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Thursday 17 September 2015

Erica Mena, Bow Wow Wedding Details: Everything You Need To Know About The Big Day

Rapper/actor Shad 'Bow Wow' Moss & former 'LHHNY’ star Erica Mena have been vague on the exact date of their wedding, but there's still info to break down.
Bow Wow & Erica Mena
(Photo : Getty Images)

Events Planner Preston Bailey Is Pretty Much A Big Deal


The buzz surrounding Mena and Moss' walk down the aisle has turned up to 11 since the announcement that famed events planner Preston Bailey would be coordinating the big wedding day. Let's be clear: Snagging the in-demand Preston, who has overseen shindigs by the superstar likes of Oprah Winfrey, Uma Thurman, Ivanka Trump and Catherine Zeta Jones, is a coup, according to public events professional Nicole Newsum, who has worked with actress Nia Long, model Bria Murphy and has represented such high profiled brands as L'OrĂ©al and SoftSheen-Carson. "Preston Bailey is the go-to visionary to make any space elegant," she tells EnStars. "I've seen his work in person and it’s just immaculate. He's really known for his decor, his centerpieces, and floral work."
Newsum added that the Mena/Moss wedding watchers will be in for a treat. "If you want your wedding to be simple and traditional, Bailey can do that," she says. "If you want an over-the-top rock and roll feel, Bailey can do that as well. I remember going to his 50th birthday party. The energy and look of the event had a very island feel to it with dancing...very thematic and theatrical...a piece of art."

The Wedding Will NOT Take Place Down Under


Reports were rolling from the Twitterverse to mainstream entertainment sites and tabloid outlets that Mena and Moss would be holding their much talked about pending nuptials in Australia, of all places. But as EnStars posted on May 29th, reports of an Iggy Azalea destination wedding were pure fabrication, according to the Artist Formerly Known As Bow Wow. "Nah, I'm not getting married in Australia," Moss set the record straight to Hip Hollywood. "I'm going to Australia to get a bag, turn up, promote the record (his latest “Where You At”) promote CSI: Cyber; do what I do. And bring my [tail] back to America and continue doing what I do." So it seems like rumors of a Caribbean wedding may be true after all.

LHHNY's Yandy Won't Be Getting A Wedding Invite


There appears to be no love lost between Mena and former Love & Hip Hop New York co-star Yandy Smith. In an apparent jab at her reality-show-sister-in-spirit--who married soon-to-be incarcerated beau Mendeecees in a live wedding ceremony on VH1 this past Memorial Day--the future Mrs. Moss made it clear on social media that she would never go that route, posting the below tweet.

Bow Wow Film Festival coming to Beartooth

Dogblog note: Here's something you don't see often -- a film festival for dog lovers! The Beartooth Theaterpub is hosting the Bow Wow Film Festival at 10:30 a.m. Saturday, Sept. 12. Check out the press release:
Bow Wow Film Festival Coming to Anchorage
At the Bearstooth Theaterpub
When: Saturday, September 12th at 10.30 am.
The Bow Wow Film Festival, under the direction of Susan Kelley, and in conjunction with WebEye Group Productions, producer of the highly successful Fly Fishing Film Tour, is excited to announce the 2015 Bow Wow Film Tour, featuring the irresistible personalities of lovable canines.
The Bow Wow Film Festival is a fun family time with a feature-length film composed of a series of short films highlighting dogs, dog antics and celebrating dog-human relationships.
The festival collaborates with animal rescues, humane societies, and not-for-profit organizations around Wyoming, Colorado, Texas, Minnesota, California, Texas, and more to raise funds and awareness for adoptable animals. The Anchorage show will benefit Alaska Dog & Puppy Rescue.
The 2015 Bow Wow Film Festival kicked off last month to a sold-out, standing room only group of dog lovers in Boulder, Colorado, and has delighted audiences at every stop.
Tickets are $4 general admission and $5.50 reserved seating, on the day of show

Bow Wow And Erica Mena: Rapper Talks Making Sure He Never Got 'Caught Up' With Other Women Before Fiance [VIDEO]

James Harden's now epic situation has brought to light Bow Wow's old ways and he explained how he made sure he didn't get caught.
Bow Wow
Entertainer Bow Wow(Shad Moss) (Photo : Getty)
NBA star James Harden’s now epic slip up has lead to Bow Wow letting fans know how he used to treat women before getting engaged to reality star Erica Mena.
Erica Mena Still Livid With ‘Love & Hip Hop New York’ Producers
A woman took a snapshot of the Houston Rockets player sleeping in bed with her and put it online; only for it to go viral (and create a trending hashtag #WhenJamesHardenWakesUp). So Bow Wow took to his own Facebook to reveal why this would have never happened to him back in his playboy days.
“Yo i see y'all boys still young rich and DUMB. Now james is my boy but let me say this now. This is how i USE to do it its called ‘leaving no evidence’ if you was chilling w me my security takes phones and you signing papers. The rule is when she leaves she gets her phone back.”
Bow Wow Shows Off New BMW Erica Mena Bought Him, Tells Other Women To ‘Boss Up’
He said if there was a wrench thrown into the plan and the woman’s phone wasn’t taken, he would wait until she fell asleep to throw it under the bed.
“…so i KNOW im good and could sleep peacefully.”
He went on to diss guys for being “too comfy w/ [broads] yall dont know!” and commended “the ladies because most of us are just that rich and STUPID so y'all know how to get us.”
He said that he’s made the mistake and gotten “caught up too” back in his “rookie” days but learned from his errors.
“Ladies when y'all do stuff this, it ruins it for you because we NEVER calling you again.”
Check out his full rant below.
(Photo : Facebook.com/BowWow)

In the meantime, he’s turned in his player cards and is set to marry Mena later this month.

VCA to Acquire Camp Bow Wow Chain

Camp Bow Wow founder and Chief Executive Heidi Ganahl shelved plans for a day-care business for dogs after her husband died in a plane crash 20 years ago.
Now, after leaving a career in pharmaceutical sales, creating two startups that sputtered and spending most of a million-dollar insurance settlement, Ms. Ganahl has reminted herself a millionaire. She has agreed to sell Camp Bow Wow to VCA Inc. and join the Los Angeles pet health-care company to plot Camp Bow Wow's expansion.
VCA, which has a stock market value of $3.3 billion, operates more than 600 animal hospitals and provides diagnostic services to others. Terms of the transaction weren't disclosed. Franchisers such as Camp Bow Wow often are bought for single-digit multiples of the yearly fees they receive from franchisees. Camp Bow Wow collected about $4 million in such fees last year.
As part of the deal, Ms. Ganahl plans to hire a president to run Camp Bow Wow's day-to-day operations, while she, as chief executive, focuses on strategy. Camp Bow Wow's core business offers day care for dogs at franchise-owned facilities, starting at about $25 a day, as well as overnight boarding for between $40 and $60 a night.
'My vision for Camp Bow Wow was to have 1,000 units, to really be the player in pet care,' says Heidi Ganahl, pictured in Golden, Colo. 'I don't have the capital to do that.' ENLARGE
'My vision for Camp Bow Wow was to have 1,000 units, to really be the player in pet care,' says Heidi Ganahl, pictured in Golden, Colo. 'I don't have the capital to do that.' MATTHEW STAVER FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
Since settling on a franchise model in 2003, the company has sold 152 franchises in the U.S. and Canada. Of those, 122 camps and seven house-call franchises are running, two are corporate-owned, with the rest in development. Some of the franchises also offer dog training.
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The company said that together, the businesses employ about 3,500 people and last year generated systemwide sales of $71 million.
In the 1990s, Ms. Ganahl and her husband had planned to start a dog-care business after an unsatisfying search for boarding for their two mutts. But before they got started, her husband died while riding in a biplane that crashed.
With the insurance money, Ms. Ganahl started a catalog business that sold baby bedding. But she found the mail-order business mundane and her choosy customer base difficult to deal with so she shut it down. Next, she started consulting for people who, like herself, found themselves suddenly wealthy. She said she pulled the plug on that business because few clients followed her advice and the frequent retelling of her own story was draining.
With her settlement nearly spent, her brother urged her to reconsider dog day care. Against the advice of friends, family and veterinarians, the pair in 2000 converted a Veterans of Foreign Wars hall in Denver into Camp Bow Wow. A second location in Broomfield, Colo., followed and a decision to franchise was made in 2003.
Ms. Ganahl, 47 years old, recently spoke about her experiences in franchising and why she is selling now.
Edited excerpts:
WSJ: Why did you become a franchiser?
Ms. Ganahl: I started Camp Bow Wow with $80,000 I had left from the million-dollar settlement. I maxed out every credit card, took every bit of home equity I could. I used that for the first two camps and I didn't have any other capital. The cool thing about franchising is you're using other people's money to build your brand instead of going the corporate store route and having to have a lot of cash to build out each location.
WSJ: Did adding franchises resolve the cash problem?
Ms. Ganahl: Franchising is a tough model. Not a lot of franchisers can get loans or raise money from investors or private-equity guys. You usually have to give up control or a big percent of the company to get money in. I have tried everything I can to not do that along the way.
WSJ: What was your biggest mistake with Camp Bow Wow?
Ms. Ganahl: I underestimated the importance of cash. Whenever I had extra money, I put it into technology, whether it was the intranet for franchisees, point-of-sales systems, search-engine optimization. I was so focused on growing the business aggressively that there were many times I was pushing tight on payroll and I'd have to use a credit card.
WSJ: What do you think about competition from new, home-based dog-sitter sites like DogVacay.com and Rover.com?
Ms. Ganahl: The Uber-ization of the pet-care space is important and we want to be part of that wave. But we also don't want to spend $40 million to build a program to do it. We're talking to one of the leaders in this space about a partnership. They'll make staying at Camp Bow Wow one of the choices and we're going to help them train and certify pet sitters.
WSJ: Why sell now?
Ms. Ganahl: My vision for Camp Bow Wow was to have 1,000 units, to really be the player in pet care. I don't have the capital to do that and I didn't want to go out and sell the business to any old private equity. I'd rather play with a great name in the pet industry that I trust.
WSJ: What challenges arose from employing family?
Ms. Ganahl: My family members were awesome employees. My dad did franchise sales for me, my uncle was my head of operations, my aunt did my training. It worked really well for a while. The bigger we got, the harder it was to keep them in these lofty general positions. I started to make decisions about what would make them happy, rather than what was good for the business. That was the point I knew I had to move some of them out or give them soft landings and hire people who are more objective and have the right skills to take us to the next level.
WSJ: How did you tailor Camp Bow Wow to appeal to the widest customer base?
Ms. Ganahl: We gave it a mountain-lodge look. We wanted it kind of rugged. The frou-frou spas fit for some places, like Manhattan, but in your typical suburb, it's, "Oh, come on, my dog doesn't need a manicure, but I do want him to behave and not rip up the couch when I'm gone."
WSJ: The American Pet Products Association expects nearly $5 billion will be spent on services like boarding and grooming this year. What are your customers like?
Ms. Ganahl: Some of our top clients spend upward of $20,000 a year at camp. A typical client probably spends $1,500 a year. They bring their dog once or twice a week and then they'll board every time they go on vacation.

Biography: Red Pollard

John Pollard was born in 1909 and raised in Edmonton, Alberta, in the western reaches of the Canadian wilderness. The second of seven children born to a bankrupt Irish brick manufacturer, Johnny — as he was known to his family — grew up in a boisterous home. He was passionate about athletics — particularly boxing — and so fond of literature and poetry that he was known to challenge his sister Edie over who was better at memorizing literary passages. But his greatest pleasure by far came from his horse, Forest Dawn. To help his family make ends meet, Johnny took to delivering groceries with his toboggan hitched to the little horse. By the time he was in his early teens, he had decided that he wanted to be a jockey.
Wandering
When he was fifteen, Pollard left home in the care of a guardian and went off to pursue his dream. Within a year, the guardian had abandoned him at a makeshift racecourse in Butte, Montana, and the boy was on his own. He spent the next couple of years wandering around the country’s lowliest racetracks, trying to talk his way into a saddle. He was tall for a jockey — about five feet seven inches in his stocking feet — and though he managed to ride often enough, he never won a single race. Eventually, he began moonlighting as a boxer, using the ring name “Cougar.” But most people knew him as “Red,” a nickname he earned for his shock of flame-colored hair.
Books as Companions
Horse racing is a seasonal sport, and Pollard was always on the move, traveling to Canada in the summer, California in the fall and spring, and then to Tijuana in the winter. His only constant companions were his books — well-worn leather pocket volumes of Shakespeare, Robert Service’s Songs of the Sourdough, and a Ralph Waldo Emerson collection. He barely earned money enough to eat, and spent most nights sleeping in horse stalls, but according to his sister Edie, Pollard was “happy as heck.”
Troubled Horses
In 1927, Pollard was sold — young jockeys were considered property — to a horseman named Freddie Johnson, who handed him over to his trainer, Russ McGirr. Although Red was still losing far more often than he won, McGirr discovered a rare talent in the boy that would help carry him into racing history. After years of riding the worst mounts on the worst tracks in the racing circuit, Pollard had come to understand troubled horses. He was kind to them, avoiding the whip, and his mounts often responded to his gentleness by running hard.
Partially Blind
Despite that gift, however, Red continued to have only a middling career. Some of his failures were doubtless the result of an accident he had had sometime early in his career. While exercising a horse around a crowded track one morning, he had been hit in the head by something kicked up by another horse’s hooves. The blow damaged the part of his brain that controlled vision, permanently blinding him in the right eye. “Without bifocal vision,” explains author Laura Hillenbrand, “you don’t have depth perception. So he couldn’t tell how far ahead of him horses were. He couldn’t tell how close he was cutting it. But he knew no fear. He rode right into the pack with one eye.” For the rest of his life, Pollard kept his blindness a secret, knowing that if track officials found out, they would never let him ride.
Lucky Day
By the summer of 1936, twelve years of bad luck and failure had begun to take their toll. Like many Depression-era unfortunates, Pollard was broke and homeless. That August, he was heading north with his agent — a squat, hare-lipped man named Yummy — when a freak car accident left them stranded outside of Detroit, with nothing but twenty cents and a half-pint of a cheap Whisky they called “bow-wow wine.” The two men hitchhiked to the Detroit Fair Grounds, where Pollard bumped into Tom Smith, Seabiscuit’s trainer. As it happened, Smith was looking for a jockey. When introduced to the temperamental, often unruly horse, Pollard offered a sugar cube. Seabiscuit touched the jockey’s shoulder in a rare gesture of affection. As Smith saw it, Seabiscuit had chosen his jockey. It might have been the luckiest day of Pollard’s life.
Plagued by Injuries
For a time, Pollard and Seabiscuit lit up the racing circuit, capturing win after win in races across the country. But the injuries that plagued Red throughout his career unseated him from the celebrated thoroughbred more than once. In February 1938, he was almost crushed to death in a horse pile-up at the San Carlos Handicap. It took months to recover. No sooner was he back in the saddle than an inexperienced horse spooked during a workout and crashed into a barn, nearly shearing off Pollard’s leg below the knee. The broken leg wouldn’t heal properly and would keep him from riding Seabiscuit in the famous one-on-one match-up against War Admiral on November 1, 1938.
Hopelessly in Love
While Pollard recuperated at Boston’s Winthrop Hospital, wondering if he would ever race again, he fell in love with his private nurse, a refined Boston native named Agnes Conlon. The restless jockey and the prim, well-heeled nurse were an undeniably odd match, but they were also hopelessly in love. When Pollard asked Agnes to marry him, she defied her family’s wishes and said “yes.” They would have two children and live together for over forty years.
The Greatest Ride
The highlight of Pollard’s racing career came in 1940, when he rode Seabiscuit to victory in the race that had twice eluded the horse, the Santa Anita Handicap. “I got a great ride,” Pollard said afterwards. “The greatest ride I ever got from the greatest horse that ever lived.” Seabiscuit was retired almost immediately after the race, and Pollard soon did the same. But he couldn’t stay away from the jockey’s life for long. He soon returned to the racing circuit, and was twice hospitalized after terrible accidents — he broke a hip in one spill and his back in another. After Seabiscuit, the jockey never had much success, falling back to the bush leagues of racing from which he had emerged.
Retirement
Finally, in 1955, at the age of 46, Pollard hung up his silks and retired for good. For a time, he worked sorting mail at the track post office, and then as a valet, cleaning boots for another generation of riders. He died in 1981, but what exactly killed him was unclear. According to his daughter Norah, “he had just worn out his body.” Agnes, sick with cancer, died two weeks later.

 
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