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All Those Summer Feels That Make Life Worth Living, In 80 Seconds

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Summer is upon us -- the season jam-packed with outdoor fun, bare skin and bliss.

When the childhood nostalgia of having two entire months off from school bubbles up inside of you. When downing a few pints of beer during the afternoon is more than acceptable because you need the extra hydration. When laying outside and letting the sun pour over you is the all the entertainment you need. There's just that special something about summer that makes everything feel... happier.

The Huffington Post set out to encapsulate all of those sensations of summer, so watch the video above for a solid dose of those oh-so-good feels.

Video Produced by Amber Genuske
Graphics and Art by Noelle Campbell and Amber Genuske
Music by Superhuman Happiness

Weird Al's Parodies Juxtaposed With The Real Videos Shows His Incredible Attention To Detail

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It's official. Weird Al's "Mandatory Fun" has become a number one album.

He is unstoppable, but let's not forgot his earlier material.

Weird Al's music videos played side-by-side with the videos they spoof warrants a whole new appreciation for the satirist.

Because if you're going to make fun of something, you better do it right.

If Your Entire 90's Childhood Was A Movie, This Would Be The Trailer

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We know that the 90's was quite an era for pop culture -- who doesn't remember the incessant chatter of a Furby? -- but what if you could see the best of the best items in a feature film?

Well, now you can. Or, at least, you can see the trailer for what would be a hilariously kitschy movie.

In this video, Wil Wheaton compiles all of our nineties favorites into one epic coming attractions reel.

90's kids: revel and rejoice.

Food Blogger Erin Gleeson Shares Her Secrets For Turning Meals Into Works Of Art

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Food blogger Erin Gleeson creates stunning, nature-inspired tableaux that look good enough to eat.

By Abbe Wright


Three years ago, photographer Erin Gleeson and her husband traded cramped New York City living for a cabin about an hour south of San Francisco, nestled in a thicket of redwoods. She began looking for local gigs, but found that potential clients were asking for a California vibe (natural light, rustic styling), not the sleek, spare look of her previous images.

To build a portfolio, Gleeson, 34, launched the food blog the Forest Feast, inventing recipes on the fly with whatever seasonal produce arrived in her weekly CSA (community-supported agriculture) delivery and using her property's lush locales as a backdrop to photograph them. "I have come up with some pretty weird combinations!" Gleeson admits. "Persimmons and cilantro, roasted sunchokes with apples. I'm drawn to color, so I reach for the most vibrant thing in the box and then figure out what other shades and flavors complement it."

Gleeson arranges her simple creations -- strawberry-cucumber salad or figs with goat cheese and mint -- on vintage plates, and then wanders outside until she finds the ideal surface to show them off. "I look for tree stumps, fallen leaves and mossy patches, which turn emerald green after it rains," she says. Then she heads to her home studio to blog, including step-by-step photos of the recipe, fanciful hand lettering, and her own watercolors of the ingredients.

She hopes her charming collage-like posts -- now available in an enticing cookbook, The Forest Feast -- will inspire more off-the-cuff seasonal cooking. "First I want to draw people in because the recipe looks gorgeous," she says, "then have them realize they can pull it off with just a handful of fresh ingredients!"

Flip through the slideshow below for some of Gleeson's most inspiring creations.



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Here Are Some Liquid Ink Nudes For Your Viewing Pleasure (NSFW)

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Here at the Huffington Post Arts&Culture, there are two categories of images that our audience seems to find particularly hard to resist. The first is a particular brand of underwater ink photography that possesses the uncanny ability to stop time with the click of a camera. The second, you guessed it, are nudes.

Well, dear readers, consider today your lucky day, because we're bringing you the unprecedented melding of these two artistic genres. Digital artist Alberto Seveso has created a hypnotic series of painterly nudes, combining the sensuous curves of the human form with the enchanting visual effects of pure pigment in motion.

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In an email to the Huffington Post Seveso described himself as the "King of Photoshop when it comes to fluid paint swirl and sperm-shape layered portraits." We can't really argue with that. Seveso explained his passion for graphic design stems back to childhood, when he was captivated by skate deck graphics and the album art adorning 90s metal band CDs. Over time, this interest in psychedelic imagery translated to experimenting with digital imagery like few other had done before.

The series below, titled "Trivial Expose," is, as far as we're concerned, the ultimate visual guilty pleasure. Scroll down and enjoy the sacred internet space where nude bodies meet dreamlike ribbons of color and smoke. And, be warned, although generally abstract, the images still get a bit NSFW.

Artist 'Stitches' Faces Together To Create Eerily Normal Looking People

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It's obvious the subjects in the photo series Metamorfoza are not quite...right. But they're not as off as you'd think, considering the methods employed by Ino Zeljak, the Zagreb-based student behind the project.

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Using Photoshop, Zeljak merged portraits of two different people shot in similar lighting conditions. To do so, he overlapped the images, often duplicating one person's hair and clothing to share between the two. Some of the pairs were genetically related, others were strangers.

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In an email to HuffPost, Zeljak said he was trying to show the range of possibility in the human face. The effect is startling. You think you're viewing a standard portrait, "but when you look at it a bit closer you see something different and strange."

Combining Images Across Time And Place To Tell A Single Story

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This piece originally appeared on Slate.


By James Emmerman

David Hilliard’s vibrant, multipanel images find a delicate and unique balance between fact and fiction. Combining frames from his four-by-five view camera shot at different times, Hilliard creates composite panoramic images that are seemingly fluid, but instead form a narrative that shifts between time and place. These escapist photographs focus on the ideas of masculinity, identity, and personal relationships through a cinematic style of portraiture.

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“Photography, with all of its mechanical dumbness, is believable, right? But when you piece [images] together, there is a lot happening between the moments that you just don’t know. It could be a day or a second. That was amazing to me when I first started to figure it out,” Hilliard said. “[This style] seemed to be the best of everything. It could be cinematic, it could be photographic, it could be fiction, and it could be performance.”

Although both his father and grandfather were hobbyist photographers—his father even cut and pasted photos together in a similar style—he wasn’t always interested in photography. Hilliard was inspired by an attempt to rise out of the boredom of his lower-middle-class suburban childhood in Lowell, Massachusetts, and he originally attended Massachusetts College of Art and Design in the late ’80s as a film student.

“My films were very static. I realized my favorite parts were the most mundane, when I would linger on an object, because I liked to stare at something rather than move through it,” Hilliard said. “It was politely suggested that I was in the wrong department.”

Thus Hilliard came to photography and the multipanel style. Later, while getting his MFA at Yale, he studied with photographers who shot in the panoramic style, and he gradually honed the technical aspect of the medium. The growth of his personal connection, which has kept him shooting in the medium, began around the same time with one of his first three-panel images.

“When I was in college I made a triptych of my parents, the three of us having dinner together. But my parents had been divorced for years and they would never be in the same room,” Hilliard said.

It shows Hilliard in the center with his mother and father in separate panels on either side.

“I loved it. It was so empowering for me to create this theater. And in the end it was a truth, in that I wish it could’ve been that way, but it wasn’t,” Hilliard said. “It was almost like I created this therapeutic photograph that acted as closure.”

Hilliard’s intimate association with this style of work is still very present. The vague, elusive narratives are a careful look at the human condition in which viewers can project their own experience.

“If you break [my photographs] down, yes, they are different moments in time. But I don’t know if I think that much about it. It’s just about delivering an identity. It’s about leaving the viewer with a feeling,” Hilliard said. “My work, I hope, at its best, strikes a balance between a truth and fiction. In the end it’s a truth, but there is an element of theater that leads to that truth.”

Minor Matters Books will publish Hilliard’s newest monograph, What Could Be, in November. The semi-autobiographical book looks at different pockets of his work focusing specifically on family, personal discovery, and the nuances of masculinity.

A selection of his photographs will also be on display at the Schoolhouse Gallery in Provincetown, Massachusetts, from Aug. 29 to Sept. 17. See more photos on Slate.

This Is What The World Looks Like, According To Quantum Mechanics

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The realm of quantum mechanics tells us that humans experience 40 conscious moments per second. These individual frames, or sequences of "now," amount to the way we perceive time flow. We don't realize the gaps in between these conscious moments, hence the fluid movement of our lives.

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While we live in the vivid frames that make up our experiences, one artist has attempted to capture the gaps -- or blinks -- in between the 40 moments. In a project that seems to stall time while illuminating its flip book-like passing, Isabel M. Martinez catches the hiccups of everyday perception in her stunning series "Quantum Blink."

The photos are constructed from two separate exposures, snapped only instants apart. The people inside the "frames" are acting out daily rituals, crossing the street or zipping a jacket, and seem caught in a state of unreality. Rather than simply stuck in one specific moment, the subjects appear somewhere in between the sequences of activity and the blinking millisecond of stopped time.

"I am looking for the line that divides the finite (probability) from the infinite (possibility)," Chilean-born Martinez writes. "If time is a succession of instants, I want to see what lies in between them. I am after the gaps between instants of consciousness." The striped pattern we see in the portraits "is the result of masks placed in-camera," Martinex adds. "This feature allows me to blend two images together and at the same time keep them from fully fusing onto one another."

Resembling a punctured piece of film, the photos are nearly incomprehensible as solid snapshots, mimicking the ins and outs of entropy. While it's not precisely what the world might look like in a quantum vision, the work is a slightly startling project that forces the viewer to decipher what's real and what's imagined, effortlessly urging us to reconsider the anatomy of a second.


Artist Launches Bonsai Trees And Other Lovely Plant Arrangements Into Space

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We've heard that outer space is, visually speaking, a pretty majestic experience. Yet although the galaxy beyond is undoubtedly filled with stars and misty clouds for days, there aren't any decorative touches around to spruce up the space.

Enter Tokyo-based artist Azuma Makoto, aka the official interior decorator of outer space. For Makoto's recent artistic endeavor, entitled "EXOBIOTANICA," he launched a 50-year-old Japanese white pine bonsai, along with an arrangement of orchids, hydrangeas, lilies and irises, into the great beyond.

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The carefully arranged greenery was expelled from planet earth from Black Rock Desert, Nevada -- also the location of the Burning Man Festival. The whole project was taped, thanks to the six GoPro cameras strapped to the balloons which carried the plants. As you could probably guess, the juxtaposition of crisp floral arrangement and the empty wilderness of outer space is a surreal sight to behold.

"I went to Amazon, Brazil last year and created art pieces with plants that were full of aliveness in dense forest where I could hear groan from the earth," the artist explained to the Huffington Post. "This was a mind-blowing experience since I really felt that I was arranging the plants onto the earth. For this EXOBIOTANICA project, one of my inspiration sources was curiosity – I asked myself, 'what would it happen when I arrange plants on the globe, from up in the sky?' as a concept that is completely opposite of what I did in Brazil."

The goal was simple: "I wanted to explore how flowers and plants would bloom, decay and change outside of the earth. I wanted to seek and tell how their beauties will look with the earth as its background."

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Before actually launching the flora into outer space, Makoto, in collaboration with John Powell of JP Aerospace, "experimented number of times under low-temperature and did rehearsals for camera’s angles beforehand so that we would able to estimate what would happen to some extent." Despite all the preparations that took place, nothing could predict the staggering beauty that results from the strange and enchanting vision of a domesticated floral arrangement floating through the unbridled Milky Way.

Now that he's tackled outer space, Makoto has set his sights on artistic destinations closer to planet earth, though just as visually compelling. "For the next steps I would like to try various conditions such as the bottom of the sea, volcano, the Arctic and the Antarctic to see what kind of expressions flowers and plants would display. These challenging concepts make me excited by only thinking about it." We cannot wait to see where Makoto brings his lucky bouquets next.

See the breathtaking photos below and let us know your thoughts in the comments:

Forget Selfies, Dronies Are The New Must-Take Travel Photo

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Selfies are so last season.

Meet "dronies," the cooler, more adventurous, amped-up sibling of the oft-maligned selfie.

A "dronie" is basically a selfie from the sky, taken not at arm's length from your smartphone but from an uber-cool drone that flies above you, photographing not only your face, but your (hopefully) beautiful surroundings.

According to The Telegraph, "dronies" are best taken as short videos, rather than single images. "Dronies" are even being encouraged by the New Zealand Tourism Board, which is piloting drones on ski runs to photograph skiers and snowboarders.

The "dronies" are then sent to the skier or boarder's phone, ready to be shared with friends, like the video below.



So yea. It's a thing. See?















Are you ready to take a "dronie"?

Monsoon Rivers, Flying Carpets And Nations Mourn MH17: Week In Photos, Jul. 20 - 27

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Nothing quite compares to the power of a photograph to communicate the goings on in the world. Ranging from the serious to the silly, these photos offer peeks into what happened around the globe this week.

1. Dutch military men carry a coffin containing the body of a victim of downed Malaysia Airlines flight MH17, during a ceremony at Eindhoven Airbase on July 23, 2014.
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(JOHN THYS/AFP/Getty Images)

2. Palestinians help a wounded man to the emergency room at Nasser hospital following an Israeli airstrike in Khan Younis, south Gaza on July 24, 2014.
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(AP Photo/Hatem Ali)

3. England's Jodie Stimpson puts on her shoes for the running phase of the Women's Triathlon during the 2014 Commonwealth Games at Strathclyde Country Park near Glasgow on July 24, 2014.
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(BEN STANSALL/AFP/Getty Images)

4. Supporters of Joko Widodo, the new president-elect of Indonesia, cheer at an election victory rally on July 23, 2014 in Jakarta, Indonesia.
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(Ed Wray/Getty Images)

5. Banana trees are blown down in the Neihu district as Typhoon Matmo passes the city on July 23, 2014 in Taipei, Taiwan.
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(Ashley Pon/Getty Images)

6. Israeli soldiers prepare their tanks in a deployment area on July 24, 2014 on Israel's border with the Gaza Strip.
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(Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)

7. Investigators search through the site where TransAsia Airways flight GE222 crashed the night before, near the airport at Magong on July 24, 2014 in Penghu Island, Taiwan.
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(Ashley Pon/Getty Images)

8. German pianist Stefan Aaron takes off from Munich airport in Germany on a "flying carpet" attached to a helicopter on July 23, 2014.
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(CHRISTOF STACHE/AFP/Getty Images)

9. President of Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region Massoud Barzani meets with United Nations Chief Ban Ki-moon upon his arrival in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdish region of northern Iraq, on July 24, 2014.

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(SAFIN HAMED/AFP/Getty Images)

10. Indian villagers cross the river Baitarani in a boat after it was flooded following monsoon rains near Akhuapada in Jajpur distict of Orissa state, India on July 23, 2014.
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(AP Photo/Biswaranjan Rout)

All The Awesome Cosplay From Comic-Con 2014 So Far

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It's only Day 3 of San Diego Comic-Con, but the convention has already blessed us with so much. There was a really happy Benedict Cumberbatch, a hilarious "Game of Thrones" blooper reel and some really excited "Teen Wolf" fans. But the best thing about Comic-Con is always the cosplay. From Batman and Bane to Wario, fans dressed up as everything you can imagine. Check out the best cosplay from this year's convention so far:

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'Batman V Superman' Comic-Con Footage Called 'Epic,' 'Dope'

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At last year's Comic-Con festivities, Warner Bros. waited until the end of its Saturday afternoon panel in Hall H of the San Diego Convention Center to officially announce Zack Snyder's Batman versus Superman film. This year, the studio surprised attendees by putting what is now called "Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice" at the beginning of its Comic-Con presentation. Snyder and stars Ben Affleck (Batman), Henry Cavill (Superman) and Gal Gadot (Wonder Woman) made brief appearances on the Comic-Con stage, and Snyder screened a short teaser for the 2016 release. Below, find a compilation of tweets from journalists in attendance at the Warner Bros. panel. "Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice" is out in theaters on May 6, 2016.

































This Is Wonder Woman's 'Batman V Superman' Costume

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During Saturday afternoon's Warner Bros. panel at San Diego Comic-Con, the studio debuted first footage from "Batman V Superman: Dawn Of Justice" and a glimpse at Wonder Woman's costume in the forthcoming superhero feature. Shortly after the presentation, director Zack Snyder posted a sneak peak at the iconic comic-book heroine's new look on Twitter and Imgur:



Gal Gadot is playing Wonder Woman in "Batman V Superman" opposite Ben Affleck (as Batman) and Henry Cavill (as Superman). "Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice" is out on May 6, 2016.

King Kong Skull Island Movie Announced During Comic-Con

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During the Legendary Pictures panel at San Diego Comic-Con on Saturday, the production company announced plans to bring King Kong back to the multiplex.






In a press release following the panel, Legendary elaborated on the feature, which does not yet have a director attached:

Previous works have touched on the island, but staying and exploring this mysterious and dangerous place offers Legendary the opportunity to take audiences deeper inside this rich world with a style and scope that parallels other Legendary productions. The film will be released on November 4, 2016.


The company screened a short teaser for the Skull Island movie during the panel:




But most journalists in attendance took the announcement as a sign of one thing: an eventual movie featuring a battle between King Kong and Godzilla. (Legendary is also the production company in charge of Godzilla's big-screen fortunes.)







Legendary's "Godzilla" sequel will arrive in theaters after director Gareth Edwards finishes work on his "Star Wars" spinoff.




King Kong, meanwhile, last appeared onscreen in 2005's "King Kong," which was directed by Peter Jackson.

A Very Small Amount Of 'Ant-Man' Footage Just Screened At Comic-Con

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Marvel Studios brought the cast and director of "Ant-Man" to Hall H of the San Diego Convention Center during the studio's Saturday night Comic-Con panel. Actors Paul Rudd and Michael Douglas and director Peyton Reed were in attendance, as too were co-stars Corey Stoll (who plays the film's villain, Yellowjacket) and Evangeline Lilly (who plays Douglas' onscreen daughter, Hope Van Dyne). Stoll and Lilly had long been rumored for the film, but their involvement was made official by Marvel on Saturday.

"We've been fans of Evangeline for years, and couldn't be more pleased that she’s agreed to join us on Ant-Man's journey to the big screen," Marvel Studios head Kevin Feige said in a statement. "We look forward to audiences learning more about her character when she joins forces with Hank Pym and Scott Lang in 2015."

In addition to the cast, Marvel showed off a brief teaser of test footage from "Ant-Man" to the Comic-Con crowds. Production on the film, which is set for release on July 17, 2015, doesn't begin until August. A smattering of reactions to the footage is below:























Edgar Wright was famously attached to directed "Ant-Man" for years, but he left the project in May because of creative differences with Marvel. Reed took his place a few days later.

"It's all working out very well. They couldn't be more enthusiastic now for where the movie is headed under Peyton's direction," Feige told HuffPost Entertainment in a recent interview. "Yeah, there was a certain amount of shock and disappoint, as there was for all of us, when we parted ways with Edgar. But they're all professionals and all excited for the film and for the ideas behind the film and for where we're taking the film. Now it is an awesome and unified cast and crew moving forward."

As many observers noted, however, Lilly revealed during the panel that she had not yet read a script for the film. That will likely change soon, as "Ant-Man" is due out in less than a year.

'Avengers' 2 Comic-Con Footage Offers 'Darker,' 'Incredible' Look At 'Age Of Ultron'

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During Marvel's Comic-Con panel on Saturday night at the San Diego Convention Center, studio boss Kevin Feige and the cast of "Marvel's The Avengers: Age of Ultron" unveiled new footage from the forthcoming sequel. The follow-up to "Marvel's The Avengers," the 2012 blockbuster that earned more than $1.5 billion in worldwide grosses, is set for release on May 1, 2015. Joss Whedon, who was not present at Comic-Con because he recently underwent knee surgery, is the film's director. Needless to say, journalists and fans in attendance for the Marvel presentation were impressed with the footage. A compilation of their enthusiastic tweets are below.
















































"Marvel's The Avengers: Age of Ultron" reassembles Avengers superheroes Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr.), Thor (Chris Hemsworth), Captain America (Chris Evans), Hulk (Mark Ruffalo), Hawkeye (Jeremy Renner) and Black Widow (Scarlett Johansson), while also introducing Scarlet Witch (Elizabeth Olsen) and Quicksilver (Aaron Taylor-Johnson) to the mix. James Spader is set to play the villainous Ultron in the film.

In addition to the footage from "Marvel's The Avengers: Age of Ultron," Marvel also announced official casting for "Ant-Man" and revealed that "Guardians of the Galaxy 2" would arrive in theaters on July 28, 2017.

7 Reasons Why Cottage-Style Homes Are The Best Kinds Of Homes

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From their quaint porches to their often-enchanting surroundings, there is just so much to love about a cottage. Let us count the ways...

All photos from our friends at Porch.com.


Have something to say? Check out HuffPost Home on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

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Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line "Project submission." (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

After Dark: Randy Barbato & Fenton Bailey, AKA The Fabulous Pop Tarts

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This is the eleventh installment in HuffPost Gay Voices Associate Editor James Nichols' ongoing series "After Dark: NYC Nightlife Today And Days Past" that examines the state of New York nightlife in the modern day, as well as the development and production of nightlife over the past several decades. Each featured individual in this series currently serves as a prominent person in the New York nightlife community or has made important contributions in the past that have sustained long-lasting impacts.

HuffPost Gay Voices believes that it is important and valuable to elevate the work, both today and in the past, of those engaged in the New York nightlife community, especially in an age where queer history seems to be increasingly forgotten. Nightlife not only creates spaces for queers and other marginalized groups to be artistically and authentically celebrated, but the work of those involved in nightlife creates and shapes the future of our culture as a whole. Visit Gay Voices regularly to learn not only about individuals currently making an impact in nightlife, but those whose legacy has previously contributed to the ways we understand queerness, art, identity and human experience today.


The Huffington Post: How did The Fabulous Pop Tarts, your disco-pop-rock duo, develop during the height of New York nightlife in the '80s and '90s?
Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey: The two of us met at NYU film school and started collaborating on films together. We were living in the East Village in the '80s and The Fabulous Pop Tarts was an extension of that lifestyle. Everything we made -- music, videos, posters -- was under the banner of World of Wonder. When we realized we weren't going to get a record label we started our own: World of Wonder records. At the time there was a real can-do spirit -- that's what Downtown was all about. All of these creative people were living in this burnt-out, cracked-out neighborhood and making art, music, opening clubs and launching magazines. It was a hotbed of creativity and, more specifically, a ferment of entrepreneurialism.

We had a backstage pass to all of this. And we sang about it: We played CBGBs dressed head-to-toe in Coca Cola clothing (back when Coke started its clothing line -- which of course we loved) and sang a song called "Drink Coca Cola" -- not because we especially liked Coke but because this was the birth of the brand age. And not just for rich people who could afford them, but for everyone.

In retrospect, the early '80s was a cultural crossroads; this was when the underground hitherto defiant in its separateness went for -- to quote one of our own songs -- "Money Success Fame Glamour." Nightlife was the great networking mixer that brought uptown and downtown together, that brought the establishment into contact with the anti-establishment. And so out of that you have Madonna, Koons, Haring, Mapplethorpe, Dee Lite, They Might Be Giants, Karen Finley and many many more. A starburst of artists literally exploding out of this ghetto.



How would you describe the work the two of you produced during your time as The Fabulous Pop Tarts?
Well, we saw ourselves as a cross between The Pet Shop Boys and ELO, and I'm not sure the world was ready for that.

Ginger Canzoneri -- one of our many long-suffering managers -- called up Seymour Stein (the man who signed Madonna) who reportedly barked at her, "Haven't you ever heard of the Pet Shop Boys?" and slammed down the phone. Maybe there were similarities. We were far campier and more outré than the PSB, who were models of discretion and therefore more marketable. More talented too, possibly!

Our first single was "New York City Beat." It didn't do much. But 25 years later -- seriously, a quarter of a century -- Armand Van Helden sampled the chorus and had a hit with it. We first learned about this song when RuPaul heard his version in the trailer for The Zohan movie and told us about it. None of us could believe it! So we did have a hit in the end. We heard a rumor that Ru and Michelle Visage are doing a re-record of the track as well... so the Pop Tarts live on! [laughs]

How did your duo intersect with Club Kid culture? Did they inform and shape one another in any way?
We were slightly older than the club kids, euphemistically speaking. And we also had daytime jobs -- Fenton on Wall Street and Randy on Madison Avenue. So we could never do the night club thing full-time and, although for many years we burned the candle at both ends, we are always slightly outside of things.

Now around the time that Michael Alig launched Disco 2000 we did a night, also at the Limelight, called Flaunt It! TV. The idea was we would tape a show at the club and then show it on public access TV. We had Quentin Crisp, Sigue Sigue Sputnik and some other guests. Producing a TV show and a club night while holding down a day job proved a little overwhelming. Although it was short lived, it did inspire our move into television.

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How did the two of you transition from making music as The Fabulous Pop Tarts into founding World of Wonder? What was your original intention in creating the production company?
Well, we were never going to win "American Idol" for our voices. We were always interested in the total package: the looks, the clothes, the album design, the graphics, the posters, the merchandise. Pop was a delightful package that, at its best, could sum up, celebrate and parody consumer culture. So we made our own videos and even got them on MTV.

Meanwhile we were obsessed by Manhattan public access, which we watched religiously. The idea of anyone making their own television shows and having them broadcast was just so wild. Robyn Bird, Al Goldstein, Mrs Mouth, Rick X -- these were our inspirations. We were in London recording a Pop Tarts album (having finally secured that major record deal!), and we really missed those whacky shows, so we pitched the idea of a clip show bringing Brits the best and worst of New York's public access. It was called Manhattan Cable. This was a million years before the Internet and now you would call these clips viral videos and watch them on YouTube. If only we had thought of THAT!

How did you transition from creating content for a specific community, heavily rooted in nightlife, to creating content for a more mainstream audience? How did you adapt?
That's just the thing. There was no transition. We never changed a thing -- the audience did. Remember the scandal when Versace created a couture safety pin dress? Punk, S&M... all these ideas on the outer edges of society end up drifting towards the center. Yesterday's shock is tomorrow's yawn. Now there's always a lot of handwringing about how this is the end of Western civilization, but on we go. We call it the MBMC - the Madonna, Britney, Miley Continuum.

It's worth pointing out that "Big Freedia Queen of Bounce" on Fuse and "RuPaul's Drag Race" on Logo are not only the #1 shows on their networks, they are also the most watched shows in the entire history of those networks. And the point is not to boast; it took years -- many years -- to get those shows on the air, and Ru and Freedia have been laying the groundwork for a long time. And during that time the audience has changed. The mainstream is ready for drag queens, twerkers -- and more.

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How prominent or influential do you feel your time as The Fabulous Pop Tarts was to work that you produce today?
Well, once you have performed and dressed as a potted Poinsettia in red and green lamé in the front window of a clothing store on Broadway, you tend to have less shame. That's proved useful.

And we met so many people then who became good friends and collaborators: RuPaul, Lady Bunny, Mathu Andersen, James St James, Thairin Smothers, Stephen Saban, Gabriel Rotello, Michelangelo Signorile, Trey Speegle, Laurie Pike, Zaldy, Tish and Snooky... It seems unfair to name some and not all but they and many others have been so inspiring to us.

How would you say nightlife today differs from your time as The Fabulous Pop Tarts and prominent figures in the scene? In what way do you think nightlife has been shaped and augmented by technology?
Technology has transformed nightlife the way it has transformed so many things. It has gone virtual. You don't have to go to a bar to meet people. Hello, Grindr.

One of the first things we did as producers was to create all of the video installations for Club USA. Club USA in the heart of Times Square was a fabulous high concept folly. Times Square itself had finally -- after countless attempts -- pulled off a Renaissance by going for a kind of "Bladerunner" look of screens everywhere. Instead of trying to be all classy and chi-chi it went for blaring, crass and garish. Michael Alig and Peter Gatien created Club USA to riff off of this energy. What they created wasn't necessarily a great nightclub but a suitably monstrous installation announcing the advent of the Screen Age.

Because we've been increasingly glued to our screens ever since.



What can we expect from the two of you and World of Wonder in the future?
A lot of people who enjoy "Drag Race" also like "#Candidly Nicole," also like "Big Freedia," also like "Million Dollar Listings," also like "Life With LaToya." But they have to watch them all on different channels. So they don't necessarily know that they are all World of Wonder shows. As a result of that we are putting a lot of energy into our YouTube Channel WOW Presents where you can experience many members of the family in one place. We are also building a multi-channel network where some of the amazing people we have worked with have their own YouTube channel. And you can read all about that at the WOW REPORT written by Party Monster author James St James, Trey Speegle and others.

So, really, you can expect more of everything. The very first time we ever saw RuPaul he was wheatpasting pictures of himself all over Atlanta that said "RuPaul Is Everything." What, at the time, seemed a brassy hyperbole has proven to be prescient.

Because today we are all Everything. We are all brands. And not just artists and celebrities -- all of us.

That original punk promise of Manhattan Cable is being made good on: You can have your own TV channel on YouTube. Yes, Kodak has gone bankrupt but without a doubt this is a golden age of photography. Just look at people's Instagram accounts.

This is the golden age of content.

Check out the slideshow below to view the other installments in this series. For more from Randy Barbato and Fenton Bailey keep up with World of Wonder production company here.

Furniture Designed To Look And Feel Like Human Skin (PHOTOS)

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You should always love the skin you're in. And now, you can love the skin you're sitting in.

UK artist Gigi Barker has created a line of furniture made to look, feel and smell like human skin.

There is, as New York Magazine reports, "a chair meant to mimic a squishy roll of fat and footstools that resemble deformed testes."

Story continues after crazy furniture ...


The furniture has been infused with human pheromones and aftershave.

Barker tells WIRED that some of her art's most enthusiastic fans are youngsters.

"Children have been one of the most interesting demographics in relation to the work," Barker said. "Without any of the hang ups we later develop, they are free to truly explore and interact with the work. Work regarding the human body is very personal and we all have a very immediate reaction to it so the reactions have reflected this."



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But those looking to take home Barker's deformed testicle footstools may be in for some sticker shock.

The stool alone costs about $775 and the skin chair will run you close to $2,550, according to WIRED.

Barker's designs are somewhat like full-size versions of artist Jessica Harrison's miniature skin furniture creations that Geekologie wrote about in April of last year.
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