Google
Web
Toronto Daily News
News Archive
« October 2008
SuMoTuWeThFrSa
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
262728293031 

Curves In, Furry Boots and Celebrity Divorces Out

Biggest trends for 2007 are predicted by a team of Virgin Mobile's trend setting scientists.

 
Celebrity divorces and ugly fashion will be so last year, according to a new opinion poll of Virgin Mobile's trend setting customers for what's hot and what's not in 2007.

While 2006 was a year of celebrity DUIs, dramatic and distressing divorces and bouncing beautiful babies, 2007 is all about freedom, fun and fanaticism.

Here is what the 20-something members, of the Virgin Mobile "It" Team,
identified as the big news for 2007 in Canadian and celebrity trends;

Reality TV will get real, prediction says. A new breed of show will emerge, enticing skinny celebrities to gain weight and do something that makes a difference for the world rather than their next photo opportuntiy

Divorce rates would drop dramatically. For the first time ever in Hollywood, the divorce rate declines due to the focus of celebrity couple on adopting children and trying to have twins

Furry fashionista will fall out. Canadians finally get the memo that the style died two years ago and they stop wearing those furry ugly boots

Curvy will come back. Curvy bodies are officially in! This spawns a bevy of new shape enhancing equipment for those thousands of Canadian women (and men) who want JLo-like curves

Libraries will live again. Millions of young people will enter libraries for the first time ever as they search for information after top Internet search tools crash, Virgin Mobile predicts.

Delicious diets will dominate. Sales of lemons and maple syrup will go through the roof as millions of Canadians subscribe to the "Lemonade Syrup Cleanse", which laves skin more radiant and hair shinier

Social networking will boom, as thousands of avatars unite in the online realm and raise money and ideas for Global Warming education programs. These avatars united force politicians to put the environment on the top of the agenda in real world election campaigns.