Free Paris Hilton

LOS ANGELES - Celebrities who fall on tough legal times can often rely on their fellow stars for support.
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Jodie Foster spoke out on
Mel Gibson's behalf after his anti-Semitic tirade last summer. The cast of "The View" gave
Alec Baldwin a place to explain his custody battle and an angry voicemail message he left for his 11-year-old daughter.
Robert Downey, Jr., was welcomed with understanding and job offers after his multiple drug arrests.

But few Hollywood players have come out in support of
Paris Hilton, who was sentenced to 45 days in jail for violating her probation in an alcohol-related reckless driving case. The 26-year-old surrendered to sheriff's deputies June 3 and was booked into a Lynwood jail. She was released to home confinement a few days later, then ordered back behind bars Friday.

A crowd of Hilton fans gathered outside the courthouse Friday where she learned her latest fate. But the hot, young showbiz set that Hilton hangs with has remained mum on the heiress' plight.

Usually "powerful people protect powerful people," said veteran Hollywood publicist Michael Levine.

"But in this case I don't see any rallying around her," he said. "She is a person who got into the famous club for nothing and I think there's some contempt around that."

Howard Bragman, a longtime publicist who runs the public-relations firm Fifteen Minutes, said Hilton doesn't have the "strong foundation of relationships in this town" that would motivate famous folks to stand behind her.

"Paris' career was made in a microwave and not in a crock pot," he said, adding that Hilton lacks the self-awareness that might inspire empathy from her colleagues.

"You've got to understand and accept responsibility for yourself in order for people to rally around you," he said.

Before Hilton was sent back to jail Friday, comedian
George Lopez called her brief stay behind bars "more like a spa treatment than an actual sentence."

"Celebrities get treated lightly by the judicial system," he said. "Wealthy and affluent and famous people get treated differently than anybody else."

Los Angeles County Sheriff Lee Baca said Hilton did get special treatment because of her celebrity status: "She got more time in jail."

Host
Sarah Silverman cracked a crude joke at Hilton's expense to open last Sunday's MTV Movie Awards at which the heiress made a surprise appearance. When the camera panned to Hilton, she was not smiling.

Hugh Hefner has been one of the few celebrities sympathetic to Hilton's situation.

"I feel very badly for her," he said Thursday when asked about the heiress.

But Paris-pity or no, Hollywood seldom misses a promotional opportunity. ABC used the endless publicity surrounding Hilton's case to promote its new TV show, "Dirty Sexy Money." The show focuses on a fictional family, the Darlings — a wealthy clan not unlike the Hiltons.

The network placed full-page ads in the Los Angeles Times and the New York Post that read: "We love Paris. The Darling Family." An airplane towing a banner with the same message flew above the downtown courthouse Friday.
 
Maybe she can "forget" to wear panties again, and "accidentaly" flash the right person, and get out!! Oh wait, the whole worlds already seen her "not so private" parts like what, 100 times now? Oh well, maybe she'll have to stay in jail. Guess she should have saved that trick for when she needed it!! He he
 
I don't really wish death upon her, I think I would rather see her picking up trash on the side of the road with the other inmates, or serving food in the prison caf. or something humiliating like that.:)
 
I don't know...I think she's been humiliated enough. Sarah Silverman's monologue, being dragged back to prison, pictures of her crying all over the place... I know I don't like the girl and all...but public humiliation is very harsh.
 
Oh I don't know, I don't think Paris is to worried about the humiliation. I think she has the mentality of a 2yr old. She wants attention, even negative attention. I think what would really hurt Paris is if nobody really gave a damn if she went to jail or not. If nobody spoke her name, if everyone just changed the channel when she came on tv, if her tantrum in the court room went completely unnoticed, I think then she would be truely humiliated. She doesn't care if the attention she gets is negative, she just wants the attention. If she really cared what people thought of her she wouldn't do the stupid stuff she does in the first place. Do you really expect to show up at an awards ceremony, or anything public, before turning yourself in and people aren't going to take a stab at you? She wasn't truely upset until she didn't get her way, until a judge was finally as sick of her as everybody else and made her do something she didn't want to do on his terms instead of hers. Poor baby.:rolleyes:
 
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