Hot Vegas
Jamie Foxx Pours into Club -- to Bartend?

Oscar winner Jamie Foxx made a late night appearance at Tao nightclub in Vegas over the weekend, helping to do some in crowd bartending. Who needs a glass?!
Jamie Foxx
TMZ snapped this photo of Foxx around 4:00 AM at the Bocaj Vodka Party at the Venetian, where he attempted to pour a little somethin' in a lucky dreamgirl's mouth. She was plucked from the crowd with the help of Jamie's trusty little flashlight. Smooth operator!

No word on if she actually got a taste of his cocktail.

Tags: Bocaj Vodka, BocajVodka, Jaime Foxx, JaimeFoxx, Tao Nightclub, TaoNightclub

Reader Comments

(Page 2 of 2) Previous 15 Comments

16. Will someone please clear Brittney off the tracks, make room for this train wreck coming down the line!!

Jamie, go back to being just Jamie, you are trying to hard to be something else.

Posted at 9:24PM on Sep 10th 2007 by Sandy

17. Man I Wish I Was Jaime. Don't You #5?Ha Ha Ha.

Posted at 1:07AM on Sep 11th 2007 by Rev

18. What a fun guy... and as gay as it gets w/ his dead on female impersonations; overly-groomed, Bernie Mac hairline. He's such a woman.

Posted at 6:06AM on Sep 11th 2007 by Qweesi

19. Variety criticized my upcoming movie - The Kingdom - Boo hoo ...waaaaa

" Where pic goes astray is inturning anonymous, indigenous peoples into ducks at a shooting gallery. In "Black Hawk Down," the alleged good guys mowed down hundreds of faceless Africans; here, it's Arabs, in what seem like comparable numbers. The sense of vicarious sport is the same; anyone in a caftan or a kepi is fair game.

Which is too bad, because "The Kingdom," for the most part, tries to be a serious drama about an ongoing crisis, begging the question of whether a movie attempting to spark serious debate should be pandering to the worst instincts of its audience. On the other hand, this isn't exactly "Frontline."Berg adopts a faux-doc shooting style that becomes a tiresome exercise in the kind of handheld camerawork that perhaps once implied immediacy but now implies a lack thereof. "The Kingdom" doesn't have the complexity of "Syriana," nor the real-life pathos of "A Mighty Heart," but it's equally spasmodic, to no real end. More drama and less frustrated action might have kept this "Kingdom" from falling."

Save your money folks ...


Posted at 6:09PM on Sep 11th 2007 by Rev

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