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Get Ready For The Return Of 'The Comeback' With Our Refresher

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Hello, hello, hello! Nine years after "The Comeback" began and ended its single-season stint on HBO, Valerie Cherish disciples are gathering at the alter of their favorite hapless has-been to welcome her back to television. Returning for an eight-episode limited series on Nov. 9, with a growing cult audience that's discovered the show via DVD and streaming services, "The Comeback" and lead star Lisa Kudrow are once again in the TV spotlight. Whether you're a newcomer or a longtime advocate, use our primer to prep for Sunday's premiere.

If "The Comeback" is so good, why was it canceled, anyway?
Longtime pals Michael Patrick King and Lisa Kudrow created "The Comeback" after "Sex and the City" and "Friends" came to a close in 2004. Its 13-episode debut season premiered on June 5, 2005, to disappointing ratings and lukewarm reception. (For example, onetime Entertainment Weekly critic Gillian Flynn -- maybe you've heard of her? -- gave the show a C.) In the same way that many of this year's films have dissected fame's cruel treatment toward aging movie stars, "The Comeback" was one of several premium-cable series to chronicle the inner workings of television -- "Curb Your Enthusiasm," "Entourage" and "Extras," among others.

"We've looked at our schedule, and given our future commitments, we felt we would not be able to give the show the support it needed," an HBO spokeswoman said in September 2005's cancellation announcement, which came about two weeks after the season finale. In retrospect, the show arrived too soon for us to admire its rich commentary: Multi-camera sitcoms like the one Valerie joins were only just becoming a punching bag, and celebrities headlining reality shows still seemed like a fleeting novelty. "The Comeback" began to find a second life when Kudrow earned an Emmy nomination in 2006. Many critics hoped she'd win (instead, Julia Louis-Dreyfus prevailed for "The New Adventures of Old Christine"), and the show's fan base has escalated in the years since. Entertainment Weekly called it one of the 10 best shows of the 2000s. (We assume Gillian Flynn didn't cast a vote for that list.)

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Michael Patrick King, Lance Barber and Lisa Kudrow work on a scene while filming Season 2 of "The Comeback."

Can I watch the new season without having seen the first?
It won't be hard to follow along with the basic plot, but we recommend visiting Season 1 before moving forward. Otherwise you'll miss the many in-jokes about Valerie's previous antics and the people who surrounded her. The new season is essentially Valerie being the exact same Valerie we saw nine years ago, and callbacks abound.

I don't have time to catch up. Just tell me happened in Season 1.
Okay. Shallow sitcom actress Valerie Cherish returns to the spotlight following a decade-long hiatus with what should be a starring role in the youthful comedy "Room and Bored." She's also agreed to be the center of a reality series called "The Comeback," which means a camera crew is embedded with her along the way. By the time "Room and Bored" production begins, Valerie's part has been reduced to a supporting role as frumpy Aunt Sassy, which puts her at odds with callous showrunner Paulie G. (Lance Barber), who disagreed with Valerie's casting from the get-go. Along the way, we meet Valerie's flamboyant hairdresser Mickey (Robert Michael Morris), her patient businessman husband Mark (Damian Young), her standoffish teen stepdaughter Francesca (Vanessa Marano), her skeptical housekeeper Esperanza (Lillian Hurst), her abrasive publicist Billy (Dan Bucatinsky), her younger co-stars (pre-fame Malin Åkerman, Kellan Lutz and others) and Jane (Laura Silverman), the collected producer of "The Comeback" to whom Valerie frequently barks orders by breaking the fourth wall.

I want to watch the season premiere on Sunday, but I only have time to squeeze in a few episodes between now and then. Which ones should I watch?
Let's break it down to five vital "Comeback" episodes for your mini-binge: Episodes 3 ("Valerie Bonds with the Cast"), 6 ("Valerie Saves the Show"), 10 ("Valerie Gets a Magazine Cover"), 12 ("Valerie Shines Under Stress") and 13 ("Valerie Does Another Classic Leno"). You can find them on HBO Go, Amazon Prime, iTunes or DVD.

I keep seeing some places say the new season is only six episodes. Is it six or eight?
When the return of "The Comeback" was announced in May, most reports indicated it would span six episodes. HBO confirmed to HuffPost Entertainment that the new season is in fact eight episodes.

Are all of the characters back?
Yes! We've seen the first five episodes, and can confirm that Mickey, Jane, Paulie G., Mark, Esperanza and Juna make triumphant returns. Unfortunately, we don't see any of Tom, Francesca, James Burrows and the rest of the "Room and Bored" cast.

What's Valerie up to this time?
While producing a reality pilot she hopes Bravo will pick up (get ready for an Andy Cohen cameo), Valerie learns a newly rehabbed Paulie G. is writing an HBO sitcom about a washed-up actress named Mallory Church who bears more than a few resemblances to Valerie herself. After storming into the HBO offices to protest, Paulie G. and the other executives offer her a role on the show. Of course she accepts.

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Valerie is igonored by the paparazzi in a scene from Season 2 of "The Comeback."

Who else is behind this show if it's so good?
All of the "Comeback" writers and directors are splashed across today's comedy landscape. Michael Patrick King went on to create "2 Broke Girls"; Amy B. Harris was an executive producer on "The Carrie Diaries"; Michael Schur wrote acclaimed episodes of "The Office" and "Parks and Recreation" before creating "Brooklyn Nine-Nine"; John Riggi was a star "30 Rock" scribe; Greg Mottola directed "Superbad" and "Clear History"; David Steinberg has directed "Curb Your Enthusiasm" and hosted "Inside Comedy"; Linda Wallem co-created "Nurse Jackie"; and Michael Lehmann has helmed episodes of "American Horror Story," "True Blood" and "Californication."

All of a sudden we're resurrecting short-lived shows. Is this one any good?
It's understandable if you're dubious after the disappointing fourth season of "Arrested Development," the limited buzz surrounding "24: Live Another Day" and the on-again, off-again status of AMC's "The Killing." But Season 2 arrives in full "Comeback" form: biting, a bit cringeworthy and almost jarringly funny. Watching Valerie try to convince us (read: convince herself) she's playing an actual "character" instead of a version of herself on Paulie G.'s new show is classic clueless Valerie. The show is still delightfully painful to watch at times because of how cataclysmic Valerie is to herself, and the satire is amped up another notch with the passing of time. Popular culture's changing tides are just as much of a punchline here as they were nine years ago, as we see in an outtake from a never-seen "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" gig that Valerie bombed before the franchise first aired. Val couldn't handle the "Real Housewives" because she was embittered by her first reality-TV experience, yet here she is repeating her own mistakes. That's been a thesis of "The Comeback," and even with a slightly more benevolent take in Season 2, it's still one of Valerie's most recognizable characteristics. Season 2's continue prescience is a reminder that Season 1's jokes were on the nose back in 2005, way before audiences took to them en masse.

Will there be more after Season 2?
King and Kudrow have demurred on whether the show has another life down the road. Michael Lombardo, HBO’s president of programming, said he'd welcome more of "The Comeback" in a "heartbeat." As of now, nothing official is planned.

"The Comeback" returns Nov. 9 at 10 p.m. ET on HBO. Watch Lisa Kudrow's full HuffPost Live interview here.

Florida Mom Creates Incredible Disney-Themed Costumes For Her Daughter

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Florida parents Chad and Jennifer Rouch love all things Disney. As Jennifer told The Huffington Post in an email, they're such "Disnerds" that they got engaged during a Christmas party at Disney World, and once or twice a week, they make the 30-minute drive to the Orlando park with their Disney-loving daughter Lane (courtesy of their annual passes).

During these Disney World visits, 3-year-old Lane often wows her fellow park-goers with her amazing outfits -- beautiful character costumes that her mom sews. Jennifer Rouch is a seasoned seamstress and has created countless costumes for Lane, usually by recycling and up-cycling materials from local thrift stores.

A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on





Jennifer documents her homemade Disney costumes and Lane's adventures at the park on a Tumblr page called "My Disney Daze," as well as an Instagram account that dad Chad made earlier this year. With their frequent visits to Disney World, the Rouch family is rarely lacking in opportunities to take photos to show their many followers.

The Rouches originally decided to purchase Disney World annual passes to give their daughter, whom Jennifer describes as "quite shy," something fun to do with her parents while surrounded by other kids. "We wanted her to not be crippled by shyness, so we took her to a place where a kid could feel happy and safe to dream and play and be themselves or anyone they want to be."





While Lane loves all Disney characters, Jennifer said she and her husband have a special place in their hearts for Princess Tiana, the first character at the park who really helped "to bring Lane out of her shell." "She was the first princess at the parks that Lane went up to all by herself, and they shared a game of peek-a-boo that was truly magical," the mom said, adding "now they have a thing for looking for wildlife and picking flowers in ‘the bayou.'"

Lane has become a bit of a celebrity at Disney World. After she dressed like Jane Porter from "Tarzan" for "Dapper Day," several cast members started following her on Instagram and recognizing her throughout the park. The staff even invited Lane to a special "Beauty and the Beast"-themed night, in which she had a tea party with Chip, read with Belle, and shared a dance with the Beast. As Lane and the Beast walked through the Disney castle restaurant, Jennifer says "the music from the movie swelled up, and the entire restaurant stood up and applauded our little girl, the beauty and the beast."

A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on





Jennifer doesn't only make Disney costumes -- she has also sewn incredible superhero-themed outfits for Lane (who's named after Lois Lane) and even costumes from classic movies like "A League Of Their Own."

Still, as you can see from this sampling of Lane's Instagram photos, there's an extra special place for Disney magic in their family.

A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on



A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on



A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on



A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on





A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on











A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on



A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on







A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on



A photo posted by Lane the Wee One (@ferdalump) on





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Bavarian Dudes Make Beautiful Music With Rusty Tool Boxes... For Some Reason

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A bunch of tools never sounded so good.

Clad in what looks like lederhosen and armed with toolboxes, the Bavarian group "Alpine Drums" made some banging, beautiful music during a "tavern musician" performance on the Bavarian television show, Bayerisches Fernsehen.

Toni Bartl's group of musicians performed an impressive, well-choreographed routine paired with a (literally) banging beat. During the number, the musicians used their toolbox and a few wrenches to create the unique sound, with a monster cabinet solo about a minute in, and the introduction of a light show.

You can learn more about the group on their website, or check out more of their fancy "Alpinstep" footwork below:




Sketches Of George Lucas Museum Look Like They Belong In Outer Space

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CHICAGO (AP) -- The sketches of "Star Wars" creator George Lucas' Chicago museum show a flowing white building topped with a hovering ring. The newly unveiled architectural designs for the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art were drawing a range of reaction on Wednesday, from snide comments to forthright admiration.

"It looks like a palace for Jabba the Hutt. I was wondering what planet we are on," Chicago Alderman Bob Fioretti, who's challenging Mayor Rahm Emanuel in the mayor's race next year, told the Chicago Sun-Times. Online design site Co.Design was more generous, comparing the architectural concept to "an Egyptian pyramid reimagined for the year 2020."

The Beijing-based principal designer, Ma Yansong of MAD Architects, released the first sketches Tuesday. The seven-story museum will be located between Soldier Field and McCormick Place on Lake Michigan. It's expected to cost about $400 million. Ma has said it's the most important project of his career to date.

"Inspired by the work of Frank Lloyd Wright and Mies van der Rohe, the design integrates the natural beauty of the park and Lake Michigan with the powerful man-made architecture of Chicago," MAD Architects said in a statement on the firm's website.

When Lucas announced the design team in July, he called them "some of the top architects in the world."

"I am thrilled with the architectural team's vision for the building and the surrounding green space. I look forward to presenting our design to the Chicago community," Lucas said in the July 28 statement.

Chicago-based Studio Gang is doing the landscape design, including a bridge to connect the museum with Northerly Island. Chicago-based VOA Associates is leading the implementation of the design.

Ma's previous work includes Absolute Towers in Ontario, Canada; the Ordos Museum in Ordos, China; and Chaoyang Park Plaza in Beijing, China.

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(AP Photos/Courtesy of the Lucas Museum of Narrative Art)


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Online:

http://www.i-mad.com/press/mad-architects-releases-design-concept-of-lucas-museum-of-narrative-art-lmna/

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Information from: Chicago Sun-Times, http://www.suntimes.com/index

Deaf Mom Dances With Her Son, Shows Off Killer Moves

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Mark Villaver has danced behind some impressive celebrities like Taylor Swift.

But he's never looked better on the dance floor than in this video, where he and his mom throw down some super smooth moves to Usher. Mark's mom is deaf, but judging by her flow, she has no problem finding her groove.

In the introduction to the video, uploaded to YouTube in mid-October, Mark asks his mom in sign language if she'd like to dance. She signs back, visibly excited, "YEAH!" prompting a dance routine which will absolutely knock your socks off.

WATCH Mark and his mom dance, above.

H/T The Mighty


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Here's The Reason For Bran's Absence From 'Game Of Thrones' Season 5

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Spoilers are coming ...

In September, actor Kristian Nairn said in an interview that he and Bran wouldn't be in Season 5 of "Game of Thrones," and the entire Internet was like, "Hodor?"

Now, one of the "GoT" showrunners finally explained the reason why.

In an interview with Entertainment Weekly, David Benioff called the information leak "unfortunate," but he revealed that, though there are differences between the show and the books, he and fellow showrunner Dan Weiss are still trying to stick to author George R. R. Martin's various storylines:

Last year we caught up to the end of Bran’s storyline (in Martin’s most recent A Song of Ice and Fire novel, A Dance with Dragon). So if we pushed him forward this season, then he’s way ahead of where the other characters are.


The Season 4 finale of "GoT" leaves off at the point where Bran begins training on his skinchanging and greensight.

Benioff went on to say that it "made sense" to leave Bran's story where it was for now and that going through his training wouldn't be "particularly cinematic."

Though the info from Benioff explains why we won't see much of Bran very soon, don't expect many more details for other Season 5 leaks. When HuffPost Entertainment asked the author of series about released footage that appears to show Jaime Lannister in Dorne (potentially a huge plot change), Martin simply said, "You'll have to discover that when it comes out here. Don't want to reveal any spoilers."

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Image: Jipsz

H/T EW

Your Least Favorite 'How To Get Away With Murder' Couple Already Has YouTube Fan Videos

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After only six episodes and what seems to be a consensus that their coupledom is peripheral to the plot of "How to Get Away with Murder," we'd like to inform you that Laurel and Frank already have several homemade YouTube montages devoted to their relationship. We'd also like you to know that commenters on said videos have apparently nicknamed the pair "Flaurel," as if that were a something the Internet has been doing all along. (Don't worry, Internet, no need to start now.)

No affront meant to the creators of these videos, of course -- they're all quite well-made -- but Laurel and Frank (sorry, we can't bring ourselves to call them Flaurel) are hardly a couple most viewers have vested interest in. They don't often appear onscreen together, and, when they do, their relationship is tertiary to almost everything else happening on the show. Of the more than 360 "How to Get Away with Murder" photos on ABC's press site, we couldn't find a single shot of the pair alone together. That's why we're so tickled with these declarations of adoration. Usually this treatment is reserved for Sam and Diane types, but these days everyone is a fan favorite somewhere, apparently.

Without further ado, we now give you Flaurel:









Haley Morris-Cafiero's Stunning Photographs Show The Strange Looks An Overweight Woman Receives In Public

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Back in 2013, photographer Haley Morris-Cafiero released a series of self-portraits showing how bystanders looked at her in public.

What were they reacting to? Her weight.

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Morris-Cafiero has now released a new set of photographs as a continuation to the series, in which she photographs people reacting to her exercising, shopping for new clothes or preparing to go to the beach.

"When the Wait Watchers images went viral, many of the online articles had anonymous commenters posting that my life (and the world) would be better if I just got a makeover and exercised," she told The Huffington Post in an email. "In my new series, I am doing the same process as 'Wait Watchers' where I set up a camera and record the reactions of strangers but now I am engaging in 'self-improvement' acts such as exercising, looking at clothes, etc. My goal is to be more assertive with my role in the image and show that I am still looked at with critical glances when I try to 'improve' myself towards society's standards."

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Morris-Cafiero is hoping to publish these images, alongside some commentary she's received, in a book titled The Watchers.

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The photographer told HuffPost that her book is inspired as much by people's reactions to the photographs as the narrative of the images themselves.

"When the images went viral, the articles provided a platform for anonymous critics to make comments," she said in an email. "Many of the comments concentrated not on the actual photographs, but on how ugly my face, hair, clothes, etc were. The commenters don't realize that they are contributing to my project by making judgements about me based on how I look ([thinking I'm] on welfare, unemployed, have diabetes). So I started archiving the comments."

Morris-Cafiero is careful to distinguish between the vitriolic comments she receives on the Internet, and the glances of people captured in her photographs.

"I still don't know what the passersby in my photographs are thinking or reacting to," she said.

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Not all the online feedback she's received has been negative. Another inspiration for publishing this book is the outpouring of stories from other people who feel judged for their weight.

"In addition to critical emails and comments, I have received hundreds of emails from supportive people who have found inspiration in my photographs," Morris-Cafiero wrote on her Kickstarter page. "Some say 'thank you' and others tell stories of my images helping them love their body, overcome bullying or not commit suicide."

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Learn more about this amazing project here.

Still Don't Get ‘Inception'? Neither Does This Mom

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The only thing more entertaining than a good movie is having your mom recount the details in a total mom way. Joe Nicolosi knows this all too well. First, he had his mother explain "The Matrix," and now here's "Inception." In the video, Nicolosi's mom attempts to explain Christopher Nolan's mind-bender, but has trouble getting all the pieces straight. For instance, she's convinced the cast is entirely different and that a certain scene happened -- even though, for the life of us, we can't remember its existence. Watch the video above, then go call your mom.

Ed Sheeran Accepts Engagement Ring From Teen Fan Battling Brain Cancer

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We dare you not to cry after reading this.

At his Oct. 30 concert in Glasgow, Scotland, British pop sensation Ed Sheeran met Katie Papworth, a 19-year-old fan who has been battling an aggressive form of brain cancer for eight years and recently lost her eyesight.

Backstage, Papworth presented Sheeran, 23, with an engagement ring, which he accepted.

Sheeran also signed a picture she drew for him. "Katie, lovely to finally meet my wife," he wrote on the drawing.

The Les Hoey MBE DreamMaker Foundation, an organization working to help children dealing with life-threatening illnesses, orchestrated the meeting and later thanked Sheeran on Facebook, posting a photo of the singer with Papworth, her mom and her caregiver.





H/T Billboard

A 'Lemony Snicket' Series Is Coming To Netflix

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Millennials: prepare to freak out. Lemony Snitcket's A Series of Unfortunate Events, one of the most beloved children's books from the late '90s (Harry Potter aside, of course) is being adapted into an original series for Netflix. The books followed the constantly disastrous lives of the Baudelaire orphans: Violet, Klaus and Sunny. Since they're parents were mysteriously killed in a fire, the orphans are forced to live with Count Olaf, their cousin/uncle who goes through any means necessary to steal their inheritance.

Netflix plans to adapt the series of 13 novels into a live-action show, in partnership with with Paramount Television. Paramount was also behind the 2004 movie of the same name starring Jim Carrey and Emily Browning. BuzzFeed caught up with Daniel Handler, the mysterious author who wrote the books under the pen name Snicket. He told them that he's working closely with Netflix to find a director for the series. And his dream casting for Count Olaf? British actor James Mason, circa 1949. Mason died in 1984, so that's not happening, but one can dream.

Handler is currently on tour for his new book series All The Wrong Questions, a prequel to A Series of Unfortunate Events. Until we know more about the Netflix series, just hope that you have better luck than the Baudelaires.

For more on the news, head to Variety.

You Need To Hear This Beachy Cover Of Taylor Swift's 'Shake It Off'

The Evolution Of Madonna's 'Like A Virgin' Performances Over The Past 30 Years

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Thirty years ago, a blithe little song about fresh romance made pop music feel so shiny and new. Madonna was already something of a household name when "Like a Virgin" was released, on Nov. 6, 1984 (two months after we heard it for the first time at the inaugural MTV Video Music Awards), but the song made her pop's impending queen. It gave Madonna her first No. 1 single, sitting atop the Billboard chart for six weeks.

Arguably still her most famous song, "Like a Virgin" is now a staple at wedding receptions, on the airwaves and on lists of controversial moments in popular culture. But you're much less likely to see Madonna perform a standard rendition of the classic today. Most of her tours have featured a remastered version, which means we've heard several wildly different iterations of the pop standard. Here's how "Like a Virgin" has evolved in the 30 years since it was released:







See our complete ranking of Madonna's singles here.

Gorgeous, Trippy Light Show Will Make You Want To Get On Your Bike And Ride

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If human-powered transportation were always this beautiful, maybe a lot more of us would be pedaling around.

Check out "Ghost Peloton," an on-the-move performance piece featuring riders, bicycles and dancers outfitted with LED lights.

The elaborate spectacle was staged during last summer's Yorkshire (U.K.) Festival for the start of the 2014 Tour de France in Yorkshire. Video of the production was posted to Vimeo last month.

"The rhythm of movement from the choreographed actions of massed participants becomes a source of creativity in itself, extending perception of the immediate setting," the Vimeo description says.

Directed by Mark Huskisson, the filmed performance is a collaboration between the NVA's Speed of Light and the Phoenix Dance Theatre.

It's a trippy ride. Enjoy.

H/T Laughing Squid

'The Hobbit: The Battle Of The Five Armies' Gets Its Full Trailer

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"This is the last move in a master plan," says Gandalf in the main trailer for the final "Hobbit" film, "a plan long in the making." Sounds good, Gandy. "The Hobbit: The Battle of the Five Armies" ends Peter Jackson's time in Middle-earth following five previous films. Watch the trailer below. "The Five Armies" is out on Dec. 17.


Susie Essman's Bizarre Real-Life 'Curb Your Enthusiasm' Moment

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Susie Essman stole a place in our hearts as the hilarious, prone-to-yelling Susie Greene on "Curb Your Enthusiasm." Speaking with HuffPost Entertainment at the Natural Resources Defense Council "Night of Comedy" on Wednesday, Essman revealed the experience in her life that most belonged on an episode of Larry David's hit sitcom. It actually happened on a lunch break during filming:

We all went out to some restaurant in Pacific Palisades where we were filming. And right after we ordered, this guy comes out really angry, and he rips the 'A' rating -- you know the food inspection -- off the wall and he puts up a 'D.' And Larry's looking at me all freaked out, like, 'We ordered! We can't eat here now.' So I went running out after the guy, and he was all the way down the block. And I ran after him and I was like, 'Why did you do that?' It turned out one of the five dishwashers wasn't working correctly. But it was a moment where it was like: it so could have been a "Curb" episode but it wasn't. We were just sitting there, like, what just happened?


Go ahead, press play:

The Cast Of Quentin Tarantino's 'Hateful Eight' Is Announced

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Quentin Tarantino reached deep into his own Rolodex for his buzzy new movie, "The Hateful Eight." The Weinstein Company announced the cast on Thursday, and among the lead stars are several actors who've appeared in Tarantino's previous movies.

Samuel L. Jackson ("Pulp Fiction," "Django Unchained"), Kurt Russell ("Death Proof"), Walton Goggins ("Django Unchained"), Tim Roth ("Reservoir Dogs," "Pulp Fiction"), Michael Madsen ("Reservoir Dogs," "Kill Bill") and Bruce Dern ("Django Unchained") will join Tarantino rookies Jennifer Jason Leigh and Demián Bichir to comprise the film's title evildoers.

The Weinstein Company also confirmed rumors that Channing Tatum will join the cast, but the capacity of the "Magic Mike" star's exact role was not disclosed in the press release.

"The Hateful Eight" became the subject of much attention after the script leaked online in January, and word at the time indicated Tarantino would shelve the project. That was overturned when the writer/director staged a table read in April (but Tarantino will include a new ending for the theatrical release). Several members of the official cast were part of that event: Jackson, Russell, Goggins, Dern, Madsen and Roth were joined by Amber Tamblyn, Denis Menochet (who appeared in "Inglourious Basterds") and James Remar (from "Django Unchained").

"The Hateful Eight" will enter production in January, eyeing a fall 2015 release. Here's the official plot synopsis, courtesy of TWC:

In THE HATEFUL EIGHT, set six or eight or twelve years after the Civil War, a stagecoach hurtles through the wintry Wyoming landscape. The passengers, bounty hunter John Ruth (Russell) and his fugitive Daisy Domergue (Leigh), race towards the town of Red Rock where Ruth, known in these parts as “The Hangman,” will bring Domergue to justice. Along the road, they encounter two strangers: Major Marquis Warren (Jackson), a black former union soldier turned infamous bounty hunter, and Chris Mannix (Goggins), a southern renegade who claims to be the town’s new Sheriff. Losing their lead on the blizzard, Ruth, Domergue, Warren and Mannix seek refuge at Minnie's Haberdashery, a stagecoach stopover on a mountain pass. When they arrive at Minnie’s, they are greeted not by the proprietor but by four unfamiliar faces. Bob (Bichir), who’s taking care of Minnie’s while she’s visiting her mother, is holed up with Oswaldo Mobray (Roth), the hangman of Red Rock, cow-puncher Joe Gage (Madsen), and Confederate General Sanford Smithers (Dern). As the storm overtakes the mountainside stopover, our eight travelers come to learn they may not make it to Red Rock after all…

These Vintage Images Show Just How Much Department Stores Have Changed

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One of the fondest memories from my childhood was going to the Wanamaker's store in Philadelphia for lunch with my grandmother. We'd go right around every holiday to find me a frilly holiday dress, then visit the store's tea room for a light snack. When I tell this story to others, it's as if I told them that my grandmother and I regularly traveled to the moon. Their brains cannot compute that a department store would have anything but a sad food counter (anyone ever been to a Target?). And frilly holiday dresses? Who am I, Shirley Temple?

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A view of the famous organ at the former Wanamaker's department store in Philadelphia. It's now a Macy's.

To say that department stores have changed since my ladies luncheon days is an understatement. First of all, Wanamaker's is long gone, along with other regional stores that gave character to other cities. Second, shopping habits have shifted. Specialty chain stores and, of course, the Internet have transformed the way we shop. We don't go to a department store for furniture, we shuffle off to IKEA or a national brand's store. We don't even head to a store to buy books, preferring instead the deep discounts that only the Internet can bring.

However, one landmark department store is trying to entice shoppers to come visit -- as a tourist attraction, more or less. Macy's Herald Square is getting a makeover to accommodate the buying habits of visiting travelers, who make up a good portion of the thousands of shoppers who come through the doors daily. In the video above, you get a behind-the-scenes peek at how the company is making this store easier to shop (and the ambitious plans to expand the shoe department, which is the size of a football field), at a hefty price tag.

But going back to the "old school" department stores: Don't everyday shoppers deserve a nice shopping experience? If stopping by my local Macy's didn't entail trudging through cramped, cluttered departments devoid of any sort of service, I would gladly shop there more often. Aren't we tired of visiting a handful of stores on our weekends? Are we getting sick of ordering clothes on the Internet that end up being the wrong color or size? Can we go back to actually interacting with another person to buy something? Or, will this mode of shopping only be for the well-off, like the other department stores currently undergoing makeovers in New York?

Take a look through the below round-up of just a few photos from department stores past and tell me if you'd agree.





Guggenheim Protesters Somehow Snuck A 40-Foot Banner Into The Legendary Museum

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The Guggenheim's Abu Dhabi museum isn't going up without a fight. On Tuesday evening, members of the protest group Gulf Ultra Luxury Faction (G.U.L.F.) unfurled their latest denouncement of labor conditions on Saadiyat Island, the ritzy enclave where the Frank Gehry-designed branch is slated to rise. This time, the protest mechanism was a 40-foot banner that was reportedly snuck in via a baby stroller. Reading "Stop Labor Abuse" and "Countdown to Guggenheim Abu Dhabi," it hung briefly down the museum's famed conical core before two male guards tore it away.



For months, G.U.L.F. members have pulled off "a series of unsanctioned displays," as The New York Times puts it, inside the museum. Amidst inundating the museum with leaflets and sneaking in provocative paintings, the group has managed to meet with museum representatives, including Guggenheim director Richard Armstrong, to discuss their concerns.

"We've heard nothing since," one activist, NYU professor Andrew Ross, told The Times today. Enter the banner, an example of “what we do when we don’t get a response," Ross continued. "We step up pressure.”

The angular island museum is set to come up alongside an Abu Dhabi branch of the Louvre museum and the newly finished NYU campus outpost. Construction in Abu Dhabi -- in line with the country's neighbors -- relies on migrant workers who face routine exploitation, memorably brought to light in a damning 2009 Human Rights Watch report.

While some observers question how much leverage the Guggenheim can wield in terms of protecting laborers, protestors insist the museum must at least agitate. In a missive published by Hyperallergic today, activist Walid Raad lists a variety of approaches the Guggenheim could take, from pressuring the UAE Ministry of Labor to enforce preexisting laws, to insisting on the release of potentially revelatory reports on the current state of workers.

Azealia Banks Just Beyonced Us With Her Debut Album [UPDATE]

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UPDATE: Azealia Banks has officially Beyonced us with her debut album, "Broke With Expensive Taste." The rapper tweeted a link to the album in the iTunes store on Thursday afternoon.




EARLIER: It's been a long road to Azealia Banks' first album. So long, in fact, that at one point it seemed like the rapper had completely faded from the hip-hop scene. But now it looks like Banks' long-awaited debut album, "Broke With Expensive Taste," may actually happen.

After dropping her free mixtape, "Fantasea," in early 2012, the rapper announced the title of her first album with an expected release in September of that year. The album was delayed multiples times and pushed back to 2014 until Banks eventually parted ways with Universal Music Group this past July. The future of "Broke" was unknown, until the rapper mysteriously blacked-out her Twitter and Instagram accounts, as well as her website earlier this week with imagery that now seems to be from her album artwork.

On Thursday afternoon, Banks finally posted an Instagram video of the album artwork:

"Broke With Expensive Taste" - HQ ALBUM ARTWORK. #BWET

Um vídeo publicado por Azealia Banks (@azealiabanks) em




According to Vulture, Spotify has also seems to have the "Broke With Expensive Taste" track list greyed out on its servers. The track list includes a handful of already-released singles such as, "212," "Chasing Time," "Yung Rapunxel" and "Heavy Metal and Reflective." The full track list, according to Spotify, is as follows:


1. Idle Delilah
2. Gimme a Chance
3. Desperado
4. JFK (feat. Theophilus London)
5. 212 (feat. Lazy Jay)
6. Wallace
7. Heavy Metal and Reflective
8. BBD
9. Ice Princess
10. Yung Rapunxel
11. Soda
12. Chasing Time
13. Luxury
14. Nude Beach A-Go-Go
15. Miss Amor
16. Miss Camaraderie


Banks seems to be pulling a Beyonce on us, but we really hope the album actually comes out this time. HuffPost Entertainment contacted her reps for more details, and this post will be updated if and when a comment is received.

For more, head to Vulture.
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