This Week in 2007
July 4th, 2007 Was Iconic
Lindsay Lohan left rehab to celebrate her 21st birthday in Malibu with her mom, while Brody Jenner struggled to row a kayak.
'BlackBerry Is My Life': Remembering How Celebs Reacted to the First iPhone
This month marks the 10 year anniversary of the iPhone's debut—but back then, stars like Kim Kardashian and Paris Hilton didn't want to give up their BlackBerrys.
Happy Ten-Year Anniversary of Dads Paying $3,000 for Hannah Montana Tickets
"Hannah Montana 2: Meet Miley Cyrus" was supposed to be "The Wall" of tween pop concept albums, but its promotional tour turned into the first controversy of Miley's career.
Britney Spears Was a Great Blogger
Before she ruled Instagram, Britney Spears maintained a personal blog that showed an intelligence and sense of humor rarely attributed to her.
The Sad Story Behind the Passed-Out Lindsay Lohan Meme
Everyone knows the paparazzi-photo-turned-meme, but few remember the weekend that preceded it.
The Feud That Made Her Leave 'The View': Was America Too Hard on Rosie?
Memed into history, the split-screen face-off between O'Donnell and conservative pundit Elisabeth Hasselbeck over the Iraq War captures a time when it wasn't trendy for celebrities to oppose the President.
Remembering the Bananas Rape Comedy from the Man Who Made 'The Princess Diaries'
The Garry Marshall-directed "Georgia Rule" starred Lindsay Lohan, whose personal problems overshadowed the complicated, strange politics of the 2007 film.
Remembering Britney Spears's Short-Lived Punk Tour
For one month ten years ago, the pop singer criss-crossed across the country in a brunette wig and pink fur coat for minimalist performances. It didn't launch a comeback, but it prompted something much more interesting.
Viagra, Murder, and Other Problems Teens Only Faced on Degrassi
Teens had very different problems in 2007, at least according to teen bible Degrassi.
Remembering Coachella 2007, When Amy Winehouse and Lindsay Lohan Reigned
Amy Winehouse may not have headlined Coachella, but she was the axis of the cultural elite and messy starlets that defined the era.