Are you a Bachelor addict? Well, you're in good company. ABC's reality show about single guy Aaron Buerge's quest to find his true love has developed a diehard celeb following. "It's pathetic, I know, but it's the only thing I ever TiVo anymore," says Natasha Henstridge. Will & Grace's Megan Mullally seconds the emotion: "I would pull my head off before I would miss an episode." Sandra Bullock and Less Than Perfect's Sara Rue are also Bachelor devotees, and Mullally's costar Debra Messing has even broken down the chances of the two finalists, 'Bama belle Brooke and Jersey girl Helene. "Brooke is a blonde, southern girl, and [Aaron] said from the beginning that he was partial to that," says Messing, "so I think he'll go with her."

Next month George Clooney will pay tribute to his late aunt, singer Rosemary Clooney, in two distinct ways. On Dec. 10 the actor will speak at an L.A. gala featuring, among others, Tony Bennett, k.d. lang and Diana Krall. The event, which is being organized by Rosemary's five children (including Crossing Jordan's Miguel Ferrer), will benefit the Mayo Clinic Rosemary Clooney Pulmonary Research Fund. (Rosemary died of lung cancer in June.) George will also make a more personal salute to his aunt: He has selected Rosemary's rendition of "There's No Business Like Show Business" to run over the end credits of his directorial debut, Confessions of a Dangerous Mind, a biopic about game-show host Chuck Barris due Dec. 27.

At the L.A. premiere of 8 Mile, Pamela Anderson started a minor to-do with a local TV reporter. "You're wearing fur," said Anderson, an avid animal-rights activist. "Is it real?" The squirming reporter replied, "No, I think it's fake." Skeptical, Anderson felt the lining of the coat with her fingers, then sniffed the lapels. Finally, convinced the fur was synthetic, she granted the interview. Afterward, the correspondent checked her label. "Oops!" she said. "One hundred percent sheepskin."

After posing for artists at Manhattan's Madame Tussaud's NY wax museum, The Rock boasted to David Letterman and Jay Leno that his wax double was anatomically correct. The Scorpion King star was joking—as with all the figures, his double has no private parts—but so many people started peeking into his statue's pants that Tussaud's recently put underwear beneath the doppelganger's trousers. "It was embarrassing," says Tussaud's general manager Janine DiGioacchino. "We had to ask him what he wears so it would be accurate. He teased us, saying, 'Only crocodile-skin bikinis—handmade and expensive.' But we settled on white briefs."