

The Hannah Montana news just keeps on coming!
Fans who joined the teen idol's official fan club Web site, mileyworld.com and tried, unsuccessfully, to get tickets for the "Best of Both Worlds" concert tour through the site, now have legal redress.
A class action suit filed yesterday in U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee against Interactive Media Marketing Inc. and Smiley Miley Inc. seeks to get fans their $29.95 membership money back threefold.
"Thousands of people joined the club based on the understanding that by joining they would be able to purchase Hannah Montana concert tickets before they were offered for sale to the general public," says attorney Rob Peirce, of Robert Peirce & Associates, P.C., the Pittsburgh-based law firm that filed the lawsuit along with a Memphis, Tenn.-based law firm.
Club members were supposed to "have a good opportunity to get tickets" but most didn't. The lawsuit charges that the Tennessee companies knew or should have known the Web site's membership vastly exceeded the number of available tickets.
For more information, call 1-800-543-9859 or visit peircelaw.com and click on the Hannah Montana link.
The pork store has been whacked.
Eight months ago, James Gandolfini drove his white SUV out of the parking lot of Satriale's for the last time, as HBO wrapped up the final season of "The Sopranos."
Now, the building has followed the same fate as the popular show.
It's gone.
Last month, owner Manny Costeira demolished the structure, home to the fictional pork store where TV mobster Tony Soprano and his Jersey crew hung out on the acclaimed mob drama. On TV, a life-sized pig sat atop the building. Costeira had leased the empty building to HBO.
Nine condo units will replace the former storefront. The project is called "The Soprano," and prices range from $325,000 to $385,000. Construction is to start in the spring and would be finished in about a year.
But Satriale's has not totally disappeared. Costeira has been using the Internet to hawk chunks of cast stone from the facade. He said he already has sold about 1,000 pieces in two sizes, for $25 and $50, to fans as far away as Ireland and New Zealand.
The 2-inch-square smaller chunks are mounted on a black wooden block with an "authentic pork store" nameplate.
A Roman Catholic priest accused of stalking talk show host Conan O'Brien has been admitted to a hospital for evaluation after briefly going missing.
The Rev. David Ajemian was reported missing by his father at about 3:15 p.m. Sunday after he had not been seen for nearly three hours, police said in a statement. Police were told that Ajemian's "mental health may be of concern."
He returned to his parents' home in Boston at about 7 p.m. and voluntarily went to a hospital, police said.
Ajemian, 46, was arrested last week in New York City while trying to enter a taping of "Late Night With Conan O'Brien" despite being warned to stay away by NBC security personnel.
He is charged with aggravated stalking and harassment. A judge Friday found him fit to stand trial despite a psychological condition.
Ajemian, who allegedly began writing O'Brien in September 2006, has been placed on leave by the Boston Archdiocese. He was removed in June from his last posting at St. Patrick Parish in Stoneham after two years. He attended Harvard University at the same time as O'Brien, but it is unclear whether the two crossed paths there.
If it weren't for her mother, Alicia Keys might have a radically different image.
Keys, who has a new album titled "As I Am," says that when she was trying to choose a professional name she went through a dictionary and stopped on the word "wild."
She tells Newsweek in the magazine's Nov. 19 issue that she asked her mother how "Alicia Wild" sounded to her.
"She said, 'It sounds like you're a stripper,' " Keys said.
After that, she decided to use Keys.
"It's like the piano keys. And it can open so many doors," said the singer born Alicia Augello-Cook.
Elisabeth Hasselbeck, co-host of ABC's "The View," has revealed the name of her newborn son: Taylor Thomas Hasselbeck. The baby was born Friday at an Arizona hospital. He weighed 7 pounds, 15 ounces. She is married to Tim Hasselbeck, a backup quarterback for the Arizona Cardinals.