people," he says.

The weak recovery is a concern, too. The optimism index compiled by the National Federation of Independent Business has edged up from its March nadir. But at 89.1, the index has been below 90 for six straight quarters. In the 1980-82 recession, it fell below 90 only once. An October survey by credit-card issuer Discover Financial Services (DFS) found that the biggest worry for entrepreneurs is the outlook for sales—even ahead of their usual bugaboos, taxes and health insurance. Until sales improve, hiring will be scarce.

Why Small Business Won't Be Hiring

Google Music Pays For Listeners On Bing

Google Music Pays For Listeners On Bing

It was bad enough when Bing put ads on Google and in AdSense during its launch to get people to come check it out. (In fact, it’s still the top sponsored results when you search for “bing” on Google, even though Bing.com is also the top organic result at this point also). But now the shoe is on the other foot and Google is buying search ads on Bing for its fledgling Google Music Search.

Sure, Google only launched its music search about a month ago and most people probably don’t even know it exists unless they search for a song or artist like “Muse” on Google, and even then they wouldn’t know there is a separate site because the playable song results appear right at the top of the regular search results. But try searching for “Muse songs” on some parts of Bing and you get a paid ad for Google Music search. The ads appear for other artists as well, such as Lady Gaga and Radiohead.

Everybody knows that search ads are very effective, especially Google. And if people are searching on Bing for Muse or Lady Gaga songs, buying a search ad is one way to let them know they can also find results on Google. Bing, of course, is happy to take Google’s money (and vice versa). But seeing an ad for one search engine on a competing search engine seems like an act of desperation. It is almost a better ad for Bing because Google is acknowledging that buying ads on Bing is a good idea.

Bing

'Square' iPhone Credit-Card Reader to Change the Banking Game?

'Square' iPhone Credit-Card Reader to Change the Banking Game?


Twitter co-founder Jack Dorsey just flicked on the public spotlight over his new venture: Square. It's a tiny plastic blob that gives smartphones the ability to act as secure credit card readers. It's clever, disruptive, but will have to evolve very rapidly.

Square was born extremely rapidly: It began as an idea in February 2009, and the new company came out of stealth mode just yesterday--that's a window of just ten months, which is swift even though the idea behind the device is extremely simple. Essentially it's a small piece of electronics that translates the signals from a magnetic strip reader into an audio signal. This audio signal, corresponding to the data on a credit card swiped through the device, goes in through the headphone/microphone socket of an iPhone, where it's decoded by the special Square app and wirelessly routed off to Square's remote servers which then perform the usual banking jiggerypokery that more ordinary credit card readers do.

So far, so simple-sounding humdrum, right? Well, it's more complex than that of course. By providing a basic, easy-to-use and secure system (no credit card data is stored on the iPhone in use) Square could turn almost anyone into a credit-card accepting merchant. It also costs way less than the typical wireless keypad/printer card machines you see in stores, even factoring in the price of the iPhone--partly due to its "no contracts...no hidden costs" promise. And ultimately it'll be able to work with other smartphones and laptops--anything with a microphone input, and for which a Square app can be written. Over at GigaOm they're calling a disruptive technology because of the ubiquity of smartphones, and the possibility Square could overturn the way traditional e-banking transactions are carried out.

card chipAnd that's probably true...with one huge "but." It's to do with Europe. European banking and credit card systems are very rapidly switching away from magnetic strip technology towards the smarter, more secure in-card chip tech. The change is so swift that U.S. visitors are often finding their old-fashioned magnetic cards aren't accepted in many establishments, and it's such a vastly superior system that there are even mumblings that the E.U. may ban magnetic bank cards pretty soon. This will pose a significant problem for Square, which relies on the low cost of its hardware components and fancy in-smartphone processing to work. For Square to disrupt the European electronic banking system, it will need a newer, more expensive piece of hardware that can interface and decode the in-card chips directly--this will complicate its business model pretty severely. And there's another problem: Europeans in many nations are already used to using wireless credit card readers for almost every transaction--I bought a single carton of milk in my tiny local store using the system this morning. Square will have to fight cleverly in a battle dominated by the big, muscly banks if it's to be a disruptive influence over the Atlantic.

Still, since Square went from concept to product so swiftly, it should be possible for Dorsey's system to evolve with nimble speed to cope with this issue, don't you think?

iPhone Credit Card Reader

national championship college football 2009

national championship college football 2009

national championship college football, national championship college football 2010, heisman race, national championship, sec championship game 2009

Alabama beats Florida for SEC championship

ATLANTA (AP) - Mark Ingram and Greg McElroy sliced up the fearsome Florida defense and Tim Tebow finally met his match, no matter how hard he tried to fire up his teammates.
With an emphatic 32-13 chomping of the Gators, the Crimson Tide again stands atop the Southeastern Conference. More important, Alabama is just one win away from an even bigger title - its first national championship since 1992, led by a coach who believes in "The Process" instead of the houndstooth.

Ingram, making a strong bid to claim the school's first Heisman Trophy, rushed for 113 yards and three touchdowns. McElroy was 12 of 18 for 239 yards and a touchdown to show he's no weak link and No. 2 Alabama rekindled memories of Paul "Bear" Bryant with the convincing victory Saturday.

Alabama (13-0) moves on to Pasadena for the BCS championship game. Tebow and the Gators (12-1) will likely settle for the Sugar Bowl, denied a shot at their third national title in four years.

When it was over, there were a range of emotions.


A college football "national championship" in the highest level of collegiate play in the United States, currently the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division I Football Bowl Subdivision (FBS), is a designation awarded annually by various third-party organizations to their selection(s) of the best college football team(s). Division I FBS (formerly Division I-A) football is the only NCAA sport in which a yearly champion is not determined by an NCAA sanctioned championship event.

* Bowl Championship Series (not an official NCAA championship, includes only Division I FBS teams)
* National football championship (this article pertains to systems of determining a national champion prior to and including the BCS)
* NCAA Division I Football Championship[17] (includes only Division I FCS teams)
* NCAA Division I FCS Consensus Mid-Major Football National Championship
* NCAA Division II National Football Championship

national championship college football

Steven Seagal Lawman Breaks A&E Record

'Steven Seagal Lawman' Breaks A&E Record - Featured

It's been a pretty good Nielsen week for A&E.

The network's new original series "Steven Seagal: Lawman" premiered Wednesday with two back-to-back episodes and a record-breaking 3.5 million total viewers and 2.0 million viewers in adults 18-49, making it the most-watched original series launch in A&E's history in all key demos.

The series, which chronicles Seagal's life in law enforcement, drew 3.4 million viewers for the first episode at 10 p.m., climbing to 3.6 million for the second one at 10:30 p.m.

The "Lawman" debut follows the Monday second season premiere of "Hoarders," which was seen by 3.2 million viewers and 1.9 million adults 18-49, ranking as best season opener for any original A&E series ever in the adult demo.

"Lawman" is produced by ITV Studios and Steamroller Prods.

Steven Seagal Lawman - Steven Seagal has never sought publicity for his work with the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office. However, over a span of almost two decades, he has regularly gone out on patrol and worked major cases. The series will allow fans to ride shotgun with Seagal as he and his hand-selected elite team of deputies respond to crimes-in-progress. Then, when Seagal goes off-duty, the cameras will continue following him as he pursues his many ventures - including musical performances and philanthropic efforts - in Jefferson Parish and New Orleans. More

Steven Seagal Lawman
Steven Seagal

Tiger Woods Wife is pregnant with their second child

ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) - Even with his golf done for the year, Tiger Woods found something to celebrate Tuesday: His wife is pregnant with their second child.

Woods said on his Web site that Elin is expecting in late winter without being more specific on a due date.

He has not played since his U.S. Open victory in June, and two weeks later had reconstructive surgery on his left knee that put him out for the year. Woods' first child, daughter Sam, was born on Monday after the 2007 U.S. Open.

"Elin is feeling great and we are both thrilled," Woods said. "While my injury has disappointing and frustrating, it has allowed me to spend a lot of time watching Sam grow. I can't begin to tell you how rewarding it is being a dad and spending time with her and Elin.

"The injury has been a blessing and a disappointment."

The world No. 1 player has begun rehabilitation and has traveled recently to Dubai and New York for business projects.

Woods had said after he married in 2004 that he wanted more than one child. Woods was an only child, while Elin has a twin sister.

Tiger Woods

Woods in no danger of losing sponsors

Woods in no danger of losing sponsors

Tiger Woods isn't just the world's best golfer; he's a businessman who has leveraged prize money, appearance fees, endorsements, licensing agreements and golf course design deals into more cash than any athlete has ever generated. Woods was the PGA Tour's career earnings leader by the age of 24, and passed $1 billion in overall cumulative income earlier this year; ESPN The Magazine has estimated that he will earn more than $6 billion by the time he hangs up his putter.

And as Woods tries to repair the marital, physical and public-relations damage his first scandal has caused, one thing is clear: His corporate partners have his back.
[+] EnlargeTiger Woods
Stuart Franklin/Getty ImagesPepsiCo, Gatorade's parent company, put out a statement that said: "Tiger and his family have our support as they work through this private matter. Our partnership continues."

Many observers have asked whether Woods' late-night car wreck and alleged infidelities will affect his current endorsement deals, which comprise nearly 90 percent of his annual income. The answer is: Not so far, and probably not at all. For example, Woods is in the middle of a five-year deal with Nike worth more than $100 million, and on Wednesday that company issued a statement saying: "Nike supports Tiger and his family. Our relationship remains unchanged."

Reaction was nearly identical from Gatorade, where Woods inked a five-year pact reportedly worth up to $100 million in 2008. PepsiCo, Gatorade's parent company, put out a statement that said: "Tiger and his family have our support as they work through this private matter. Our partnership continues."

Electronic Arts, Gillette, NetJets, TLC Vision -- all of them also have deals with Woods, and all also issued statements supporting him. No sponsors have dropped him. So the world of sports business is rapidly converging on one conclusion: "Over the medium- and long-term, the events of the past week will do absolutely nothing to damage Tiger's appeal to current or future sponsors," says Peter Marino, president of Dig Communications, a public-relations agency.

Why is Tiger Teflon? It's not just because his near-universal recognizability makes his endorsement so valuable. It's specifically because his core fan base is precisely the group of Americans least likely to care about the marital indiscretions of a successful guy who travels a lot: upscale men.

Woods' appeal always has been rooted in the factors that combine to make him uniquely excellent at his craft -- the story of his childhood, his competitive nature, his commitment to greatness. Being lovable has never been an essential part of that mix.

"Tiger's cuddliness quotient isn't too high," says Marc Ganis, president of SportsCorp, a sports business consulting firm. Rather, Woods resonates with golf fans who admire him and want to be like him, and most of them are middle-aged and upper-income men, or young men who aspire to be upper-income by the time they're middle-aged. Whatever they say in public or at the dinner table about how Woods has behaved, those men are not likely to turn their backs on Woods for reportedly messing around with women. And as they go, so go the companies that sell to them. "Tiger's fans are male consumers," says Marino, "and his sponsors are companies trying to reach those consumers, not married women or soccer moms."
Tiger Woods
Scott Barbour/Getty ImagesWoods at the launch of the Gillette Champions Junior Education Grant on Nov. 11 in Melbourne, Australia. Gillette is among the companies standing behind Woods. In fact, no sponsors have dropped him.

Then there's the nature of Woods' offenses, which, beyond smashing a fire hydrant, apparently are confined to his marriage. Which makes his mistakes potential ongoing tabloid fodder for sure, but not corporate deal-breakers. "Some women, and for that matter, some concerned men, may be indignant," says Ganis. "But which of the men who work for any of Tiger's sponsors is going to be the first to stand up and throw stones? Anybody who did that would put himself and his own company under tremendous scrutiny."

Woods' behavior could limit the ultimate size of his endorsement universe, as corporations that market themselves as family-friendly might be reluctant to strike new deals with him.

"If Tiger was going to be my only face to the world, I might think he's a little bit radioactive now," says one sports media executive who asked not to be identified because he does business with some of Woods' sponsors. Then again, marital trouble might make it easier for some fans to identify with him.

"Tiger certainly has been one of the most private individuals among anybody who is well-known," says Marino, "and this may actually humanize him."

But those are arguments about how Woods will fare with casual fans and with companies loosely connected to golf. Like New York Yankees slugger Alex Rodriguez, Woods is easy to admire but hard to love -- and eminently capable of making the world refocus on his athletic greatness simply by playing up to his abilities. And when he resurfaces as a superhuman golfer, Nike will want him in Nike caps and shirts and shoes, AT&T will want the AT&T logo on his bag and Tag Heuer will want him wearing a Tag Heuer watch when he holds his trophies aloft.

"Tiger's all about maximizing value for his corporate partners as well as himself," says Ganis. "If any of his sponsors get cold feet, Tiger will say, 'Thank you,' and tear up his contract with them. And they will be the worse for it."

Peter Keating is a senior writer for ESPN The Magazine. His online archives can be found here.

some of Tiger Woods sponsors are Nike, Gatorade, Gillette, Electronic Arts, Pepsi and Buick

Tiger Woods Press Conference

Tiger Woods Press Conference

Los Angeles, December 5 -- Rachel Uchitel, one of three women identified as love interests of the golf superstar Tiger Woods, was scheduled to hold a tell-all press conference on Thursday but she canceled it in last minutes.

Reports were rife Thursday that the nightclub executive Rachel called off the scheduled press conference over money. Now, fresh reports popped up claiming that Rachel did not receive money to cancel the conference.

Earlier, the 34-year-old New York party girl’s lawyer, Gloria Allred, a founding partner of Allred, Maroko & Goldberg, said Rachel had pulled the plug on the press conference "due to unforseen circumstances".

Woods’ alleged bribe to Rachel to keep mum
But soon reports began emerging that a last-minute deal between Woods and Rachel prompted the leggy blonde to keep quiet about her real story.

Radar reported Thursday that Rachel received $1 million to keep mum about her affair with golf great Tiger Woods.

No, he didn’t pay
Now, the popular gossip Web site TMZ.com has rubbished all those reports, saying that the reasons why Woods’ purported gal pal canceled her scheduled dish-all news conference were because of “fear and secrets”.

Citing unnamed sources, TMZ reports that Woods did not pay Rachel to cancel the conference where she was expected to shed light on the relationship between her and golf superstar.

Rachel backed out because she was "scared for her safety” as she knows so much about Woods, his alleged affairs, and a variety of his other matters, sources told TMZ.

Rachel cancelled the expected tell-all conference after a series of late night phone calls with Woods, the Web site said.

She "walked away without taking a cent from Tiger Woods," the website reported. "This was absolutely not about money."

"Rachel does not fear Tiger, as much as she fears all the other people caught in what is becoming a very large net," TMZ reported.

Recently, tabloid reports emerged linking the golfer with Manhattan nightclub hostess Rachel Uchitel. But, the party hostess denied all claims linked with Woods, calling them "totally untrue". She even offered to take a lie-detector test to prove she is “innocent”.

However, some believe her denial also had to do with money. If other reports are to be believed, Rachel was receiving financial help from Woods prior to the National Enquirer story that initially broke the news that she and Woods are having an affair.

Woods and his alleged love interests
The other two women with whom the 33-year-old married golfer is accused having romanced are Jaimee Grubbs, a Los Angeles-based cocktail waitress who claims to have a 31-month fling with the golfer, and the 27-year-old Las Vegas club manager Kalika Moquin.

Rachel Uchitel came into limelight after her fiancĂ© James Andrew O’Grady died in 9/11 terrorist attacks in World Trade Centre. Rachel then married her old friend in 2004, but ended up divorced in just 5 months. It was only then that she moved into the “nightclub business”.

The Manhattan resident Rachel worked as a director of "VIP services" for nightclubs in Southampton, where her work was to decide who got into the club and who didn't. She is now working hard to improve her blemished reputation.

Tiger Woods cheated

Tiger Woods Cheats