In January, in the middle of a contentious Knicks-Celtics game, Anthony basically went berserk on Garnett. Garnett had said something to him on the floor, though the particulars were not initially clear. Whatever it was led Anthony to attempt a siege of the Celtics team bus after the game. It took five cops, an entire contingent of Madison Square Garden security, and Knicks head coach Mike Woodson to get Melo to stand down. A couple days later, the New York Daily News put La La on the front page, next to a giant, suggestive circle of breakfast cereal: Garnett, the tabloid alleged, had told Anthony that his wife tasted "like Honey Nut Cheerios. And so the first great sports tabloid story of was born. Only problem was, according to La La—meaning, according to her husband—Garnett never actually said it. Which, in a way, made the Daily News story more ominous: Something that specific, that suggestive, had to come from somewhere. But where? So today La La has come to the Soho Grand Hotel on a chilly afternoon in February to talk with the one person who she thinks might know the answer: Fred Mwangaguhunga, the year-old founder and editor of the celebrity-gossip site MediaTakeout.


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Photo by Bobby Viteri. Clothing courtesy of Steelos. Sons of Essex is the kind of SoHo restaurant where high-powered New York City publicists host celebrity press junkets, but I didn't visit the place a few months ago to interview a pop star, actress, or athlete. But Mwangaguhunga is nothing like his headlines.
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It's now clear that she was robbed. It's clear that the reporting that we did hurt her, and we certainly don't want that to be what we do. The three MediaTakeOut stories that are cited in Kardashian West's lawsuit suggested French authorities suspected the reality star and her mother, Kris Jenner, of committing a crime by faking the robbery. Mwangaguhunga said the outlet based that reporting on information from reputable sources. Related Link: Kim Kardashian sues over robbery story.
On paper, year-old Fred Mwangaguhunga seems a lot like other successful businessmen. But what makes Mwangaguhunga special—besides his difficult to pronounce surname—is his business, MediaTakeOut. The son of Ugandan immigrants who stressed education and the security of a good 9-to-5 job, he initially chose a more traditional education and career path. After law school, Mwangaguhunga practiced corporate tax law at a Wall Street firm for four years, but ever since he was a teen he knew that he wanted to run his own business. Working with the small photography and videography company that did big jobs, like shooting the weddings of Donald Trump and Eddie Murphy , inspired the young New York native. He left his six-figure salary job to start his first venture Laundry Spa, a boutique laundering service for professionals like himself. Needless to say, his family and coworkers were taken aback. Everyone at the firm liked me. Are you kidding me?