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'10 Honest Thoughts On Being Loved By A Skinny Boy' Breaks Down Every Bullsh*t Stereotype About 'Big Girls'

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"I say, 'I am fat.' He says, 'no, you're beautiful.' I wonder why I cannot be both."

That's how Rachel Wiley opened her slam poem, "10 Honest Thoughts On Being Loved By A Skinny Boy," at the 2013 National Poetry Slam.

In the poem, Wiley shares some poignant observations about her relationship with a thinner man, from wondering whether her boyfriend "notices the stares" they get when holding hands in public, to recognizing that "the cute hipster girl in the coffee shop assumes we're just friends."

One particularly powerful line? "The phrase, 'big girls need love too' can go die in a fire."

We couldn't agree more.


Christina Applegate Shows Off Mandolin Skills In Lost 'Anchorman 2' Moment

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Think of it as a deleted scene from "Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues." On Wednesday's edition of "The Tonight Show" Christina Applegate told host Jay Leno that she spent a ton of time learning how to play the mandolin for the comedy sequel, only to have the scene cut from the film. When Leno offered her the chance to show off her skills, Applegate jumped at the opportunity.

Even better, she slipped into her "Anchorman" character, Veronica Corningstone, to do it. "This is how I sang it," Applegate said before breaking into a short and very strange ditty about "police and thieves in the street." While she slipped easily into Veronica this time, Applegate admitted to HitFix that it wasn't easy for the film itself. The original "Anchorman" was released in 2004, so she had trouble finding her character after such a long time had passed. "Then I realized, Veronica had changed so drastically. She's a mom now," Applegate said. "She's successful. So her MO is different.”

"Anchorman 2: The Legend Continues" is in theaters now. "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. EST on NBC.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Steven Galloway Trolls Facebook Phisher In The Most Epic Manner Possible

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Vancouver writer Steven Galloway penned an online epic when he turned the tables on a Facebook phisher who tried to scam him this week.

The author of The Cellist of Sarajevo was approached on the social networking site by a user named "Sharon Oddie Brown" who came to him with a lucrative offer: "Am so happy to tell you about the $100,000 and a brand new truck giving out to people from facebook world lottery. Do you got yours?"

Naturally, Galloway recognized this as a scam, but he decided to have some fun with it anyway. He first asked the phisher to send him $5,000 and promised to share his winnings with her. When the phisher changed the subject, he asked for $7,000, a glazed ham and stepped up his demands in a series of subsequent messages.

He was eventually put in touch with a user named "Scott Brunce Robert," who asked the author to send $5,000 as well as his Facebook and email passwords before he could claim his prize.

Galloway screwed with this phisher too, asking whether he believed in ghosts and joking that he had an "outstanding legal issue outside a massage parlour in Montecarlo."

The exchange went on for two days, and the author said on his Facebook page that he was sorry when it was over. He did, however, capture the whole conversation in a PDF document.

Check out Steven Galloway trolling a Facebook scammer:

Steven Galloway Trolls Facebook Phisher

Haikus Are A Creative Alternative To Reading This 2,000-Page Report

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Oceanographer and artist Dr. Gregory Johnson is translating critical facts about climate change into a language that's interesting and visually appealing to everyone: haikus.

When he was stuck at home one weekend with a cold, Johnson translated the first part of the Fifth Assessment Report from the U.N.'s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change into haikus. His daughter, also an artist, encouraged him to extend this poetry into watercolors. Johnson only posts on Facebook in the form of haikus and perceives the art as a form of meditation.

Published on Sightline Daily, his 19 haikus walk the reader through the history, causes and repercussions of climate change and shed light on the future of the planet. Each slide has three components: the illustration, a simple yet explanatory poem and background words that set the stage for his slide, such as "history, ice" or "change drivers."

Johnson portrays two greenhouse gas-emitting power plants elegantly and simply in the slide below. He sets the stage for their role in climate change with the "history, fire" descriptors and explains what humans are doing that's so detrimental.

coal plants

And later in his series, Dr. Johnson explains the effect of global warming on oceans: rising sea, melting glaciers and a consequential change to ocean current patterns.

glaciers

The IPCC published the first section of the four-part report in September. This 2,000-page assessment, The Physical Science Basis, expressed with even greater confidence what scientists have known for some time -- climate change is happening, humans are unequivocally responsible and that it will continue well into the future. The second section -- originally expected for release in March -- was leaked in early November and analyzed climate change's effect on the global food supply. The remainder of the Fifth Assessment will be published over the course of 2014. The IPCC published their First Assessment report in 1990 and has published a report every six to seven years since.

You can see the entire set of Dr. Gregory Johnson’s haiku on Sightline Institute’s blog, and follow more of Sightline’s work by email or on Facebook and Twitter.

Sarah Jessica Parker Reveals Favorite 'Sex And The City' Episode

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Sarah Jessica Parker talked about "Sex and the City" during a speed round on "Watch What Happens: Live." She barely had time to think or react to the questions, but she did manage to reveal which guy she thinks Carrie should have wound up with, as well as her favorite episode.

For sentimental reasons, Parker said that she felt Mr. Big was the right guy for Carrie. As for her favorite episode, Parker went all the way back to the fourth episode of Season 1 with "Valley of the Twenty-Something Guys." The episode featured Timothy Olyphant and a rather unorthodox cab conversation. Let's just say, Samantha's declaration that "a hole is a hole" will forever be etched on our brains!

As for a third movie, SJP made it clear that it's pretty unlikely by saying, "There’s a story that could be told, but I don’t know that we’ll ever tell it."

"Watch What Happens: Live" airs every Sunday through Thursday at 11 p.m. EST on Bravo.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Epic 'Eye Of The Tiger' Battle On 'Sing-Off' Earns Standing Ovation

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"The Sing-Off" continues to impress with mind-blowing a cappella performances, and yet sometimes even that isn't enough. In a tough double-elimination night, all of the remaining contestants were forced into sing-off battles. The acoUstiKats and Voice Play both came ready to fight, masterfully tackling Survivor's "Eye of the Tiger."

The judges were on their feet after that one, but they didn't stay there. In fact, both groups were sent home after their powerful performance. It just goes to show how stiff the competition is, as Small Screen Scoop's Jessica Rae pointed out. Only four groups remain in the running for the top prize, and only two episodes remain.

"The Sing-Off" continues Thursday at 8 p.m. EST, and wraps its season Monday at 8 p.m. EST on NBC.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

An 'Unexpected Choir' Of Recovering Cancer Patients Raises Awareness Of The Dangers Of Smoking

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An "Unexpected Choir" comprised of 12 laryngectomy patients recovering from cancer performed heart-wrenching renditions of the Beatles' "All You Need is Love" and "She Loves You" at the São Paulo Museum of Art. The group, organized by the A.C. Camargo Cancer Center in Brazil, sought to raise awareness of the dangers of smoking, delivering a moving performance that brought the audience to their feet.

The surprised audience was actually waiting for the São Paulo University choir, ad agency JWT Brazil writes on the YouTube video description. Not surprisingly, viewers were visibly stunned when the group of speech-impaired individuals took the stage. Accompanied by an audiologist from the cancer center, the choir, comprised of singers 60-years-old and up, eventually drew a resounding applause and a few tears as they warned of the effects of serious cigarette use.

Rick Ross & Jay Z Team For 'Devil Is A Lie,' Talk Wingstop, D'Ussé, Illuminati

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Rick Ross and Jay Z let go of "The Devil Is A Lie," a hotly anticipated track off Ross' upcoming "Mastermind" LP on Thursday. The track features considerable flexing on the part of both the 37-year-old Rozay and 44-year-old Hov, both of whom are eager to share stories about stepping on drugs and revel in their relative brand associations. Ross gets in a plug for Wingstop, Jay continues his song-ruining habit of repping D'Ussé (see: Beyonce's "Drunk In Love"), and Jay even goes so far as to mention the Illuminati and stop and frisk. Unclear: Whether he was wearing the snakeskin snapback he's currently selling at Barneys, the store which made headlines this year for racially profiling black customers. Jay would also like to make it clear that he's "getting white money but I'm still black." Regardless, listen below.

'Grand Budapest Hotel' Trailer Introduces The Cast

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Joplin says come home. Fox Searchlight released the second teaser trailer for Wes Anderson's "The Grand Budapest Hotel" on Thursday, highlighting the film's idiosyncratic cast. "Something's missing. I don't know what it contains, I don't know what it represents, I don't know what it is. But there are traces and shadows of it everywhere," Jeff Goldblum says near the start of the trailer. Moments later, he's dead. "His body was found stuff in a sarcophagus behind a storage room at the Kunstmuseum late last night," Edward Norton says. "He was short four fingers."

We could quote this trailer all day -- specifically everything Ralph Fiennes says at the end -- but for now, just watch and then count the days until "The Grand Budapest Hotel" is in theaters on March 7, 2014.

Christie's To Auction Trove Of 85 Joan Miro Works

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LONDON (AP) — A trove of 85 works by Spanish surrealist master Joan Miro acquired by the Portuguese government from a failing bank is up for auction with an estimated value of 30 million pounds ($49 million).

Christie's auction house said Friday the collection is "one of the most extensive and impressive offerings of works by the artist ever to come to auction," and covers seven decades of Miro's career. The Barcelona-born artist was influential in the surrealist movement in the 1920s and developed his signature colorful style, full of squiggles and symbols, during a long career that lasted until his death at 90 in 1983.

The auction includes the 1968 oil painting "Women and Birds" — two recurring motifs in Miro's work — which has an estimated sale price of 4-to-7 million pounds ($6.5 million to $11.5 million); and the 22-by-197 centimeter (8 1/2 inches by 78 inches) oil-on-canvas "Painting," valued between 2.5 million and 3.5 million pounds ($4 million to $5.7 million).

The sale also includes works on paper and a series of paintings on Masonite from the 1930s. The cheapest lots start at about 10,000 pounds ($16,400).

Olivier Camu, Christie's deputy head of Impressionist and modern art, said the sale gave collectors with a wide variety of budgets a chance to "celebrate and engage with the creative genius and joyous immediacy of Miro's work."

Portugal took ownership of the 85 Miro works when it nationalized the struggling Banco Portugues de Negocios, or BPN, during the 2008 global banking crisis. BPN was later sold to Angolan-Portuguese Banco BIC.

The works will be sold during three auctions at Christie's in London Feb. 4 and 5.

The current auction record for a Miro is almost $37 million for "Painting (Blue Star)" in 2012.

This Street Photo Blog For Dogs Will Make You Talk In That Voice You Only Use For Puppies

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The Dogist, a street photography blog devoted to the canine set, was created back in October with one snapshot of a Boxer on the streets of Vienna. But you could say The Dogist himself was created years ago, when photographer Elias Weiss Friedman was just a 10-year-old kid taking photos of his family's two Labrador retrievers.

The keys to his work are "expressive faces," Friedman told HuffPost. "Happy, sad, curious -- there's something very honest about the way dogs photograph."

(Story continues below this adorable dachshund.)

the dogist

Friedman started his blog after realizing the dog photos he posted to Instagram were getting a lot more attention than anything else. With an eye for composition and clean natural lighting, his portraits follow in the footsteps of popular street style blog The Sartorialist -- Friedman simply points his camera lens a few feet closer to the ground. A brand-new tennis ball (and knee pads) help him capture his subjects.

Let go from a corporate job a year ago, Friedman now finds himself chasing dogs around New York City, where he lives, full-time. He got involved with the city's tech scene shortly after, calling it "a blessing." Startup culture inspired Friedman to dive into his donation-based project, which he admits is "a bit silly."

"I think that's why I love it," he said.

While Friedman is a lifelong dog lover, he does not currently have any pets of his own -- although he'd like to. He'd also like The Dogist to travel more in search of charismatic pooches outside of New York. "My first mission statement was 'All the breeds.' Now it's 'All the dogs,'" he explained. "Every dog deserves recognition, and sometimes a compelling photograph can get a dog out of a shelter, or inspire people to appreciate their dogs more."

Scroll down for some aww-inducing pics, and check out The Dogist for more.

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Jon Stewart Surprises John Oliver With An Emotional Goodbye On His Last Episode Of 'The Daily Show'

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Thursday's "Daily Show" opened with what appeared to be a segment on British tabloids spying on the Royals, but it was all a clever ruse, setting up John Oliver for an emotional send-off on his last night as the show's Senior British Correspondent.

Oliver is leaving "The Daily Show" to host his own weekly series on HBO, but after seven years, Stewart couldn't let him go without taking a look back at some of the highlights.

The charade apparently worked, because Oliver was clearly caught off guard:



After rolling ridiculous footage of the various "characters" Oliver brought to the show as well as a montage of some of his more dignified moments, the final segment brought the long-time correspondent to tears. Jon Stewart did a slightly better job of holding the emotion back at first...



But that didn't last...



But, ever the professional, Stewart knew exactly what to do to lighten the mood:


One last Carlos Danger dance for the road, Johnny.

Watch the full clip above, then dry your eyes with a Carlos Danger dance of your own.

Darcy The Hedgehog's Instagram Photos Will Make You Squeal With Delight (PHOTOS)

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Ladies and gentlemen, get ready to squee.

There's absolutely no other way to respond to the cuteness that is Darcy the hedgehog.







Darcy's owner, Shota Tsukamoto of Tokyo, has been photographing the now 3-year-old hedgehog and uploading her photos to Instagram since as far back as May 2011. The @darcytheflyinghedgehog Instagram account currently has more 358,000 followers.

The photos feature Darcy alongside a variety of objects that accentuate her tiny stature and adorableness. It also includes numerous shots of the hedgehog resting calmly in the palm of Tsukamoto's hand. “Hedgehogs are usually very cautious animals, but that is not the case with Darcy,” he said in a recent interview for the Instagram Blog.









Tsukamoto admits to being inspired by children's books, and some of the scenes invoke a sense of wonder -- and even include some other miniature characters.







"I want to make Darcy the most famous hedgehog in the world," Tsukamoto told the Instagram Blog. With a smile like hers, we have no doubt she will be.





H/T: ABC News

Mercury Craters Named After John Lennon, Nine Other Famous Artists (PHOTOS)

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Imagine John Lennon on Mercury. It isn’t hard to do—at least it wasn’t hard for the folks tasked with giving names to craters on the planet. This week, they named 10 impact craters after famous artists, including the Beatles legend, Truman Capote, and Alexander Calder.

Just click through the slideshow below to see which inspiring cultural figures made the list.

Story continues below.



All new craters must be named after "deceased artists, musicians, painters, and authors who have made outstanding or fundamental contributions to their field and have been recognized as art historically significant figures for more than 50 years," according to the International Astronomical Union, which approves all new names related to planets and satellites.

The craters join 114 others named after the first Mercury flyby was conducted by the MESSENGER probe in 2008.

lennon crater
The Lennon crater, recently named to honor English musician/singer/songwriter John Lennon (1940-1980).

In dedication of the new Lennon crater, the MESSENGER mission released this cringeworthy tribute:


Imagine some ejecta

It isn't hard to do

Terraced walls and impact melt

Secondary craters too

Imagine central peaks

Rising above the floor...


You may say I'm a complex crater
But I'm not the only one
Someday more will join us
On the planet closest to the sun.

Pregnant Ballerina, Mary Helen Bowers, Encourages All Moms To 'Embrace And Celebrate' Their Bodies

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Ballerina Mary Helen Bowers is about to give birth to her first child, and has been dancing through pregnancy with unbelievable agility and breathtaking grace.

Bowers, the woman behind the Ballet Beautiful fitness company and the trainer who helps get Victoria's Secret models into runway form, has been documenting the stages of her pregnancy in a series of stunning photographs. She has been sharing these steps of her journey to motherhood on her Instagram account.

"I've found the entire process of being pregnant to be such a miraculous, beautiful time," she told The Huffington Post in an email Friday. "As a first-time mom I am so excited! My instinct has been not only to capture this special time, but [also] to share it with others, too. Pregnancy is magical, I've never felt more connected to my body. Looking back I'm so happy that I've taken so many photos and really documented the different stages."

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The 33-year-old, who is most famous for working with Natalie Portman for her "Black Swan" role, is due to give birth next week, according to TODAYMoms. She has been dancing through the entirety of her pregnancy, with her doctor's approval.

"The changes that your body goes through during pregnancy are so radical, I've really tried to embrace and celebrate my new body and hopefully I can encourage other women to do the same," she told HuffPost. "I've also spent a lot of time over the last nine months developing a new prenatal series for Ballet Beautiful to help other moms-to-be stay healthy and active during pregnancy."

She previously told ELLE.com that ballet has helped her avoid back pain and swelling through her trimesters.

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Bowers has received mostly support from followers while sharing her personal snapshots, but she has also faced critics.

"Even in 2013, the image of a pregnant woman embracing her figure and really putting it out there can be scary to some people, but I don't let that stand in my way and I don't think other women should either," she wrote to HuffPost. "My company, Ballet Beautiful, is built around celebrating the strength and femininity of the female body -- for me pregnancy has just been an extension of that."

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Flash Mob Performs The 'Peanuts' Christmas Song IRL, And It's Incredible

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"The Charlie Brown Christmas Song" is up there with eggnog and yuletide cheer, as far as Christmas traditions are concerned. So when we saw that a flash mob had reenacted the iconic number in New York City, we nearly jumped for joy.

Yes, enthusiastic individuals dressed as Snoopy and the gang performed the nostalgic number on the snowy streets of NYC -- which really means they bounced up and down adorably for a while. Passersby melted at the sight, whipping out their smartphones to record the IRL Christmas magic.

Watch the video, which was uploaded to YouTube this week, above. And they say New Yorkers have no holiday spirit!



h/t Mashable

The Stories Behind The Most Powerful Photos Of 2013 (VIDEO)

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The highs and lows of the year that was 2013 will endure through the powerful photography that captured the triumphs and failures of the human spirit.

HuffPost Live's Josh Zepps gathered the photographers behind these unforgettable shots to hear the stories of the pictures that moved us this year.

BOMBING IN BOSTON
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While millions of Americans stood frozen in front of their televisions, watching the chaos of the Boston Marathon bombing unfold, Boston Globe photographer John Tlumacki was in the thick of the action. From his spot at the marathon's finish line, Tlumacki snapped the above photograph just five seconds after the first bomb exploded.

The photographer described the display of humanity that he witnessed immediately following the carnage following the two explosions. In addition to the Boston paramedics, EMTs and firefighters who were on the scene, victims got a rush of care from caring observers.

"Bystanders leapt over the fence. They were climbing the fence to get at the injured people," Tlumacki said. "I would say within 15 seconds, most of the people on the ground that were injured were being tended to."

As a result of the lightning quick response from professionals and strangers alike, none of the injured people surrounding Tlumacki died in the aftermath of the disaster, he said.


BATKID SAVES THE DAY
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It was a transformation for the ages: Miles Scott changed from a 5-year-old who had battled leukemia into Batkid, a cloaked keeper of peace and justice for the city of San Francisco.

The day of heart-tugging happiness was orchestrated by Patricia Wilson, executive director of Make-A-Wish Foundation Greater Bay Area, who has been granting children's wishes for 15 years. Wilson asked for volunteers and was hoping to assemble a crowd of 200 people to cheer on Batkid as he conquered the city, but her call for help went viral and a wave of tens of thousands of supporters descended on San Francisco.

"I still can't articulate what that was like, to feel the love of that many people in front of city hall," Wilson said.

Wilson said she scoured Twitter that day and marveled at the powerful kindness spreading like wildfire online.

"It was just goodness. It was the day the Internet was nice," Wilson said. "Caring and compassion won the day for sure."


THE LOVE SHE CARRIED
military couple

This unplanned shot went viral this year for its perfect illustration of love conquering all.

Family photographer Sarah Ledford, owner of ShutterHappy Photography, had a photo session with Kelly Cottle, her husband Jesse Cottle and the rest of Kelly's family, which Ledford scheduled at the edge of a river that boasted beautiful scenery but rough terrain. The photographer had no idea that one of her subjects had lost both legs in Afghanistan and wore two prosthetics.

At the end of the shoot, Jesse took off his prosthetics and the entire family hopped into the water for one final shot. Ledford thought she was all done, until she lucked into the perfect moment.

"He jumped on the back of Kelly, and Kelly was hauling him out of the water," Ledford said. "I stopped them and was like, 'No, no, hold on, this is way too cute, I have to capture this.'"

For Ledford, the best part was that a photo that seemed so magical to everyone else was just a typical day for this special couple.

"This was just everyday life for them, and I was capturing who they were in the moment," she said.


DOMA'S DEMISE
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This photo marks the continuing drumbeat of equality that rang across the nation when the Supreme Court struck down the Defense Of Marriage Act this summer.

Same-sex wedding photographers Cindy Brown and Sharon McMahon were in a small Georgia town near Atlanta called Pine Lake when they heard the news, and Brown's reaction was immediate.

"I just ran out into the streets and started screaming and yelling at everybody," she said.

Brown and McMahon went downtown later that day for a celebration of DOMA's demise carrying a "NO H8" sign, and they snapped this moving portrait as a random car passed them by. McMahon said the glory of the day was the love that overflowed among strangers.

"We didn't know one another, but we were hugging. We were just running from one person to the other, from one place to the other," she said. "It was so spontaneous. I think that's what really made it great. People just kept coming in."

Best Foreign Language Oscar Short List Includes Surprise Snubs

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced the nine films eligible for nomination in the Best Foreign Language Film category at 2014's Oscar ceremony. The films are:

"The Broken Circle Breakdown" from Belgium (Felix van Groeningen, director)



"An Episode in the Life of an Iron Picker" from Bosnia and Herzegovina (Danis Tanovic, director)



"The Missing Picture" from Cambodia (Rithy Panh, director)



"The Hunt" from Denmark (Thomas Vinterberg, director)



"Two Lives" from Germany (Georg Maas, director)



"The Grandmaster" from Hong Kong (Wong Kar-wai, director)



"The Notebook" from Hungary (Janos Szasz, director)



"The Great Beauty" from Italy (Paolo Sorrentino, director)



"Omar" from Palestine (Hany Abu-Assad, director)



Films not listed on the Oscars' foreign language short list: France's Palme d'Or winning "Blue is the Warmest Color," which was not eligible for nomination, Chile's "Gloria," Iran's "The Past" and Saudi Arabia's "Wadjda," all of which were eligible. "Wadjda," in particular, was a surprise omission. The film, the first Saudi Arabia feature directed by a woman (Haifaa Al Mansour), was favored to win Best Foreign Language Film at the Oscars. Needless to say, some awards watchers were upset with that snub:




Nominees for the 86th annual Academy Awards will be announced on Jan. 16, 2014.

Watch All The Christmas Movies You Need To See In One Minute

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There's no question that the holiday season is a busy time. With all the eggnog drinking, pie-making and obligatory family gatherings, who has time to sit down and watch every essential holiday movie?

Well, we made it easy for you by squeezing as many holiday favorites as possible in about one minute. From traditional features such as "It's a Wonderful Life" and "A Christmas Story" to modern-day preferences such as "Love Actually" and "Elf," we summarized 11 movies so you don't have to stress about catching them on cable.

Watch the mashup above and get all your required Christmas entertainment over with now (you've got eggnog to drink).

Deaths In 2013: Remembering Those We Lost This Year

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This year, we lost everyone from Hollywood greats to political giants. Ahead, we say goodbye to those who left a cultural mark.

This story appears the special Year in Photos issue of our weekly iPad magazine, Huffington, available Friday, Dec. 27 in the iTunes App store.

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