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Paul Feig Officially Making New 'Ghostbusters' With 'Hilarious Women'

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The all-female "Ghostbusters" reboot is officially a go. THR first reported the news, which Paul Feig confirmed in a tweet. The director announced that he'll team up with "The Heat" writer Katie Dippold to make the film, which has been rumored about for months. Feig had been in talks to direct the film since August.




Feig, who also directed "Bridesmaids" and "The Heat," was Sony's front-runner for the directing gig after Ivan Reitman exited the project in March. In September, Reitman told HuffPost Live that Feig was "perfect" for the job. "There were always going to be women involved in the next iteration of 'Ghostbusters.' Paul seems to be the perfect director to sort of bring that about."

'The Womansplainer' Will Explain Feminism To Anyone In Need

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Know any dudes who just don't understand feminism? Send them a handy link to The Womansplainer.

Artist Elizabeth Simins started the satirical site in response to exasperating anti-feminist Twitter trolls:




The Womansplainer, as its homepage describes, provides "consulting for men who have better things to do than educate themselves about feminism," offering services to Twitter trolls and men's rights activists alike. Clueless patrons can pay between $20 and $100 for Simins to answer certain questions by choosing from a drop-down bar of options including "Are all feminists lesbians?" and "Do feminists hate sex/humor/fun?" The price depends on how deep you're willing to go -- will a quick Google response satisfy you, or do you need an in-depth Twitter conversation?

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"I wanted to make people think about what men are really asking for when they ask women questions about feminism that they could easily research the answers to themselves, which happens CEASELESSLY to most women who are vocal on social media," Simins told The Huffington Post in an email. "When they get angry at women for not immediately taking time out of their day to educate them, what they're saying is: 'My time is worth more than yours.' But it isn't."

Simins reports that the response has been overwhelmingly positive, and that most people appreciate the humor and get the message.

"I've even had other women ask if they could franchise the business -- and to that I will ALWAYS say yes, because that's the point!" She told HuffPost. "Our time is valuable, and we shouldn't be expected to treat it otherwise."

Mind-Melting Footage Of Turkey Puts All Other Vacation Videos To Shame

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If only our friends' vacation videos were this fascinating.

Italian filmmaker Leonardo Dalessandri produced this whirlwind of a video, using footage he compiled during a recent 20-day, 2,100-mile journey throughout Turkey.

"I've crossed Cappadocia, Pamukkale, Ephesus, Istanbul, Konya; and tasted baklava, kunefe, doner, the turkish tea; and got the chance to meet the soul of Turkey, its people.. and got their smiles and their hospitality," Dalessandri writes in the Vimeo description. "This is Turkey lived by me from north to south, and I hope you enjoy it."

Hungry for more? Here's Dalessandri's profile of Morocco.

H/T PetaPixel

4 Shocking Moments From The 'American Horror Story: Freak Show' Premiere

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"American Horror Story: Freak Show" finally debuted on Wednesday night, and it was full of all the creepy, sexual madness we expected. While we knew a decent amount about the new season before it premiered, the first episode, "Monsters Among Us," still managed to surprise. For instance, while we knew Evan Peters' character had lobster hands on the show, we did not expect him to do that with them. There was more, too. Here are all the OMG-worthy moments from the "American Horror Story: Freak Show" premiere (major spoilers follow):

Evan Peters prostituted his lobster hands
Meet Evan Peters' Jimmy Darling, or what women are calling "a lifesaver for the American housewife!" Jimmy Darling may be bullied and called a freak for his lobster-like fingers, but we quickly find out in the season premiere that he makes some nice side cash for sexual favors. Jimmy is the main event at housewives' Tupperware-esque parties, using his special hands to please women in ways their husbands can't.

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Sarah Paulson murdered her mother, then stabbed herself/her sister
Not only does Sarah Paulson have two heads in "Freak Show," but those two heads are constantly clashing. We find out that it wasn't the murderous Twisty the Clown who killed Bette and Dot Tattler's parents, but Bette, who was driven to stab her mother to death. Then Dot stabbed her sister (which is also like stabbing herself). All Bette wanted was to see "Singing in the Rain," geez!

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Opium orgy
What would a sexual season of "American Horror Story" be with a good ol' fashioned orgy? One of the more unsettling moments from the episode (mostly due to the screeching music that accompanied the scene), this scene showed footage of Grace Gummer's (yep, Meryl Streep's daughter!) Penny the Candy Striper smoking opium and having a wild orgy with Elsa's performers. The highlight was an overly-excited Pepper, who was definitely having the best time out of anyone there.

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Jessica Lange doesn't have most of her legs!
The premiere of "Freak Show" presented us with the notion that Elsa Mars was different from her troupe of performers and using her circus to become famous. While that is definitely true, we find out in the very final moments of the episode that Elsa is just like her employees, different from the rest of society: She has lost most of her legs.

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"American Horror Story: Freak Show" airs on Wednesdays at 10:00 p.m. ET on FX.

This Illustration Of Ebola Coverage Shows How Problematic Media Reports Can Be

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The first Ebola patient to be diagnosed in the U.S. died Wednesday. Three days earlier, government health officials in Sierra Leone reported 121 Ebola deaths in a single day. But Western media made little mention of the latter.

A new illustration from frequent Vanity Fair contributor André Carrilho puts that into perspective.

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andré carrilho ebola

Until American doctors treating patients with Ebola in West Africa were diagnosed with the disease, the current Ebola outbreak has been largely faceless, mainly about statistics and if and when the virus would spread to American soil.

Carrilho told The Huffington Post he created the illustration to show how the media "seems to treat epidemics differently, depending on where they occur, and to whom."

"I think unfortunately, in the Western media, there are first-world diseases and third-world diseases, and the attention devoted to the latter depends on the threat they pose to us, not on a universal measure of human suffering," he said. "A death in Africa, or Asia for that matter, should be as tragic as a death in Europe or the USA, and it doesn’t seem to be."

Since the first cases of the current Ebola outbreak were reported in March, 3,865 people have died of the disease in Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The mortality rate for the disease averages around 50 percent, the World Health Organization notes, and there are currently no licensed Ebola vaccines.

Two American aid workers who survived the disease were given the experimental drug ZMapp for treatment. It is unknown if the drug helped in their recovery process, but the decision to administer the drug to the two victims was seen as controversial because African victims of the disease were not given the same opportunity for treatment.

Carrilho says this difference in treatment and media coverage shifts the paradigm.

"If an epidemic breaks out in the USA or Europe, suddenly the reporting is more engaged. This gives rise to a few side effects," he said. "The 'us versus them' relationship shifts from detachment to fear of incoming immigrants from affected countries, and in both race and nationalism have an active part."

If Carrilho could see one change in the way the outbreak and public health are discussed, he says, it would be to tack on more global perspective.

"I would like to hear from the people who are affected everywhere," he told HuffPost. "I would like to feel that everyone’s voices are more equally heard, even if they speak a language that is not mine."

Environmental Artist Maya Lin Win's $300,000 Gish Prize

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NEW YORK (AP) — Artist and environmentalist Maya Lin is the recipient of the prestigious Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize.

The $300,000 prize is one of the largest cash awards in the arts. Lin's designs include the Vietnam Veterans Memorial.

She will receive the prize at a private event in New York City on Nov. 12.

It recognizes individuals who have "made an outstanding contribution to the beauty of the world and to mankind's enjoyment and understanding of life."

Lin was chosen from among 100 nominees in all fields of the arts.

She's currently working on a multisite work "What Is Missing?" It focuses on the current crisis of biodiversity and natural habitats.

The annual prize was established in 1994 by actress Lillian Gish's will.

Past recipients include Frank Gehry, Bob Dylan and Spike Lee.

80-Year-Old Black Artist Leo Twiggs Uses Confederate Flag To Create Art

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ORANGEBURG, S.C. (AP) — Leo Twiggs' paintings of shadowy Confederate flags and faceless men with bulls-eyes on their backs are a few of the haunting images he has developed living as a black man in the South.

The 80-year-old South Carolina artist says he hopes the works, which some may see as divisive, spark thoughtful reactions and help people understand their shared history, even for those outside the South. "This Confederate flag, the Civil War, they are part of the history of all of us," Twiggs said. "You take the stars off the bars, and it becomes a cross, maybe a railroad crossing. It can become a crossing over, something that we commemorate, and something we can cross over."

Jovial and chatty at his Orangeburg studio, Twiggs said he is enjoying his best year as an artist. He's had more than 70 solo shows over his career, and three new shows recently opened in his home state in Myrtle Beach, Greenville and Taylors.

Two of them highlight his use of Confederate flags — red, white, or blue smudged with brown or blood-red splotches. In several, the outlines of brown figures float in the background. Many flags are tattered, looking tired and rough. A black cow stands watch in some, recalling an animal Twiggs cared for as a child, growing up in segregated St. Stephens.

"We were poor, but we had dignity," Twiggs said. "Ours was a struggle that speaks to a struggle experienced by all mankind."

Sandy Rupp, owner of the Hampton III Gallery in Taylors, said Twiggs has been exploring flag images since the 1970s.

"He's not trying to divide everybody," Rupp said. "He sees it as a historic symbol, a symbol of white supremacy that he makes into his own. He makes it his flag, and gives it his power."

As the aroma of hot wax fills the room, Twiggs uses a metal pen-like tool to drip warm wax on a rough piece of fabric. He colors it with hand-mixed vegetable dyes, and then removes the wax with an iron, repeating the process over and over. It takes up to a month to complete each composition.

William Eiland, director of the Georgia Museum of Art at the University of Georgia in Athens, said for many in the South, the flag represents "an unrepentant South, perhaps a South rising again."

"But Leo takes that image and lets it mutate, change, degrade, adapt, into an image that becomes part of his experience," Eiland said.

Other themes fill Twiggs' work — the rebel flag morphs into a white railroad crossing sign, which divides many rural Southern towns; black ancestral mothers pose in their Sunday best; white boss men in wide-brimmed hats stand over ghostly black and white figures; white strings of hurricane-force winds whip bodies in a storm.

Twiggs said his "Targeted Man" series of faceless men bearing bulls-eyes harkens back to the Ku Klux Klan using white robes and burning torches "to try to scare us." But once the nation came under attack in the Sept. 11 terrorist strikes, Twiggs said he realized the images also meant, "we are all targeted, we all have things to fear."

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Follow Susanne M. Schafer on Twitter at http://twitter.com/susannemarieap

Meet Hatsune Miku, The Sensational Japanese Pop Star Who Doesn't Really Exist

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Hatsune Miku is the world’s most famous virtual pop star. And now she’s even more famous, having made her U.S. television debut this Wednesday on "Late Night With David Letterman." She didn’t come out of nowhere: this summer, the Japanese sensation toured as an opener for Lady Gaga, materializing regularly on stages around the country in a confounding flash.


Hatsune Miku performing live in 2011.


All Miku concert footage makes for strange watching. Legions of fans pump light sticks at every swish of those blue ponytails, as if a virtual star needs the encouragement. The sight is arguably even odder live, as an in-person Miku doesn’t exactly seem worth the fuss. Media outlets routinely mistake her for a hologram, but in fact, she’s less sophisticated than that. She’s a 2D image, rendered onto the stage using mirrors (the technology, called Pepper’s Ghost, is so far from cutting edge, it’s been used for decades at the Haunted Mansion in Disney World). Critics who trek halfway across the world to see Miku rock out invariably leave underwhelmed. She looks more magnificent -- and just plain larger -- on YouTube than in life, having been enhanced by video editors.

But the deception shouldn’t matter. “People focus on the live show like it’s so bizarre,” says Ian Condry, a professor of Japanese studies at MIT. He blames this preoccupation on a lack of context, coupled with a scenario that requires some explaining -- a crowd “cheering at a cartoon on stage.” Without context, the sight, he admits, “doesn’t make sense.”

In fact, fans aren't cheering for Miku per se, but for everything she represents. “They know Miku doesn’t exist,” Condry says. “But they know people on the other side do.”

Miku is a mascot for a product: a voice synthesizing software, through which users can write songs. In 2007, a company called Crypton Future Media released the software online, freely available, and built using Yamaha’s Vocaloid technology as well as a database of samples recorded by a voice actress. As with most of Japan's entities (including the country's police agencies), this offering came with a cartoon mascot. She was 16, liked pop music, and wore her hair in long pigtails. She was Hatsune Miku, a name that translates to “first sound of the future.”

Crypton’s president Hiroyuki Itō realized that Miku was more powerful the less there was to know about her. The company isn’t interested in creating a franchise -- no spinoff anime shows, or prequels that tell her story. In an interview with HuffPost, Itō spoke through a translator about his intention to keep Miku “an empty canvas, a plain piece of paper, because only then, people will project their own feelings and use her as an interface.”

The model is revolutionary. Every song Miku sings in concert is written by a user of the software. Most Miku music videos are also the work of fans. Crypton has developed a licensing agreement that allows MikuP, or Miku producers, to use the software mascot's likeness without paying royalties. If a creator’s work becomes wildly profitable, the company enters into a more traditional licensing agreement.

Condry compares Miku to a sample in a hip-hop track. “If you’re some underground person, you can sample without paying anything. Even if you’re indie level, you can probably get away with it. Girltalk can release albums, even though he can’t put them on iTunes. But if you’re Kanye, you’re going to pay top dollar.”

Writing for Vocaloid software is a bit like pulling the strings of a puppet. Miku does what a composer wants, albeit a little jerkily. The upshot is a sense of freedom: a MikuP can theoretically try anything and see what sticks. One composer, who goes by the name Kz, dedicated himself to writing lyrics about the community of creators that sprung up around Miku, rather than Miku herself. One of his songs, "Tell Your World," became such a popular anthem for Mikuheads, Google eventually licensed it for a Chrome ad in Japan.



Another Kz song caught the attention of Pharrell, who remixed it for the soundtrack of the recent Takashi Murakami movie, "Jellyfish Eyes." The attending music video, also directed by Murakami, features Miku, her clan of tertiary Vocaloid avatars, and an animated Pharrell dancing on a high-octane version of the Starship Enterprise.



Speaking to HuffPost through a translator, Kz likened his writing process for Miku to osmosis. “She has no kind of will or ideas herself, so you have the direct message going directly through.”

Plenty of Miku songs are as vapid as any pop hit, with references to her long hair, short skirts, and princesslike demeanor (there’s also a vibrant Miku-based pornographic culture, not sanctioned by Crypton). But the genre has deepened as it’s grown, with narrative lyrics that wouldn’t typically make a top 40 list, from the story of a cancer patient to a set of songs about a single day that unfolds with the gruesome strangeness of a Haruki Murakami novel, complete with an all-seeing cat. In the latter, Miku's chirps are actually scary, multiplied at moments of high stress into a wall of noise.



Other songs use Miku’s lack of personhood to comment on our own devolution into so many "data packets," as Condry puts it. “They play with this idea of whether she exists, and how much we exist in comparison," he says.

He sees the Letterman appearance as a rare misstep in a campaign that’s mostly foregone the old routes to cultural takeover, like late night debuts. “The pathway to Miku’s success in Japan went through a grassroots community before it had a chance to break into the mainstream. If people aren’t impressed by what they see on Letterman, they may have to wait a bit until their kids and grandkids explain what it’s all about.”

Nobel Prize In Literature 2014 Awarded To French Author Patrick Modiano

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The 2014 Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded on Thursday to French author Patrick Modiano for "the art of memory with which he has evoked the most ungraspable human destinies and uncovered the life-world of the occupation."

Modiano, 69, is the author of more than two dozen books and several screenplays. The 11th Literature laureate born in France, Modiano is also the recipient of the Grand prix du roman de l'Académie française, the Prix Goncourt, the Prix mondial Cino Del Duca and the Austrian State Prize for European Literature.

Prior to the announcement, speculation as to the next Nobel laureate in literature was rampant. Bettors at U.K. bookmakers Ladbrokes favored Kenyan poet Ngũgĩ wa Thiong'o and Japanese novelist Haruki Murakami, who had surged to the front of the pack in recent days. Murakami had frequently been fingered as a possible Nobel laureate in previous years, including in 2013, when he led the odds, only to lose out to Alice Munro.

Other favorites familiar to U.S. readers included Philip Roth, Joyce Carol Oates and Thomas Pynchon -- novelists celebrated by the American literary establishment but thus far without Nobel Prizes -- as well as singer-songwriter Bob Dylan.

Oddsmakers also favored writers less familiar to the general U.S. audience, including Svetlana Alexievich of Belarus, Austrian novelist Peter Handke, and Syrian poet Adonis.

Though betting was hot and heavy at Ladbrokes, there’s little data behind Nobel odds. There’s no Nobel longlist or shortlist announced. Even the nominees are kept secret by the Nobel organization.

So, how does the Nobel Prize in Literature get awarded? The Nobel Prizes are awarded by the Royal Swedish Academy, academics and thinkers who have been appointed to lifetime memberships. The Academy elects, from within its own members, The Nobel Committee for Literature, which invites distinguished academy members, previous laureates and other qualified nominators from around the world to nominate authors for the prize. From the nominations they receive, the committee selects a short list of candidates. The final choice is made by the full 18 members of the Swedish Academy, who review the life's work of the nominees chosen by the Nobel Committee for Literature.

The Nobel Prize in Literature has been the subject of considerable controversy over the years. The prize has been criticized for skipping over seminal authors such as Vladimir Nabokov, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and Leo Tolstoy, while being bestowed upon other authors who have since languished in apparent obscurity.

Some, such as Philip Roth, have suggested that the Academy relies too heavily on non-literary criteria, such as the perceived social justice value of the author’s work. In 2011, Per Wästberg, the chairman of the committee for literature, responded to this charge: “We do not have a human rights criterion," he insisted. "We award, for example, Orhan Pamuk for his outstanding novels and essays; then the award becomes politically interpreted.”

The sheer scope of the Nobel Prize presents an obvious challenge; with literature from across the globe open for consideration, it would be difficult for the Academy to recognize each highly acclaimed author from each literary tradition around the world. This breadth of consideration, as well as the relative opacity of the process, keeps critics and oddsmakers guessing each year as to what direction the Academy might take.

View the full list of past Nobel laureates in Literature at Nobelprize.org

A Breakdancer and A Statue Have It Out In An Epic Dance Battle, And It's Pure Art

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Get ready to witness the freshest moves brought to you by a B-boy and ... a statue?

In a video uploaded to YouTube, breakdancer "Noster" dance battles a statue -- OK, not an actual statue, but a street performer named Eclypse posing as a statue. The showdown, which took place in a mall, heats up pretty quickly as both happen to be amazingly skilled at their craft, giving the onlookers a very memorable shopping experience.

Watch them take turns breaking it down, with movements perfectly synchronized to the fast-paced music. While their movements are robotic isolations, their energy is off the charts.

With moves like those, the two will definitely not be receiving any dance challenges from us.

H/T Wimp.com

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The Heartbreaking And Beautiful Faces Of People Living With Alzheimer's Disease

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Alzheimer's disease is a far-reaching condition, one that rips through not only the lives of those who have personally suffered through the diagnosis, but the lives of family members, friends and caretakers who brush up against the illness as well. It can transform a loved one into a stranger, tunneling through relationships, memories and routines until the familiar slips bleakly into the unknown. A brother, grandmother or husband's descent into dementia becomes an identity in itself. They are no longer themselves; they are a captive to disease.

Amsterdam-based photographer Alex ten Napel became captivated with the dissolution of dignity so often associated with dementia. In his series of black-and-white portraits, simply titled "Alzheimer," he sought to explore the experience of "wasting away," in order to ponder existence in such a state. The results are equal parts heartbreaking and beautiful, shedding light on the very human qualities of encroaching mortality.

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"The public opinion regarding dementia at that time [I began this series] was that dirty old men and women, being lonely and abandoned, waste away in nursing homes," ten Napel explained to The Huffington Post. "Pictures show people with baby bibs on, slobber from the mouth and the remains of a dinner on their clothes. 'That's no life!' was the prevailing public thought."

Aware of the obvious differences between himself and an Alzheimer's patient, he wanted to create images that mined the more similar spaces. "We all are familiar with sadness, joy, fear, despair, depression and cheerfulness," he added. "And people with Alzheimer's feel it the same way. Unfortunately emotions confuse them... and us."

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His photographs are not embellished. He sat with patients living in a nearby Dutch nursing home for an hour or more, photographing the residents sitting before him like any other portrait subject. "I would wait for that specific moment portrait photographers wait for. The special moment in time in which posture and facial expression come together in a meaningful portrait," he recalled. "That often meant a very long wait."

Some portraits capture brief instances of elation, others seem to embody worry and unease, but most contain moments of contemplation. As the individuals framed before us peer into a void, we -- the viewers -- likely mirror the expression, and both parties rather idealistically wonder together about fate, the future and the evolution of the human spirit.

alzheimers


"The disintegration of the inner life hits the heart of human existence. Our whole life and heart is devoted to developing our personality," ten Napel further explained. "A confrontation with people who suffer from dementia can be frightening because their existence raises questions about our own lives. They show us that life can evolve in a different way and their fate makes us sensitive to that."

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Artist Resolves To Insert Trans Women Into The Canon Of Art History

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The history of representation in Western art is unfortunately a pretty narrow one, consisting almost exclusively of white, cis men and women.

Artists like Kehinde Wiley and Mickalene Thomas have retroactively inserted black bodies into the art historical lexicon, thereby widening the range of portraiture's scope. Queens-based artist Janet Bruesselbach is broadening the scope further, through a series of full-length oil portraits depicting trans women. The project, titled "Daughters of Mercury," aims to provide trans individuals with an artistic visibility they don't yet possess, through a series of loving portraits.

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Alice, oil on canvas, 37x29in, 2014


"This series was inspired by my love for the trans women I have met online and my sympathy with the struggles they have being seen as women and people," Bruesselbach explained to The Huffington Post. "As an artist, if I'm close to someone I will inevitably try to paint a portrait of them. This started with Maddie, but I met more and more beautiful women that I felt were not often the subjects of classical oil portraits, and whom I wanted to earn, as models, some of the money they needed toward ongoing expenses, and to offset pay and hiring discrimination.

The venture's title, "Daughters of Mercury," stems from the idea of alchemical transformation. "I'm not much of a romantic or mystic," Bruesselbach says on Kickstarter, "but arguably, the painting process is one of transmutation of pigment into life. Its negotiations of representation parallel the continual aesthetic and cultural decisions trans women are often forced to make."

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Maddie, in progress, oil on canvas, 48x24in


Although she cites Baroque painters and representational modernists as influences, Bruesselbach's true artistic inspiration comes from interacting with her subjects and exploring the complex process of visual representation. "I hope to communicate that trans female bodies are female bodies, and that there is a huge diversity among trans women in gender presentation, sexuality, profession, class, ability, race, and body type. I want to bring attention to the lives and work of my subjects. But I also just want to make gorgeous paintings people want to look at."

Bruesselbach is currently raising funds for her project on Kickstarter, hoping to collect $20,000 by October 26 to purchase supplies and pay her models. She hopes her vision will appeal to those outside the trans community who can help make this long overdue artistic intervention a reality. "While I've only gotten positive responses to the series so far, many of the people I talk to consider the audience to be niche, and expect only the trans community to support it... Trans women are everywhere, but until recently have been marginalized by the invisibility enforced by the intensification of misogynist violence toward them. It is up to cisnormative society to stop questioning their femininity, embrace their beauty, and counter the disadvantages they have just by being themselves."

Visit the "Daughters of Mercury" page to learn more.

11-Year-Old Sensation Taylor Hatala Kills It With 'All About That Bass' Dance

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Taylor Hatala, 11, is one incredible dancer, no treble.

The preteen, of Sherwood Park, Canada, went majorly viral in September, thanks to her super-smooth performance set to Nicki Minaj's "Anaconda." Now she's back with a fast-paced routine for Meghan Trainor's "All About That Bass."



Wowed by her moves, news outlets are calling her "prodigy" and "phenomenon." But what Hatala is more than anything else is hardworking.

The dancer told City, a Canadian broadcaster, that she dances for at least three hours a day, seven days a week, splitting her time between two studios -- and that's after she finishes her schoolwork.

"She is the hardest-working, most genuine, big-hearted kid you could ever meet," Jennifer Mills, artistic director of Hyperflex Dance Studio, where Hatala studies technical dance, told Global News.

"It's been amazing watching her grow this year," her "All About That Bass" co-dancer Matt Steffanina wrote in the video's YouTube description. "So proud of her."

H/T Mashable

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These Enthusiastic News Anchors Entertain Themselves With An Intricate Handshake

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Ever wonder what news anchors do during commercial breaks? Well, these two entertain themselves in a way that's positively delightful: with a glorious, intricate handshake.

Robert Jordan and Jackie Bange, of Chicago's WGN News, have been anchoring together for about 20 years, and they've been doing this handshake since the early 2000s, though their list of moves has grown over time.

When a 2009 clip of their routine went viral again recently, they filmed this new version, showing their entire handshake, as it exists today. Currently, their routine is so long that it takes two commercial breaks to complete.

But where do they get inspiration for their additions? The news, of course. A post by WGN News notes many of their moves represent events or trends that have made headlines over time. For example, the newer moves in this longer handshake include a shoutout to the ALS Ice Bucket Challenge and the notorious “Gangnam Style” dance.

One thing is for certain with these two: Practice makes perfect.

Visit WGN News to learn more about their story.

This 1-Minute Film Will Chill You To The Bone With Terror

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Halloween is nigh, and once more scary stories are seeping through the dark crevices of the Internet.

One of latest is a short film that originated with a question asked last year at Reddit: "What is the best horror story you can come up with in two sentences?"

And if you didn't think it's possible to be absolutely terrified by just a few words, you'll think again. A resulting story by Reddit user Juan J. Ruiz (username justAnotherMuffledVo) went like this:

I begin tucking him into bed and he tells me, “Daddy check for monsters under my bed.” I look underneath for his amusement and see him, another him, under the bed, staring back at me quivering and whispering, “Daddy there’s somebody on my bed.”


Ruiz's horror story was then turned into the truly chilling one-minute clip above called "Tuck Me In," directed by Barcelona-based filmmaker Ignacio F. Rodó .

The short has shown at several film festivals throughout the world, and for good reason. Be prepared to be terrified very, very quickly.




H/T Reddit

Spend The Next Two Hours Watching 'The Empire Strikes Back Uncut'

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Cut together from more than 480 fan-made segments, "The Empire Strikes Back Uncut" is your ultimate time waster of the day. The two-hour movie is a shot-for-shot remake of "Star Wars: Episode V" culled together in a way that may recall "Be Kind Rewind" (because not enough stuff actually recalls "Be Kind Rewind"; we got your back, Michel Gondry). "This labor of love is the product of thousands of 'Star Wars' fans using their own actors, props, animation, artwork, or action figures to tell the story of 'The Empire Strikes Back,'" reads a press release from Disney announcing the video. The clip went live on the official "Star Wars" website to coincide with the return of "Star Wars Fan Film Awards." More information on that initiative can be found at StarWars.com. For now, just watch "Empire Strikes Back Uncut" below (and wait patiently for "The Phantom Menace: Uncut," we guess).

Stunning Fall Foliage Pictures Remind Us How Awesome This Season Can Be

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Fall is finally in full swing, bringing vibrant colors and cooler weather to much of the United States. In the spirit of all things autumn, we asked you to share your best fall photos with us, and received over 2,000 submissions on Instagram tagged #HuffPostFall. Clearly we're not the only ones who love this season.

Here are some of our favorites from around the country and the world. From gorgeous red treetops in front of the Washington Monument to golden aspens in a Utah national forest, there's something for everyone. Want to take some leaf pictures yourself? Check out these maps from the Weather Channel to see the best times to tour fall foliage around the country. Enjoy these colors while you still can!

Continue sharing your photos using the hashtag #HuffPostFall, and keep an eye out for more fall photo posts.


ghostexposure embedded via Instagram

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Aspen grove in the fall. This is what Heaven will look like for me. Uinta-Wasatch-Cache National Forest, Utah. #pictapgo_app #utah #saltlakecityutah #fall #travel #travelgram #huffpostfall #iphoneography #natgeotravelpic

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Red, red, and more red. Love this time of year, when DC begins to wear it's red so well. #dclivin #ig_clubaward_022 #wanderlust #worlderlust #autumninthecity #redleaves #washingtonmonument

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#leaf #leaves #ohio #fall #autumn

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Autumn in Boston. #beautifuldestinations #ig_shotz #ig_worldclub #ig_mood #instatraveler #wanderlust #worlderlust #worldplaces #outdooradventurephotos #ig_clubaward_023 #traveldeeper #livelaughtravel #boston #autumn

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Don't you just want to jump in? #fall4oneonta #outsideofhuntunion #ilovethefallcolors

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#huffpostfall #pennsylvania #foliage #autumn #leaves #fall #seasons #nature #naturelovers #instasky #instanature #instagood #igers #igdaily #ig_nature #blue #sky #country #vista #bestnaturepics #latergram

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I guess it's fall. #minnesota #fall #colors #fallcolors #tree

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October • Octubre

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CPH bikes 31

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Beauty. #mtrainier #hiking #takesyourbreathaway

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Starting to look (slightly) and feel (very much) like fall at the High Falls in Rochester. 42 degrees this morning! #upstateny #runphoto

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It's starting to look like fall! #cincinnati #thisiscincy #cincyusa #cincy #downtown #piattpark #sundayrunday #autumn

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#london #igerslondon #mayfairmonopoly #communityfirst #wwim10 #wwim10_london

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Looking south from Hamilton Point toward (for those familiar) Patterson's Pellet and the @mohonkmountainhouse Skytop tower, far left #newpaltz #newyork #shawangunks #gunks #rei1440project #neverstopexploring #mountain #minnewaska #lakeminnewaska #huffpostfall #hike #hiking #hamiltonpoint #autumn #fall #mextures #huffpostfall #huffpostgram #ispyny #ihikeny #nature #ny #NYLovesFall #cliff #mountain #nysparks #leaves #foliage

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'Twin Peaks' Is Coming Back, But Will It Be Good? Let's Discuss On HuffPost Entertainment's Podcast

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Each week, HuffPost Entertainment's Podcast examines a different pop culture phenomenon. This week, it's all about Twin Peaks. Welcome to TwinPeaksCast..



On Oct. 6, Showtime revealed that "Twin Peaks" would return for a nine-episode run on the network in 2016, which coincides with the 25th anniversary of the beloved cult series. For fans, the revival is long-awaited -- and not just because co-creators David Lynch and Mark Frost had teased its return in the days leading up to the official announcement.

In light of the news, HuffPost Entertainment managing editor (and "Twin Peaks" novice) Christopher Rosen asked Carol Hartsell, senior video and comedy editor at The Huffington Post, and Pieter Dom, the creator of popular "Twin Peaks" fan site welcometotwinpeaks.com, about the the series, how has it influenced the current television landscape and what will it take for the series to be successful in 2016? Listen above!

Previous HuffPost Entertainment Podcast Installments
Episode 1: BootyCast

Chris Hadfield's Stunning Photos From Space Will Give You A 'Truly Global Perspective' On Our Planet

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From a bird's eye view of Niagara Falls to a breathtaking pic of the Windy City, astronaut Chris Hadfield became famous for his stunning photos of Earth from space.

Hadfield shared many of his photos via social media--but not the 150 images included in his new book, "You Are Here: Around the World in 92 Minutes." The book goes on sale Oct. 14.

What inspired Hadfield, now retired, to put the collection together?

"A desire to not keep this magnificent experience to myself," he told The Huffington Post in an email, "and to let people see our planet for themselves from a truly global perspective. To share the experience of floating beside me by the window for an entire orbit of our world."

Scroll down to see 11 of the stunning photos from the book.



Check out 16 things you may not know about Hadfield here.

Hugh Grant Drops Out Of 'Bridget Jones 3'

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The third installment of "Bridget Jones" will not include Hugh Grant after all, this according to Hugh Grant. The actor, who starred in the first two films as Daniel Cleaver, reportedly said in an interview with Free Radio that he has dropped out of the movie.

"I decided not to do it," he said. "But I think they're going to go ahead and do it without Daniel. The book’s excellent, by the way, but the script is completely different -- well, the script as I last saw it a few years ago.”

The third film is to be based on Helen Fielding's third book, "Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy," which received excellent reviews last year.

Two years ago Grant told Mandrake that filming of the movie had been put on hold due to rewrites, but would no doubt feature original stars Colin Firth and Renée Zellweger. "Bridget Jones 3" was first announced back in August 2011 and Grant's most recent announcement now gives us little hope that this film will actually get made.

Grant's rep did not return HuffPost Entertainment's immediate request for comment.
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