We've lost a lot of icons recently -- but no matter what NBC says, Betty White isn't one of 'em!
During a report yesterday morning at Forest Lawn Cemetery, "Today's" Michael Okwu listed the "Golden Girl" as one of the celebrities already buried there.
Meredith Vieira corrected him -- he probably meant Bette Davis.
Bea Arthur went to the big lanai in the sky this weekend at age 87 -- but Betty White, one of two remaining living "Golden Girls," yesterday said it best, "We'll always love her."
Nothin' but pure class here -- just check out how cool she is with the infamous Queen on the Scene.
Octogenarian hottie Betty White was on the town last night wearing an unrevealing Kermit-green ensemble, and nearly causing a fan melee.
The sexy blonde "Boston Legal" babe was an honoree at last night's Museum of Television & Radio "She Made It" event in Beverly Hills. Our favorite Golden Girl and animal rights activist set the paparazzi into a frenzy as she politely signed autographs for fans.
Actress Betty White, whose many TV roles included domestic guru Sue-Ann Nivens on "The Mary Tyler Moore Show" in the 1970s, was honored by the Los Angeles Zoo Monday for her commitment to animals.
The zoo made the Emmy-winning star an Ambassador to the Animals at a ceremony attended by about 50 people, including Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa.
A bronze plaque will be placed next to the zoo's gorilla exhibit, home to White's favorite animal. "Betty has such a big heart and a beautiful spirit. She is a 'Golden Girl' in every sense of the word," Villaraigosa said, referring to White's former TV series, which ran from 1985 to 1992.
White, 84, joked that the honor would make her "tough to live with from now on."