It looks like the warlock’s den just got a little more spacious – Charlie Sheen’s remaining goddess, Natalie Kenly, moved out of Sheen’s pad last week. But the model didn’t get to keep her 15 minutes of fame and her sweet ride, according to TMZ.

Although he let his goddess go, Sheen, 45, wasn’t so loose with the car he bought for his model lady – he demanded that Kenly return the Mercedes he purchased for her.

But still referring to himself in the third person, Sheen was cavalier about the split, telling sources, it’s “not a common thing for the Masheen.”

And the “Masheen” reportedly got to work no sooner than Kenly slammed his front door. The actor turned live tour talker turned his pad into a United Nations of sorts – bringing home women from Mexico, Australia and Colombia just hours after Kenly packed up and shipped out, sources told TMZ. That sounds like a healthy way to deal with the dissolution of a relationship, right?

But Sheen’s most recent goddess vacancy isn’t anything new for the former “Two and a Half Men” star as of late. In April, Sheen’s other goddess, Bree Olsen, reportedly dumped the actor via text message before immediately moving on (Sheen-style) to a new beau. And just one month later, Sheen was officially down one more ex in his life – he was officially divorced from estranged wife, Brooke Mueller, who is also the mother of his two young sons, Bob and Max, on May 2.

From gay rights to disaster relief, Lady Gaga is always at the forefront of activism or charity outreach, but now, one law firm is crying false when it comes to Gaga’s Japan earthquake relief efforts, Popeater.com reports.

A Southfield, Mich.-based law firm, 1-800-LAW-FIRM, recently filed a class-action lawsuit against mother monster for pocketing a portion of the proceeds from the sale of her “We Pray for Japan” wristbands, benefiting relief for Japan’s March earthquake – proceeds gathered from customers who assumed their money was going directly to Japan.

“I’m suing Lady Gaga simply to hold her accountable for giving the money that she was raising for charity to the cause that she was trying to raise it for,” 1-800-LAW-FIRM attorney Ari Kresch told Radar Online.

Gaga sold the earthquake relief wristbands for $5, charged $3.99 for shipping and handling and tacked on an added 60 cents in taxes. The only problem? According to the law firm, Gaga exaggerated her costs and pocketed more than just her initial investment in the charity bracelets.

Hollywood actor and Minot, N.D., native Josh Duhamel has been named honorary chairman of a fund set up for the city’s flood recovery, the Associated Press reports.

In a statement, Duhamel said he grew up in Minot and his sister and her family lost their home to flooding from the Souris River. Duhamel says he would always consider the city home.

The fund will help Minot and the surrounding area with grants for construction materials, mortgage help, household items and other needs.

Duhamel stars in the film “Transformers: Dark of the Moon,” which opens Wednesday.

Niki Carlson, a program director for the Minot Area Community Foundation, which established the fund, says Duhamel was in Moscow on Sunday promoting the film.

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