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Ben Affleck Talks About Going Full Frontal In 'Gone Girl'

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Fans awaiting the release of "Gone Girl" may be surprised by one particular inclusion in the film: a full-frontal shot of Ben Affleck.

"Is this the debut of Ben Affleck's penis on-screen?" MTV's Josh Horowitz asked the star during a recent interview.

"I try to get it in every movie," Affleck joked before talking about the importance director David Fincher placed on letting it all hang out, literally. "There may be some very brief nudity," he said. Watch the interaction below.

“Gone Girl” opens in theaters on Oct. 3.

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Bette Davis Skewers Sexism In Unheard Interview From 1963

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When film legend Bette Davis (1908 - 1989) sat down with entertainment journalist Shirley Eder to discuss the sexes, the year was 1963, and Davis was smack in the middle of her career. But even today, her words remain as relevant as if she said them yesterday.

In this previously unheard interview -- resurrected and animated for the PBS series "Blank on Blank" -- Davis reflects on being a woman in a male-dominated industry and remarks on the obstacles facing intelligent, independent women in the workplace.

"As a female, I think [intelligence] is a terrible hindrance in business," she says. "I think it’s a terrible hindrance for any female to have a lot of intelligence in private life. But I think in business sometimes it’s even worse because there’s deep resentment ... from the male side of the business. We all work for men, you know, they’re the people in charge, and I think they find women easier who haven’t the ability to think for themselves or stand up for themselves. One can make more enemies as a female with a brain, I think."

Davis also calls for men to elevate their views of independent women.

"I think men have got to change an awful lot," she says. "I think, somehow, they still prefer the little woman. They’re just staying way, way behind. ... As a rule, I think millions of women are very happy to be by themselves. They’re so bored with the whole business of trying to be the little woman, when no such thing really exists anymore. ... This world’s gone way beyond it."

She even points to the lack of female-focused characters and plots in entertainment, an issue that continues to receive attention today.

"There’s no writing for women anymore," says Davis. "This is the truth. ... Women are the essential part of the theater but the writers are not writing about women."

Check out the video above to hear more from the interview.

Lena Dunham Says She'll Pay Acts On Book Tour

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This is what happens when you call out Lena Dunham. The "Girls" star, who is kicking off a huge book tour in support of "Not That Kind of Girl," was criticized on Monday after it was reported she was not paying artists who are performing during her tour events. In response, Dunham confirmed via Twitter that she is now compensating all the performers and also took a shot at Gawker for posting an article that revealed how much she was making on the tour.

After writing "some good points were raised" and she would ensure "all opening acts would be compensated for their time," Dunham posted this:




Before announcing that performers would be paid, Dunham had gathered a variety of opening acts through an open call on her website. The New York Times reported the acts were originally performing for free.

In the end, Dunham seemed pretty sympathetic to the whole situation:




Season 4 of "Girls" premieres in 2015 on HBO. Dunham's book is out now.

Here's The Real Reason Mila Kunis Became The Voice Of Meg Griffin

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"Family Guy" wouldn't quite be the same without Mila Kunis voicing the family black sheep, Meg Griffin.

But if not for a contract mistake, that might have never happened.

Originally, "Mean Girls" star Lacey Chabert was cast in the role of Meg, but since she reportedly wasn't under contract for the entire series run, she chose to leave after the first season. Rumors ran wild that Chabert had a falling out with the show, perhaps partly fueled by this exchange in an episode from Season 8 :



Though that seems pretty straight forward, the actress cleared up any controversy an interview with GameSpy:

GameSpy: Does this mean you have a grudge against Mila Kunis, who does her voice now, and if so, can this be settled in a game of Sonic the Hedgehog?

Lacey Chabert: No, I actually left the show of my own accord. And only because I was in school and doing Party Of Five at the time. But I think the show is hilarious, and don't have a grudge against her at all. I think she's a great actress.


Then, in an interview with IGN, "Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane stated that the reason for Chabert leaving was definitely a contract issue ... probably:

I think there was a mistake in her contract, and I guess she had not intended to be involved for, like, the full run of the show. I don’t even remember. To be honest, I don’t really, to this day, know what it was. It was nothing –- there was no tension or anything.


MacFarlane would go on to say that Chabert did a phenomenal job, but Kunis was "more right for the character."

So there you have it. "Family Guy" fans can thank a contract mistake for Kunis becoming the voice of Meg, thus further ensuring that the word "Fetch" would never become a thing.

tv show gifs

H/T Uproxx

This Surreal Look At Burning Man Will Make You Long For The Mystical Desert

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The many sights, sounds and feelings experienced at Burning Man can be too much for any one festivalgoer to process. The dusty, alien world is so surreal, in fact, it often cannot be described in words.

Fortunately, participant and photographer Ari Fararooy brought his camera to the event in the Black Rock Desert of Nevada to convey the experience through images.

"The whole week felt like a really trippy, lucid dream," says Fararooy in the video description. "I was so busy exploring and meeting people that I barely took my camera out (hence the minute long video)."

Though nothing could match the actual experience of being there, this video's slow movements over the artworks and costumed Burners, overlapped with the sounds of a didgeridoo, offer a small window into the unique pop-up city on the Playa.

Check out some of Fararooy's Instagram pictures from the event, below:
















Kevin Spacey Unveils 'Frank Underwood's Guide to Philanthropy' Between Songs

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WASHINGTON -- Rarely do leaders from both parties come together to support one cause, but if "House of Cards" has taught us anything, it's that nothing stops Frank Underwood from getting what he wants.

Thus it came as no surprise that everyone from second lady Jill Biden and House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) to House Majority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and Rep. Aaron Shock (R-Ill.) descended upon Sidney Harman Hall on Monday night to support Kevin Spacey, who plays Underwood in the Netflix series. The occasion was a concert to benefit Spacey's foundation for the performing arts. Hoyer and McCarthy, whom Spacey said were "instrumental" in his research for the role of Underwood, were honorary co-chairs of the event.

Despite battling a cold, the Oscar-winning actor enthralled a packed crowd of nearly 800 while performing a range of classic songs, including "Fly Me to the Moon," "Bridge Over Troubled Water" and "Luck Be a Lady." Spacey also brought his Washington alter ego with him, welcoming the audience to "an evening to benefit the Frank Underwood super PAC."

"I do apologize if you were misinformed about the intentions of this occasion," he said in Underwood's Southern accent, a move that won him instant laughter and applause.

Aside from a few jokes, Spacey mainly assumed the character between songs to offer "pearls of wisdom" collected from two seasons of playing the ambitious House majority whip-turned-president. He tied the spirit behind a number of Underwood quotes to his nonprofit foundation, which fosters emerging talent in the performing arts through scholarships and grants. From what he called "Frank Underwood’s Guide to Philanthropy," he offered such advice as, "If you don’t like how the table is set, turn over the table," "Generosity is its own form of power," and "Power is a lot like real estate. It’s all about location, location, location. The closer you are to the source, the higher your property value."

The crowd responded enthusiastically each and every time Spacey spoke as Underwood, a testament to the popularity of "House of Cards" in the nation's capital -- despite the tendency among politicos to criticize its portrayal of Washington. Spacey acknowledged that irony and noted that Hoyer and McCarthy, despite having helped him with the role, later went on to criticize the show.

"You’ve got to give credit to the power of Frank Underwood to get both sides of the House to agree on something," he quipped.

After a brief intermission, Spacey reappeared with a harmonica for a rendition of Billy Joel’s "Piano Man," which was undoubtedly his most well-received bit. The audience erupted into cheers from the moment he began the song on his harmonica, which Spacey said he hadn't learned how to play until just days before the concert.

Another highlight came in the form of his fellow actor and friend Jeff Goldblum, who surprised the audience by performing a duet with Spacey to "Me and My Shadow" and accompanying him on the piano for Lionel Richie’s "All Night Long." Dancing around the stage himself, Spacey added lines of his own, telling the audience to "Dance like Beyoncé! Dance like Nancy Pelosi!"

Short films between the live acts served as reminders of what the evening was really about, showcasing young students whom the Kevin Spacey Foundation had helped to pursue their dreams as actors, singers and dancers. Funding for art programs is often among the first items on the chopping block as governments grapple with budget cuts, and Spacey later told The Huffington Post that he hoped to raise awareness of why art matters before an audience that could make a difference.

"Look, there are some who believe that arts and culture are a luxury and that we can do without it, and there are others who believe, like I do, that it's a vital part of our lives," said Spacey, who noted that in 2011 he delivered the Nancy Hanks Lecture on Arts and Public Policy with a similar message. (Back then, he declared, "The real question is not whether we as a nation can afford to continue to support the arts, but whether we can afford not to.")

"I hope that more and more will begin to realize that these are vital parts of our lives," Spacey said. "These are the things that we have shared experiences about and we talk about culturally -- music, dance, theater, film, television. This is what people are passionate about."

The tagline of Spacey's foundation, "Sending the elevator back down," is a phrase he picked up from Jack Lemmon, the legendary actor who was a mentor and close friend. Asked by HuffPost what those words meant to him, Spacey described the idea as something far beyond simply giving money.

"It's when I'm in a workshop and I see that kid in a corner who is really shy and wants to be involved but doesn't know how or maybe is a little scared," Spacey said. "I was that kid, and I want that kid to have an experience of realizing something about themselves that they didn't know that they were capable of, that they could stand in front of their peers and experience something, share something, find a level of confidence they didn't know they had. That's the moment I live for, because that was me."

"I think any teacher will talk about that happening in a classroom, when you see a child suddenly figure it out," he added. "It's an extraordinary thing, it's the most powerful thing in the world, and it's really tiny -- but for them it's gigantic. And I'll never forget when that happened to me."

Stevie Nicks' New Track 'Mabel Normand' Is A Brutal Look At 'What Drugs Can Do To You'

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Stevie Nicks' new album, "24 Karat Gold," is made up of "songs from the vault," tracks she wrote in the '70s and '80s, but never fully recorded or released. In video commentary for the track "Mabel Normand," debuting at HuffPost Entertainment, Nicks explains how and why she wrote the dramatic song about Normand, a silent movie star who died in 1930.

Nicks was inspired by the actress after she saw a documentary, which portrayed Normand's life as a cocaine addict. "She was really walking on the edge for a lot of her life," Nicks said. "And I was walking on the edge, too." She wrote the track in 1985 and remembered, "1984 into 1985 was a dangerous year in my life. I definitely could have died."

Nicks tried and tried to get this song made, but said no one could tackle it until now. "It was really important to me to get this song out. It's really about what drugs can do to you." Nicks explained how the song and Normand made her realize it was time to kick her own drug habit and go to rehab: "I, unlike Mabel, managed to get a hold of it."

Listen to the song and hear more of Nicks' brutally honest commentary:





Stevie Nicks' "24 Karat Gold: Songs From The Vault" comes out on Oct. 7.

These Bridesmaids Photos Are A Train Wreck, And We Just Can't Look Away

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They say that a bride is supposed to be the center of attention at her wedding -- but, really, how could you ever compete with these bridesmaids?

BuzzFeed has compiled an amazing array of ridiculously strange bridesmaid snapshots, courtesy of Awkward Family Photos. The clip includes (but is obviously not limited to) pictures of Arctic-themed outfits, porcupine headdresses and a "shotgun wedding," in the most literal sense.

The photos get hilariously intense when the bouquet gets thrown into the mix. You've been warned.

Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Weddings on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.

The New 'Theory Of Everything' Trailer Is A Total Tearjerker

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"The Theory of Everything" already has a steady stream of buzz following its premiere at the Toronto International Film Festival. Now, a new trailer for the movie about Stephen Hawking shows more of the love story between Hawking (Eddie Redmayne) and Cambridge student Jane Wilde (Felicity Jones).

The footage shows how the couple falls in love and deals with Hawking's motor neuron disease, diagnosed when he was 21 years old. Jane is his main supporter and partner through the film, which was based on the real Jane Hawking's memoir "Traveling to Infinity: My Life With Stephen." Get the tissues ready.

Here's A Look At The Real Crime Story Behind 'True Detective'

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HBO's "True Detective" was one of the most addicting shows of the year with audiences attempting to solve the mystery of the Yellow King along with Rust Cohle and Martin Hart. As it turns out, however, there's an even scarier, real-life story behind the series.

VICE's latest original docuseries, "The Real," investigates the true stories behind popular television shows. The first episode, which premiered on VICE.com on Wednesday, takes on Nic Pizzolatto's "True Detective" and the real story of satanic sex crimes that may have inspired the series' first season. "The Real" visits Ponchatoula, Louisiana to look at what happened 10 years ago with the town's Hosanna Church and the detectives that solved the case.

If you're still itching for more "True Detective" before Season 2 rolls around, check out the first episode, "The Real True Detective" below. Stay tuned for VICE's upcoming episodes that go behind the real stories of "Weeds" and "Eastbound and Down" and other shows.



"The Real" is streaming on VICE.com.

Niykee Heaton's 'Bad Intentions' Reveal The Struggles Behind Her Best Intentions

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"So, your 'Bad Intentions' EP dropped today and it has been absolutely killing it," I say to 19-year-old rising singer-songwriter Niykee Heaton in the HuffPost office on Sept. 23. "It’s currently number six on the Top-10 charts for iTunes and has already topped the Billboard + Twitter Trending 140 chart."

With a somewhat detached gaze, Heaton said, "It's crazy. I didn't expect it all."

I don't mean to portray her demeanor as a blasé response that's rooted in arrogance. If anything, her poise was the nervous realization of achieving a goal that was never set. Little to no money was spent on any promotional material leading to the EP's release -- partly a strategy by label All Def Digital, founded by Def Jam-founder Russell Simmons, entrepreneur Steve Rifkind and film director/producer Brian Robbins -- relying entirely on persistent self-promotion on social accounts by Heaton and her manager, Lauren Pisciotta. And while Heaton is extremely grateful for everyone purchasing and listening to her music, she isn't getting lost in the numbers.

Wielding turn-up jams like "Champagne" and "Villa" in the same space as the somber "Sober" and mid-tempo "Rolling Stone," Heaton's EP offers a significant variety for a debut, all held together by her vocals, most ravishing in her lower register. Discussing her rapid surge to popularity, Heaton opens up about her childhood struggles, her promise to a lost sibling and her favorite lyrics from the EP.



Do you have any idea of what might have propelled the album? You’ve had a number of articles written leading up to the EP.
BuzzFeed was the biggest, but I think I owe the most to my fanbase. They are so crazy. They are so insane.

When did that really start to build? Was it around the time of your “Love Sosa” cover that you noticed?
That was when everything kind of blew up. Before that, I had a number of videos on YouTube with 45 to 100 views. It was “Love Sosa” that got picked up by WorldStar, the day before my 18th birthday, and it was crazy. I didn’t know what WorldStar was, but my name was on it. I owe everything to them because that was the first community to really see me. The hip-hop, urban community I owe everything to.

You’re part of the YouTube generation where you establish yourself just by putting up your own videos of yourself. How do you establish and distinguish yourself as an artist outside of those videos.
The thing that has always been important to me is that people know me as a writer. I’ve been writing since I was 5 years old, and it’s always been my main thing. I never thought that I was going to be known for singing because I didn’t have that much confidence in my voice, but I always knew I was going to be a writer. When I was doing covers and getting known for it, it was cool, but I didn’t want people to think, “Oh, she’s a cover artist.” A lot of YouTube artists get their shit professionally filmed and edited, but, to me, that’s so corny. I kept it organic and just used my iPhone. I feel like doing that helped me because people didn’t know me as a professionally YouTube cover artist. And just putting in my own originals and letting people know I’m a songwriter, I’m an artist, made that transition a little easier. Even though a lot of people knew me from Instagram -- they thought I was an Instagram model. So I would have my bikini selfies, but I would also put a new clip of a song I was writing.

Your Instagram has definitely played a role in you getting some attention. As an artist, where do you see the balance in projecting your personal life with your art?
I think it’s important to never overshadow it. If I was just nonstop posting sexy pictures and there was no music to match up with it, that would be a problem. But I think it’s very important to take advantage of your social platforms. Before even my YouTube account, I was going to open mics and driving hours to creepy bars and begging them to let me play and doing dumb contests, and it wasn’t getting me anywhere.

Based off of my image on Instagram, people thought I was this girl who was trying to use her appearance to get far. I never understood that because I was always the ugly duckling. I was the girl in high school who was a complete outcast, so I’ve never thought of myself as a thirst trap, so it was weird to hear that from people.

There’s a good variation of sound on your EP. “Champagne” is a club-ready track, and then you have “Sober” and “Bad Intentions,” which are more somber. What inspires this variation?
My music is a direct reflection of who I am. My writing is everything to me because that’s all I had growing up. I had a really tough childhood and at a point when I was very young, I sort just stopped speaking because I stuttered. I was in an environment where no one was paying attention to me, I was very isolated, so when people talked to me, I would talk as fast as I could so that they could hear me. Trying to talk so fast, I developed a terrible stutter. The only way I could get out was through my writing, so I was this 5-year-old with these journals of poetry. In elementary school they would tell us to write a poem about our dog, and kids would write, “I like dogs, they are nice,” and I wrote a poem based on the Tom Waits’ song “Rain Dogs,” and my teacher is like, “What the fuck is wrong with her?” I was that complete weirdo.

Each song is a piece of my life. “Sober” is about my father. Both of my parents were raging alcoholics, and my father still is and my sister’s dying wish was, “Dad, can you please get sober?” And I remember being in the hospital room when I was 12, the day that she died, and him going up to her and putting his hand on her shoulder and promising her that he would get sober. The fact that he couldn’t do it, and that it was his own inner demons and it wasn’t about her. “Rolling Stone” is just about past relationships, how someone could love me even though I’m so damaged. Those emotions are so genuine and so that’s why each song isn’t the same mood.

I don’t mean to press too much, but could expand a little more on your childhood?
When I was born, my sister was already sick. She was 9 years older, but was diagnosed with cancer when she was 3. Her whole life was being sick and I witnessed all of it, so all of my childhood was watching her die. My brother was a little bit older and he was going through the same things, but he didn’t take the route I did. He turned to drugs and alcohol because he wasn’t getting the attention that he needed as a child either, so I watched that happen. I was like, “Okay, someone needs to be the hero here. I can’t be the problem child, I’m not the sick one.” So I became the silent hero.

I had to grow up super fast. At 5 years old I was already an adult, and I thought very differently. When kids asked if I wanted to come hang out and play, I was like, “No, I think I’m going to watch ‘Law & Order: SVU.’ I don’t really have time to play.” I wanted to have friends, but I thought so differently that I couldn’t be a kid. My sister and my mom were always in the hospital, my dad was always drunk, the rest of my family was in South Africa so they were never around. I was always alone, so I would just write all the time. It’s kind of sad, but if I didn’t go through all of that shit, I wouldn’t be the artist that I am.

And to say that it created the artist you are, it isn't about right or wrong, but the reality of things as they happened outside of your control. Now that you have this platform, how does it feel to put out these songs where you can embody all these things you have been keeping to yourself for so many years and the see people responding and connecting to them?
When I came in to this I never had any idea of wanting to win a VMA or hitting top 10 on the Billboard charts. The only reason I wanted to do this was because I wanted my music to make an impact. Even though music is the gift that I have to work with, the night that my sister passed, everyone was going up to her to say goodbye, and I remember going up to her and holding her hand. I just kind of promised her -- I didn’t understand why I got to live and she didn’t -- my promise to her was that I wouldn’t just live for me, but also that I would live for her too. My goal is to be the angel that saves someone else’s life, even though I couldn’t save hers. When I go to my Instagram messages and there’s a 13-year-old girl [who] Sharpied my lyrics on her arm where she had cut herself, that’s the most amazing thing.

Do you have any plans to collaborate with any artists in the near future?
Ever since the “Love Sosa” cover, rappers have been reaching out. Pretty much every song I covered, the artist would reach out. The first was 2 Chainz, he reached out at the very start. But right as I started doing this is when Miley Cyrus came out with her new thing, and she started collaborated with all these rappers. I was like, “Cool, a white girl with blond hair, singing and she has all these rappers on her songs. Fuck.” Because I love rap music, so that was my first thought. So we held out on all features. I would much rather my music be true and have someone on it because I have a connection with that person, not because I paid them a lot of money to do a feature on it.

Speaking generally, I would love to work with Nicki Minaj because she’s my favorite female artist. I really respect artistry and craft and she’s all about that. I would love to do something with Drake and Kanye. And then I would love to do a feature with Bob Dylan. I know he would never do it, but something that’s unheard of, something special.



Niykee Heaton's favorite lyrics from "Bad Intentions":

I’m still lying awake by your side, and even though I know I shouldn’t I’m feeding the monsters I’m afraid to fight - "Sober"

"This line represents the meaning of this entire song. I wrote this song, literally, from my father’s point of view regarding his alcoholism and his inability to achieve sobriety. It signifies being so close to someone, trying to love them so badly, but your demons are stronger than your intentions. And it’s easier to give into those monsters, rather than to defy them."


Is it too late? I’m so afraid. This poison, I need a drink to spite you. Will you ravage me? - "Champagne"

"The meaning behind 'Champagne' is the act of substituting the loss or pain of something with another, more destructive replacement. Trying to mend a broken heart with drugs and alcohol, etc. This line is important to the song because I’m saying I’m in so much pain and its gone too far, so ill consume this poison to spite you, when in the end, all I’m doing is destroying myself."


Love me even though I’m a motherfuckin’ rolling stone. - "Rolling Stone"

"I wrote the song, 'Rolling Stone' about finding that someone who can look past all the faults and flaws in you and love you even though you may think you’re so damaged. In regards to Bob Dylan’s classic, 'Like A Rolling Stone,' he describes someone 'lost,' and 'a complete unknown.' To love someone completely, despite their defects, is incomprehensible and so beautiful."


I know we’ve made a graveyard of this all. I know I don’t feel too sober know. I wanna lie awake with your black soul, count your fears if you let me. Baby, I just want your damn bad intentions. - "Bad Intentions"

"I wrote 'Bad Intentions' about my own internal struggle about loving someone else and letting them love me back. I feel that because of what I’ve been through, and the way that my pain has changed me, that I am apprehensive and slightly incapable of loving someone else fully and completely. In this line, it is the turning point, or moment of clarity when I see that someone else may be just as damaged as I am, and if I can learn to love their weaknesses, then perhaps they might just be able to love mine."

before the beat drops

Before The Beat Drops is an artist introduction series dedicated to bringing you the rising acts before they make their break. Our unlimited access to music of all kinds is both amazing and overwhelming. Keeping your playlists fresh, we'll be doing the leg work to help you discover your next favorite artist.

Sam Smith: 'I'm Not Beyonce'

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Sam Smith took Los Angeles' collective breath away this week, playing two completely sold out shows at the infamous 5,870-seat Greek Theater in Griffith Park. Only a year ago, he pointed out, he performed at the tiny Troubador club in West Hollywood and thanked the fans who came to that first show.

"I put out a pretty depressing album last year. So I sort of wallowed for a year, but I feel much better now," Smith, 22, said to undulating waves of applause on Tuesday night. The roar of the audience at the Greek Theater encouraged his heartfelt monologue.

"I went into the studio and thought I'd make a Beyonce album. I'm not Beyonce, if you haven't notice," he joked. "I called up someone I was really in love with and told him everything and the next day I made this song. It sort of jumpstarted everything," he said, as he began to play "I Told You Now" from his debut album "In The Lonely Hour."

He only had the one album and his one EP to play off of at the Greek, but that didn't stop him from doing what only few male vocalists can do -- cover a Whitney Houston song.

"I love female divas. I grew up listening to people like Amy Winehouse, Etta James, Beyonce," Smith said. "About four months ago when we were pushing the record in New York, I was having a tough week. There was so much going on. And I decided to do something a little bit different and I did a cover of one of my favorites of all time, Ms. Whitney Houston."

Smith came out as gay in May 2014, right around the time he released his first album. In September, he told The Daily Mail that the inspiration for the soul-crushing songs was in fact the unrequited love of a straight man.

"I am a happy person, believe it or not. I want a love one day. I don't want to be miserable forever," Smith told his fans at the Greek. "I can't bring out 'In The Lonely Hour' part two, so I need to find someone to love me, quickly."

Based on the deafening applause, we have a feeling this will not be a problem for long.

Jennifer Knapp Details Her Journey As A Gay Christian Singer In 'Facing The Music'

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Grammy-nominated Christian singer-songwriter Jennifer Knapp faced her share of conservative detractors when she came out as a lesbian in 2010.

Four years later, Knapp is back with an all-new memoir, Facing the Music: My Story, in which she explores her "complicated, complex" journey as a devout Christian who identifies as gay.

As Knapp reveals in this exclusive trailer for HuffPost Gay Voices, the dilemma she continually faced was: "What do I do about being a person of faith when I'm in an environment that tells me I'm consistently in conflict with it?"

Along the way, however, she's learned a lot.

"You find detractors everywhere you go," she says. "You find hurdles and obstacles to your life and your experience ... the trick is figuring out what our response is going to be when we face them."

jennifer knapp

Read more about Facing the Music: My Story, which hits stores Oct. 7, here.





Postmodern Jukebox Transforms Nicki Minaj's 'Anaconda' Into A Bluegrass Hoedown

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Since its release, Nicki Minaj's "Anaconda" music video has been dropping jaws everywhere with its booty-shaking, basically-NSFW content.

This week, YouTube's Postmodern Jukebox has released an "Anaconda" video of their own; but you can safely share this one with grandma and the kids.



In their video, Postmodern Jukebox transforms the raunchy hit song into what the group describes as a "vintage bluegrass hoedown." It's catchy, melodious and it's already a viral hit, having racked up more than 112,000 views since being uploaded Tuesday.

"I'll take this version over the original rap any day of the week," enthused one YouTuber.

"GENIUS," declared another.

Allies' 'Laid Black' Is The Sexiest Rock Music You Have Heard In A Long, Long Time

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While radio stations and stages today are dominated by pop, hip-hop and EDM, bands like Heavy English, Closure in Moscow and Dorothy prove rock music in 2014 is far from irrelevance. The newest band to step up to the plate is Long Island's Allies, and The Huffington Post is excited to premiere their deliciously groovy debut single, "Laid Black."



"We've always been inspired with musics ability to unite so many people," Villafane told HuffPost Entertainment. "It doesn't matter where you come from, what you do or what language you speak, everyone is in it together. We recognize that support system as 'Allies' and wanted to make it clear that this band is a two way street and that you can be in it too."

Featuring Joe Villafane (vocals/keys), Ryan Higbie (guitar), Sean Banicki (bass) and Alex Kaufman (drums/percussion) -- as well as their touring member "utility knife," Zuli -- Allies has a special connection to Heavy English. Not only are both groups from Long Island, but Sal Bossio and Dan Gluszak worked as producers/engineers on Allies' upcoming EP. Their music chemistry stems back to 2011, when Villafane and Higbie took lessons with Bossio through his Virtual Music School, and Kaufman took lessons with Gluszak.

When asked to describe what influences their sound, Villafane summarized, "We're privy to the types of music that make you want to bob your head, scrunch up your face and shout damn in a sigh of relief."

"Laid Black" is an instant hip-shaker, silvery guitar pickings and piano rhumbaing overtop a seductive bedrock crafted by the drums and bass. The vocals are breathy, but powerful, and will undoubtedly make you want to slowly strip down. Rock music hasn't been this sexy in a long, long time.

“'Laid Black' is all about getting down, getting freaky and letting loose without a care in the world," Villafane said.

Allies debut EP, "The Lobby," will be available on Nov. 5, but you can purchase "Laid Black" now.

before the beat drops

Before The Beat Drops is an artist introduction series dedicated to bringing you the rising acts before they make their break. Our unlimited access to music of all kinds is both amazing and overwhelming. Keeping your playlists fresh, we'll be doing the leg work to help you discover your next favorite artist.

Welp, This Agnostic Gospel Choir Isn't Really Sure About Much

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Gospel choirs are known for their impassioned praise and harmonizing, but this one from the folks at UCB Comedy is throwing up its hands for a very different reason.

In a video posted to YouTube on Sept. 25, UCB's music video team The Backyard imagined what an agnostic gospel choir would look and sound like. Apparently it would have a lot of questions, and not just about the big stuff.

"How does God work? Is he a jerk? Is he for safe sex? Can he prescribe me Valtrex?" the choir sings as they sway from side to side.

We have to hand it to The Backyard: All the questions are real head-scratchers. Philosophers and theologists will surely be writing essays about this video for years.

What Is This 'Ello' Everyone's Posting About On Facebook?

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ello feature image

If you’ve been on Facebook in the last two weeks, you’ve probably noticed at least one of your friends has posted something like this:

i just signed up for ello? idk viva la revolucion i guess! hit me up for an invite! lol


Such a status update leads to a number of natural follow-up questions, some of which I’ll try to answer here.

Seriously, what the hell is Ello and why is everyone on Facebook talking about it?

Ello is a new, ad-free social network that is basically billing itself as the anti-Facebook without actually coming out and saying it.

Anti-Facebook? In what way?

The site goes to great lengths to tell you again and again that it will be ad-free forever and will not sell your data to third parties -- two not-so-subtle jabs at Zuckerberg’s social media giant.

This holier-than-thou mission statement has led to what can only be described as the world’s laziest form of social protest: people signing up for yet another social media site.

So does Ello describe itself specifically as the “anti-Facebook”?

Explicitly, no. For all intents and purposes, yes. When asked specifically about the “anti-Facebook” tag, Ello CEO Paul Budnitz told re/code that Ello isn’t “really anti-anything.” But then again, he also said: “We don’t actually consider Facebook a social network. We think of it as an advertising platform.” And Ello has set up the site so that anyone who disagrees with its mission statement is redirected to Facebook, so yeah.

disagree

If you press "I Disagree," you literally go to Facebook.


Do they have an overly emotional “manifesto” posted to their website?

Why, yes they do! Here it is:

Your social network is owned by advertisers.

Every post you share, every friend you make, and every link you follow is tracked, recorded, and converted into data. Advertisers buy your data so they can show you more ads. You are the product that’s bought and sold.

We believe there is a better way. We believe in audacity. We believe in beauty, simplicity, and transparency. We believe that the people who make things and the people who use them should be in partnership.

We believe a social network can be a tool for empowerment. Not a tool to deceive, coerce, and manipulate — but a place to connect, create, and celebrate life.

You are not a product.


OK, you’re telling me they collect no data?

Well, it is a website after all, so they do collect some. The site collects basic, anonymous data on Ello users as a whole, so it can figure out where users are coming from, generally where they live and how much time they are spending on the site.

But as for the information they keep about you, Ello seems to have done a good job of keeping little to nothing. In Ello’s words, they have “stripped and anoymized” your IP address. You can read more about their approach to data here.

Why is it suddenly everywhere? And how can I join?

Ello existed for around as year as a private social network for around 100 friends, according to Budnitz. Then on Aug. 7, it went semi-public, using a limited-invite system that has created a “where can I get one” mentality among people like me.

The site is now supposedly adding up to 50,000 new people every hour and doubling in size every few days. If you don’t know someone with an invite, you can sign up to be notified when they switch off the invite-only system.

OK, that’s all well and good. But what’s the actual site like?

For a site that’s being billed as the anti-Facebook, it sure looks and feels a lot like an early version of Facebook. Even the profile pages look similar:

my ello profile
Yes, those are my Big Brother-like eyes.


Besides that, it’s mostly the same stuff. You joke with friends. Share the occasional comical YouTube link. The usual.

Is there anything annoying about the site I should know about?

Yes! In listicle format:

1. You can’t like people’s posts!
this site is aight
2. You almost definitely have more friends (and hence, more potential for fun) on Facebook. Ello is pretty sparse right now.

3. It’s extremely difficult to figure out which of your friends are on Ello. This probably explains why everyone has to take to Facebook to find companionship.

facebook

4. The “post” button is so, um, tastefully subtle you could say it’s essentially invisible. I personally had to go on a 15-minute journey just to figure it out, which led to personal protests like this one:
anti ello protest

As my frustration grew, I became more and more convinced that Ello was actually just a complex marketing strategy to get me to crawl back to Facebook.

hello its me

But I eventually figured it out:

ahhhhh

It ends up you need to look very carefully...

post

Would you recommend joining?

If the idea of Facebook selling ads against you sends you into a blind rage, you might as well give Ello a spin. But if it doesn’t, the primary benefit of Ello is probably to cleanse yourself of the hundreds of high school and college Facebook friends you don’t really care about anymore (and start your social media circle anew).

Right now, I have under 20 friends on Ello, and I like them all. We’re having fun. It kind of reminds me of the early days of Facebook.

Home Economics Is Still Offered As A College Major In 2014, And Here's Why

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If you think hanging a diploma on your office wall means you have a complete education, this one perspective might just change your mind.

According to Chris Moore, Brigham Young University’s director of the Family and Consumer Sciences program, "If you have your Master's degree and you can't live within your means or go home from your job and feed yourself a nutritious meal, you're not a complete graduate. Without [home economics educators], who teaches that? They need us as much as we need them," she told HuffPost Home.

And, based on College Board reports, there are about 187 colleges across the country offering similar programs that would probably agree with that sentiment. Though the field of study is perhaps most prominent at BYU, where 100 students (out of the 34,409) are enrolled as majors in Family and Consumer Studies, formerly known as Home Ec.

college students studying

These students will graduate and go into schools to get public education jobs or teach about sewing, interior design, or personal management. Those who do not go into an education setting, however, sometimes take a "more entrepreneurial" approach. They will start their own business in the food industry, the apparel industry or go on to get another degree in interior design or a graduate degree in child development so they can work in these settings, Dean Busby, director of the School of Family Life at BYU, told HuffPost Home via email.

But despite popular belief, these students aren't just spending their days living out what Moore calls the old stereotype of "stitching and sewing." While there are courses such as "introduction to interiors," "textiles," "food preparation in the home" and "history of apparel" that are dedicated to these more traditional views of home economics, the program maintains a strong basis in STEM academics of science, technology, engineering and math, as well.

"We connect our curriculum in a way that shows how scientific principles, math and technology mainly, are used every day in the family and the home," she says, namely through the use of the latest appliances and machines as well as the current focus on issues such as home energy consumption and community disaster relief efforts, "We have fought 100 percent to show that we teach science in the home and we are a viable compliment to the STEM program through our course integration."

Other courses students in this major can enroll in include the more historically scientific-based options such as "biological foundations of human development" and "cognitive development." And, because there is "economics" in "home economics" after all, students also have the choice to take courses including "family finance" and "money in the family," which can actually help set the foundation for a financial planning or financial literacy focused career.



But what if you're not committed to majoring in home economics? Well, just like most colleges, students in other programs will dabble in a family and consumer sciences course or two, says Busby. "Our cooking, sewing, interior design, and family finances courses are very popular and many students outside of our majors take these classes each year as electives."

And whether it’s taken as a major, minor or just for a few extra credits, Moore says the objective is still the same. "Without [home economics] as a counterpart to your academic education, you're really not educating the whole person."



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.)

Zosia Mamet Is 'Definitely Not A Shoshanna'

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Once upon a time, Zosia Mamet was known for smaller roles in TV shows like "Mad Men" and movies like "The Kids Are All Right." These days, she's better known for a brilliant portrayal of Shoshanna Shapiro on HBO's "Girls" and for inspiring guest columns in Glamour magazine.

In honor of the Make Your Mark contest, in collaboration with Bayer and Glamour, to inspire and celebrate women who are making their mark on the world, Mamet spoke with HuffPost TV about what makes Shoshanna tick, Lena Dunham's new book and "Sex and the City" comparisons:

Can you explain more about the Make Your Mark contest?
It’s really geared toward what I think is sort of the essence of Glamour, which is inspiring young women and making them feel excited and confident about the choices they’re making and what they’re doing. So for the Make Your Mark contest, women write in about how they're making their mark on the world and what inspires them, no matter what that may be. The winner gets $5,000 and gets to come to New York for Glamour's Women of the Year gala.

Will we get to see more of Shoshanna on the next season of “Girls”?
I don’t know. To be completely honest all the seasons kind of bleed together for me. But her presence is always there, and that's the most important thing. She’s a little bit like the moral compass of the show. She may be crazy and wild and do stupid shit, but she always has everyone’s best interest at heart.

She also seems very different from the Shoshanna we knew in Season 1. Do you think she's going through a phase or growing into herself?
She’s absolutely growing into herself, which is what I think is happening across the board with all the girls. They’re all in their early 20s. And I think a lot of the very beginning of your 20s has to do with pushing boundaries and trying on different hats and sort of figuring out who you think you are, and then that can lead to getting burned sometimes, which she definitely did. And then it’s a matter of moving forward in a healthy way, which is definitely what I think she was trying to do last season and what she’s continuing to do this season. She's growing up.

Shoshanna really loves “Sex and the City,” and it’s pretty obvious that strives for that lifestyle. Are you a fan of the show? And what do you think when people compare it to “Girls”?
I grew up watching that show and loved it. It did something really incredible for women and for television, to have such a female-centric show. I think it was incredibly brilliant. I loved it and watched it over and over again. I really don’t think there are many similarities, other than the fact that it’s centered around four women who are experiencing growth in a decade of their lives, but they’re two drastically different decades. I think that it’s sort of an easy comparison, but I would say it’s a different timeline. But we were honored to be compared to it.

Are you a Shoshanna? Or do you identify more with one of the other girls?
I’m definitely not a Shoshanna. I’m actually incredibly different from her. I don’t know if I identify with one particular girl, I like aspects of all of them. I wouldn’t say I’m one or the other.

Okay, well if you had to choose, who are you the most like?
I think there are probably parts of Shoshanna that are in me, and I identify with aspects of Hannah’s desire to be an artist. I’m probably a little anal retentive in certain ways. I wish I was more like Jessa than I actually am, other than the fact that I own a lot of long, flowy dresses.

Has there ever been anything that’s been written for your character that you said no to?
No. I think our writers are incredibly conscious and they’re not going to do anything just to do it, they’re only going to do what is going to serve the story and move it forward. I think we really feel like whatever they do we know is necessary, so whenever I've been asked to do anything kind of wacky I’ve gone with it.

Do you hang out with anyone outside the cast?
We all have pretty busy lives, you know? Lena's off running the world, Jemima [Kirke] has two kids and Allison [Williams] and I are trying to make careers outside of “Girls.” I wouldn’t say we hang out a lot, but we are very close.

Have you read Lena's book yet?
I literally just got it on Monday at her book party. I haven’t read it yet, but I will be read it ASAP.

You and Lena both dyed your hair blonde recently. Was this planned?
[Laughs] No.

You were in some pretty great TV shows and movies prior to “Girls.” What was your favorite project?
It’s so hard to quantify, they were all so incredibly different. But "Girls" is definitely hard to beat.

What are you watching this fall?
My boyfriend and I are obsessed with “Scandal” and “Blacklist,” and I am incredibly obsessed with “Nashville.” We’ve also started watching “Manhattan” recently, which is really so good.

The Make Your Mark contest is live now at www.glamour.com/make-your-mark. Women can enter by submitting a brief essay and a photo or video that shows how they are making their own mark in the world.

These Awkward Ballerinas Take Dancing To Your Own Beat To A Whole New Level

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These ballerinas each put their own spin on what should be classical choreography, but that's just why we love them.

And it's obvious from the first moments of the performance -- when a glasses-wearing dancer makes a late entrance on stage, shoulders slumped and frustration evident -- that this ballet has a comedic twist.



When the rest of the dancers turn, at least one is bound to twist. When they leap, they leap straight into each other. No matter what they do, the dancers can't stay in sync. And while their awkwardness on stage is clearly intentional, it's also all kinds of cool.

Video of the deliberately hilarious performance, ascribed to the Vienna State Opera, first surfaced in 2011 but is currently trending across the Internet.

Hey, if something this awkward can still look this awesome, maybe there's hope for us non-dancers.



H/T Buzzfeed
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