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Photographer's Stunning Nude Self-Portraits Face The Struggles Of Aging Head On (NSFW)

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You may not feel you have that much in common with an old factory or abandoned mental asylum. But photographer Sarah R. Bloom sympathized with these derelict spaces, identifying their process of aging and decomposition with that of her own middle-aged body. She took to her camera to further explore the relationship between them.

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The Philadelphia-based artist embarked on this particular photography project at the age of 39 -- she'd already been capturing nude self-portrait for a year and a half. As the artist encroached on the final phase of her thirties, she struggled to accept the bodily changes she was undergoing and was struck with the fear of running out of time. It was then that Bloom stumbled upon abandoned buildings, physical edifices that have been deemed old, obsolete, in a state of decline -- and she identified with them.

"I’m middle-aged -- hopefully -- and I was extrapolating this to think about women in society," Bloom explained to Philly Mag. "Women have more struggles as they age than men do. And comparing this to buildings, they get abandoned, they’re just left. Crumbling. No one pays attention to them until something dramatic happens. And women have to get dramatic when they get older to get paid attention to."

fortuna

Bloom got to work, folding her unclothed body into various forgotten spaces, facing questions about aging and anxiety head on. The urban exploration experience was archived in a mini-documentary by Cory Popp. Bloom narrates her feelings during the experience, her emotional vulnerability matching that of her exposed body. "You're past the point of no return in a sense," she says. "I just look back a lot. I try not to but it's just really easy to get stuck in feeling, 'Oh my god, I'm running out time. And what have I done so far?'"

Bloom's images, reminiscent of Francesca Woodman if she'd ever gotten into ruin porn, depict the universal aging process in a poetic, unvarnished light. Six years after embarking upon the project, Bloom's work is far from finished. "The art I love moves something in me -- elicits an emotional response -- and I think that is true for most people when thinking of their favorite artworks. So I hope to communicate an echo of something they’ve experienced, or are experiencing... Part of my journey is about accepting my body. I hope that the more comfortable I am with my own, the more it will give permission for others to be comfortable with theirs."




19 Incredibly Successful People Who Started Out As Failures

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When it comes to accomplishing your dreams -- and getting credit for doing so -- all we can say is, never underestimate the power of time.

Time not only grants you the ability to use your talents, pursue your dreams and leave a lasting imprint on the world, but also gives others room to adjust their perceptions of your achievements. Success and failure are not absolute measures of one's life, but rather the opposite ends of a spectrum that is constantly in flux. Current perceptions are only as valid as you allow them to be.

The stories of these 19 brilliant people prove that a failure today may not necessarily be considered a failure a few tomorrows from now.

Thomas Edison

broken lightbulb

An inventor known for his many failures long before his successes, Thomas Edison was even told that he was "too stupid to learn anything" by one of his teachers early on in life. Yet everyone knows the name of the man responsible for inventing the lightbulb -- even if it took him 1,001 attempts to get it right. His perseverance with this particular invention clearly embodies his positive saying, “I have not failed 10,000 times -- I’ve successfully found 10,000 ways that will not work.”

Walt Disney

disney world

Even the head of the world's largest animation empire hit a rough patch. In 1919 he was fired from the Kansas City Star because he "lacked imagination and had no good ideas," according to his editor.

The Beatles

the beatles abbey road

When The Beatles auditioned for Decca Records in 1962, Dick Rowe told their manager Brian Epstein, "Guitar groups are on their way out." Despite that dismissal, the English rock band went on to become one of the most influential groups of all time.

Herman Melville

moby dick book

In the author's lifetime, Moby Dick was not considered a masterpiece. After publishing the novel, Melville struggled financially for the rest of his life. He used much of his savings to publish his subsequent novel Pierre, which also was not well-received. At the time of his death in 1891, he was a customs inspector at a ship dock in New York.

Soichiro Honda

honda scooter

When Honda, an engineer for whom the popular car company is named, first failed to get a job with now-competitor Toyota, he took to making scooters in his own garage. Little did the world know that this time of unemployment would lead him to create the billion-dollar business we recognize today.

Vincent van Gogh

vincent van gogh

His paintings may be worth millions today, but no one really gave them a second thought during van Gogh's lifetime. In fact, he managed to create almost 900 paintings in a span of 10 years, yet he only lived to see a single one sold (which went to a friend at a very low price).

Taylor Swift

taylor swift

She may have only been 11 years old at the time, but the young and driven TSwift struggled at first to find a record label in Nashville, Tennessee, that would sign her. During a middle school spring break, she took a demo CD of her singing karaoke covers of country stars Dolly Parton, the Dixie Chicks and LeAnn Rimes to Music Row and handed copies to as many music label receptionists as she could, but said she wasn't signed because "everyone in that town wanted to do what I wanted to do." She clearly found her niche, though -- this musical princess has since learned how to play quite a few instruments, taken over the country and pop-rock scene, and openly defied one the most popular music streaming companies.

Stephen King

stephen king books

This wildly successful American author of all things horror and suspense almost didn't get his big break -- 30 times! It was with his wife Tabby's help that he was finally able to convince Doubleday to publish Carrie. He has since become the 19th best-selling author of all time.

Harland David Sanders

kentucky fried chicken

Our favorite colonel from Kentucky Fried Chicken sure had to fight the good fight to get his secret recipe into the restaurant world. He was rejected a whopping 1,009 times before he finally got that fried chicken to taste just right. Talk about perseverance.

Charles Schultz

peanuts comic

The famous cartoonist who brought the world the "Peanuts" comic strip experienced quite a bit of rejection early in his career. None of the cartoon drawings he designed for his high school yearbook were ever selected to be published, and later Walt Disney turned him down for a job. It looks like it's a good thing he believed that "you can't create humor out of happiness."

Elvis Presley

elvis presley

Before the King of Rock 'n' Roll hit it big, he was told by the Grand Ole Opry manager in Nashville that he would be better off going back to his job as a truck driver than pursuing a career in music. Elvis many have never returned to that venue for another concert, but it's obvious he didn't have to go back to prove Jim Denny wrong.

J.K. Rowling

harry potter book collection

Before J.K. Rowling hit it big with Harry Potter, she was a broke, divorced single mother struggling to get by on welfare. In a matter of five years, the series took off, leading her to become the first billionaire author.

Akio Morita

rice cooker

The founder of Sony was considered a major flop at first, manufacturing a rice cooker that burned way more food than it cooked. But despite poor early sales that brought the mockery of Sony as a new company by the business community, Akio Morita found a way to turn the brand into the multi-billion dollar company the world knows today.

Stephen Spielberg

spielberg

He may now be one of the most successful filmmakers in the world, but the University of Southern California refused to give Steven Spielberg a shot in the School of Theater, Film and Television -- three times. He clearly didn't take no for an answer as he went on to pursue directing, and the school awarded him an honorary degree in 1994.

Lady Gaga

lady gaga

This New York-native, electro-pop diva proved just how badly she wanted to be in the spotlight throughout the early years of her career. After dropping out of New York University's Tisch School of the Arts to pursue her music and joining with major label Def Jam Recordings, she was let go only three months after being signed, forcing her to start all over again.

F. Scott Fitzgerald

great gatsby

F. Scott Fitzgerald had extremely high hopes for his 1925 novel The Great Gatsby, hoping for "something new—something extraordinary and beautiful and simple and intricately patterned." Unfortunately, the book received mixed reviews upon its release, and sales proved even worse. It wasn't until after he died in 1940, considering himself a forgotten failure, that the book struck a chord with the country to the point of becoming a classic component of every high schooler's literature education.

Albert Einstein

albert einstein

Einstein was a late bloomer, not speaking until age 4 or reading until age 7. These challenges did not prevent him from winning the Nobel prize in physics for discovering the photoelectric effect and developing the relativity theory. There's no doubt that the folks at Zurich Polytechnic School regret their initial rejection of the man whose name is now synonymous with "genius."

Claude Monet

claude monet

One of the most well-known artists of the impressionist movement, Claude Monet was not quite praised for his work when he was alive. In fact, it was quite the opposite, with the Paris Salon endlessly mocking and rejecting his art. Yet, today Monet is considered the “prince of Impressionists.”

Emily Dickinson

emily dickinson

The now-beloved letters and poetry of Emily Dickinson failed to resonate with their audience at first. While the author ultimately shared approximately 1,800 complete works with the world, fewer than a dozen of them were published in her lifetime.

The Top 10 Cities That'll Make You Snuggle Up And Get Cozy

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It's winter. And it's cold. And that means stocking up on blankets and hot cocoa, getting toasty by the fire and snuggling in bed with your Netflix queue are no longer optional -- they're necessary.

If coziness is a factor in your total happiness, then maybe you should make haste and move to one of the "Top 10 Cozy Cities In America." The ranking, compiled by Honeywell Heater and consulting company Environmental Health & Engineering, considered factors like the number of restaurants and coffee shops; the number of museums, florists, breweries; and bed-and-breakfast hotels in a given city, while also taking into account its "overall comfort, ambiance and accessibility." It also factored in usage rates of fireplaces and portable heaters -- naturally.

Last year, Boston took home top honors for its coziness index, but moved down to the number four spot this time around. Did your city make the cut, or is it time to move?

Julianne Moore Has Five Oscar Nominations, But She's 'Shocked' M.I.A. Name-Checked Her

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Julianne Moore was firing off a text message to one of her two kids when we walked into a lower Manhattan hotel room to chat about the new movie "Still Alice," which has dominated this year's leading-actress accolades and will likely do so again at the Academy Awards on Feb. 22. Moore earned the Oscar nod on Thursday. When we spoke Tuesday, she'd just returned from winning at the Golden Globes in Los Angeles. She was shipping out again two days later -- the morning of Oscar nominations -- to attend the Critics' Choice Movie Awards, where she again took home a trophy.

That is Moore's life right now: shuffling back and forth between her home in New York City and Los Angeles, where the bulk of high-profile award ceremonies take place. She doesn't mind, though. Her two Golden Globe nominations (the other was for David Cronenberg's dark Hollywood satire "Maps to the Stars") came in the same year that she commanded supporting roles in the action-thriller "Non-Stop" and as President Alma Coin in "The Hunger Games: Mockingjay - Part 1."

2014 was Julianne Moore's year -- her latest of many. She's one of 11 actors nominated for two Oscars in the same year (2003, for "Far From Heaven" and "The Hours"), and those are sandwiched between box-office beasts like "The Lost World: Jurassic Park" and "Hannibal," cult favorites like "The Big Lebowski" and "Safe," and indie sleepers like "The Kids Are All Right" and "A Single Man." After all that, she somehow still seems to take in award shows without a hint of jadedness. Despite Hollywood's dearth of roles for women over 40, Moore, at 54, hasn't seemed to encounter any trouble. In "Still Alice," she plays an accomplished linguistics professor with early-onset Alzheimer's. It's not like snorting cocaine in "Boogie Nights," donning period garb in "Far From Heaven" or stepping into Sarah Palin's shoes in "Game Change." Instead, the movie that will likely result in Moore's first Oscar win is a quiet tale of one woman's health decline. HuffPost Entertainment chatted with Moore about navigating awards season and what's to come for the actress:

Are the Golden Globes a blur now?
I don’t actually feel like it’s a blur. A lot happens, but it’s also kind of a long process, so I do try to really enjoy it. It was hot in there, though.

Everyone looked like they were glistening a little more than usual.
Exactly. I’m not much of a sweater, but I said, "Is it me or is it really hot?" But it was really hot.

Where’s your Globe right now?
On my desk, I think. I brought it home in my suitcase.

Congratulations on "Still Alice" independent of awards. Was it hard to memorize lines predicated on forgetting what you're supposed to say?
Hmmm. No. No, it’s interesting because memorizing lines is only difficult when the lines don’t make sense. I find that when I’m having difficulties memorizing something it’s usually because there’s some kind of line of thought that’s not being articulated properly so that there’s not a through line there. Oddly, what’s interesting about Alice is she does have a through line for the most part and then suddenly it drops out, so I knew where to do it. I think that [writer-directors] Wash Westmoreland and Richard Glatzer adapted the book so beautifully. It was lovely, so I didn’t find that hard.

What are the chief differences in working with two directors on a set?
There are just two voices. They’re often partners, like the Coen Brothers are brothers. There are Swedish directors I’ve worked with who were friends since they were 10 years old. Rich and Wash are work partners and romantic partners, so they tend to be people who work very closely together or are married or related or something like that. The differences are not as dramatic as you’d think. As all people do, generally one will have a slightly different sensibility. I’d say that Wash is the more romantic of the two and Richard is the more pragmatic, so they have a shared vision and they’re up at the monitor together and they’re able to communicate what they want.

Had you seen Julie Christie in "Away From Her," another wrenching Alzheimer's story?
I had seen the performance -- it’s so beautiful. She’s a great actress. But I did not look at anyone else’s performance before I did this. It’s a little bit like when I was doing “Game Change.” I had seen everything Tina Fey had done, which is brilliant, but I didn’t watch any of it while I was doing it. You can see it afterwards and then it’s fine.

Does living inside this character make you go home and play memory games?
No, it doesn’t. It’s interesting because people say, "What did the movie do for you? Did you worry about having Alzheimer’s, and did you feel really sad when you came home?" But it actually works conversely. I came home feeling really, really grateful for the life I have. I was very appreciative of my husband and my children and my dumb dogs and everything that I have in my life because I think really what the movie does is make you think about what you care about and what you want in your life and not taking anything for granted.

"Still Alice" and "Maps to the Stars" are both small festival movies that haven't gotten splashy releases. It seems that's all anyone gets attention for now: gigantic movies or tiny awards films that few people will see.
Hopefully if it’s an awards movie people will see it. That’s one of the reasons that distributors certainly care about awards, because they bring an unbelievable amount of attention, especially to small films, so people actually go to see them. Where you run into trouble is when you have a small movie that doesn’t get any attention, and then really nobody sees it. But that’s not something we have any control over. I only have control over the movies that I do and the people I work with and what I say yes to. I think you’d make yourself crazy if you’re always thinking about whether or not somebody is going to be watching something. It’s a little like worrying yourself about how many hits on the Internet you’re going to get. You can’t control that on a website.

You’ve been nominated for four Oscars.
Zero for four, as they say!

Do you have a favorite Oscar gown?
Do I have a favorite Oscar gown? Probably. I’m trying to remember what I wore. I wrote a white Prada one, a green one, I wore a Calvin Klein. Maybe the emerald-green YSL that my friend Tom Ford designed. I think that was for "Far From Heaven" and "The Hours."

julianne moore 2003 oscars

I asked Amy Amy this last month ...
Okay, all right, if you asked Amy!

There's been a smattering of articles lately that ask who's more overdue: Julianne Moore or Amy Adams.
I don’t think you can talk like that!

What is your response to pitting two people next to each other like that?
I don’t pit us against each other. I actually recently met her. We just hadn’t crossed paths, and she’s so lovely. So incredibly talented and beautiful and gracious, and so the last thing in the world you want to do is be pit against another actress you admire. So I think there’s room for everybody, and there’s no way to determine who gets more. It’s just a crazy thing. One of the benefits of this awards season, I can say, is that I got to meet her. I don’t know that we ever would have been in the same movie together, so it’s really lovely to get to know her and to be with all of these women -- to get to be with Reese Witherspoon and Rosamund Pike and Felicity Jones, who I hadn’t met and who’s so great, and Jennifer Aniston, who’s been so fantastic. Tilda Swinton is always great, and Marion Cotillard is always great, so the women that we’re talking about right now are tremendous actresses.

And you didn't know many of them prior? Surely you must know everyone by now, right?
You don’t! You’d be surprised. It’s a little like when someone says, “What town are you from? Do you know so and so?” And you go, “We don’t know everybody!” I think that actors are like that, too. You might even feel like you know somebody because you’ve watched their work and admired it and stuff, but you don’t always get to meet them or work with them. I think the thing for women, unfortunately, is we never end up in the same movie because we’re just not all together. It’s always really great to meet them.

Which of them are on your radar to work with now?
I think all of the people I just spoke about. I haven’t worked with any of them, but I would work with all of them in a heartbeat. Laura Dern and I are friends and have worked together briefly for about three days, and we’re always trying to find something interesting to do together. She’s wonderful. I think just about everybody they’re talking about.

Have you thought about an Oscar gown yet?
No, I have not been nominated yet. That would be hubris.

Fair. You have a month between nominations and the ceremony, though. What will you fill that time with?
You’re generally doing press, that’s what you’re doing. And I have two kids, so I’m doing that kind of stuff. I’m also in pre-production for a movie that I’m doing. But I like to be prepared. I always admire those women who are like, “I tried on three dresses this morning and I chose this one.” I’m like, "This morning?" I’d have a heart attack! That I can’t do. I really can’t do it.

What was your reaction to being name-checked on M.I.A.'s last album?
Oh my God! I’m so flattered! I was like, "M.I.A. just said my name!"

How did you find out?
I don’t know. Someone told me. They sent me the video and I was like, "Where is it, where is it?" I was so flattered. Are you kidding? It made me feel like a part of popular culture.

Have you met her?
No! I bet she’s very cool. I don’t run into anybody! That was super cool and really fun, and I never imagined that I would be that cool.

I remember rewinding it the first time I heard it.
I know, like, "Did she just say Julianne Moore?" What? Yeah, I know. I was so flattered. And shocked!

This interview, which has been edited and condensed, was conducted before Thursday's Oscar nominations, where Moore scored her fifth nod. "Still Alice" opens in wide release on Jan. 16.

Pandora Predicts The Grammy Winners Based On Users Listening Habits

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Pandora has taken the data provided by its 76 million users to predict this year's Grammy winners. Focusing on the categories of Album of the Year, Record of the Year, Best New Artist and Song of the Year, Pandora speculates that the winners will be, in respective order, Sam Smith's "In The Lonely Hour," Sia's "Chandelier," Iggy Azalea and Meghan Trainor's "All About That Bass." Check out the predicted winners and the rest of nominees in their categories in a chart provided by Pandora:

pandora grammys

Mount Holyoke Cancels 'Vagina Monologues' For Not Being Inclusive Enough

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Mount Holyoke College, an all-women's school in Massachusetts, has scrapped plans to host a performance of "The Vagina Monologues" because it is not inclusive enough.

Mount Holyoke student Erin Murphy explained on behalf of the student-run theater board in an email to students on Wednesday that the play is problematic because it is not inclusive of trans women, Campus Reform reported.

"At its core, the show offers an extremely narrow perspective on what it means to be a woman," Murphy explained, according to Campus Reform.

"Gender is a wide and varied experience," Murphy continued, "one that cannot simply be reduced to biological or anatomical distinctions, and many of us who have participated in the show have grown increasingly uncomfortable presenting material that is inherently reductionist and exclusive."

Murphy did not immediately return a request for comment from The Huffington Post

In 2014, Mount Holyoke began admitting transgender women for the first time, but the college told The Huffington Post that had nothing to do with the Vagina Monologues performance.

"The student-group decision to cancel the play was made independently of the College's transgender admission policy," the college said in a statement to HuffPost. "As a women's college with a long tradition of educating women leaders, Mount Holyoke College supports and encourages students to take the lead in establishing and governing their own organizations. The College encourages students to seek peer input through open discussion and to consider and respect all viewpoints in their decision-making process."

The school's annual performance on Valentine’s Day is a fundraiser for the V-Day campaign, a nonprofit that works to end violence against women and girls globally. The Vagina Monologues was written in 1996 by Eve Ensler, who founded the V-Day campaign. Ensler's play has been translated into 48 languages and performed in 140 countries, according to the V-Day campaign.

The college said the student-run Project Theatre sought input from students on campus in November as the membership considered whether to continue performing the play. The students had the Mount Holyoke dean of students distribute an email on its behalf to collect input from fellow undergrads about the play and its continued production.

"As a student-run group, Project Theatre makes all decisions about production, content and performances," the school continued.

At Columbia University in 2013, a student group created its own Vagina Monologues controversy in an attempt to be more inclusive of marginalized communities when it decided to only feature women of color in its cast. The intent, students said at the time, was to create "a space in which the voices, stories, and experiences of women of color can be heard, acknowledged, and addressed."

Cheyenne Jackson's 'Biggest Gripe' With Broadway: 'The Ticket Prices Are So Expensive'

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Cheyenne Jackson stopped by HuffPost Live on Friday to discuss "Eyes Wide Open," his new show at New York's famed Carlyle Cafe, and the state of Broadway today.

Asked by host Josh Zepps whether Broadway is in a "good place," the seasoned actor pointed out the good and the bad:

If you're speaking just fiscally, obviously it's the most successful year. Every single year it keeps topping itself. I have mixed feelings about some of the bigger shows in just that the ticket prices are so expensive. ... It's so hard for tourists, when they come here, to pay upwards of $200 a seat. That's the hard part. But as long as people will pay it, then producers will go ahead and charge it. That's my biggest gripe right now.


Jackson added that the "rich and booming" off-Broadway scene offers alternatives to pricier shows.

Zepps also asked the actor about the idea that audiences are willing to accept risky, unique plays more than musicals that are perceived as "challenging." Jackson agreed that musicals have less room to experiment.

"People, when they think 'musical,' they think, 'Okay, I'm gonna go in, I'm gonna turn off my brain, I just want to watch the dancing boys and girls and be entertained by this spectacle,'" Jackson said. "I do, I think it's a double standard."

Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Cheyenne Jackson here.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live’s morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

George R. R. Martin Shoots Down A Huge 'Game Of Thrones' Fan Theory

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This piece contains spoilers about "Game of Thrones."

Complete shock is coming.

People of the realm, prepare yourselves, because an incredibly popular "Game of Thrones" fan theory was shot down by author George R. R. Martin. If you're a fan of that one big theory, you can relax. Those who believe they know the fate of Benjen Stark aren't so lucky, though.

Many fans of Martin's Song of Ice and Fire series have believed that Coldhands, a mysterious character who Bran Stark meets beyond the Wall, was actually Bran's long-lost uncle, Benjen Stark. Well, now you can forget that.

Vulture reports that a Reddit user, _honeybird, read the original manuscript of A Dance With Dragons at Texas A&M's Cushing Library and discovered some handwritten notes from George R.R. Martin to Anne Groell, his editor. In one note, Groell straight up asked if Coldhands was Benjen, and Martin wrote a pretty definitive, "No."

Coldhands hasn't been introduced in the HBO show yet, but in the books he's thought to have once been a man of the Night's Watch and plays a pivotal role in Bran's journey North. All of this seemed to be evidence of the popular theory, but it appears that's not the case.

Though Martin has reportedly put an end to this theory and previously told HuffPost Entertainment about another theory that wasn't true, the author has confirmed that some fan theories out there are correct.

So just keep believing, "R + L = J" supporters!

For more, head to Vulture.


Image: Giphy

Mariage Blanc's 'Blue Eyes' Is A Field Trip Back To Laurel Canyon

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mariage blanc

Originating from Pittsburgh, Mariage Blanc's new album, "No Autobiography," is a fuzzy goulash of sounds pulled from Laurel Canyon in the late '60s and the indie-pop of the late '90s (it's their latest rendition of "melancholy pop"). The Huffington Post is pleased to premiere the first single off the album, "Blue Eyes."



Having been in operation for more than seven years now, Mariage Blanc's -- Josh Kretzmer, Matt Ceraso, Josh Dotson and Rich Kawood -- ever-evolving approach seems to have finally hit a sound that is poised to win the ears of a much larger audience. In comparison to their 2013 EP, "Undercurrents," the new album is a much more mellow output, which largely is due in part to the departure of their previous drummer.

“When we were working on these songs, Matt and I were working on a lot of the songs on our own in our respective houses or together in our houses, we couldn’t really be loud," Kretzmer said. "We weren’t figuring out the songs as a full band, so, from a writing perspective, they lent themselves to being a little bit gentler.”

But before "No Autobiography" came into being, the band ran into a string of bad luck. It started with the loss of their drummer, then a broken jaw and the moving of two members from Pittsburgh. Feeling like they were operating on borrowed time, it seemed inevitable that the end of band was just around the corner. However, the separation had the opposite effect, and it is summed up by the mentality of foregoing the forced plans of "maybe a label will pick this up," or "maybe we can go on tour," and simply fitting their art into their adult lives.

“I think that two of the big pitfalls of why bands stop are, one, at some point they get to, ‘Well, we haven’t done X,Y or Z so far,’ or ‘We haven’t made it yet,’ and get frustrated and quit," Ceraso said. "The other one is people turn about our age -- 30-ish -- and say, ‘Well, we can’t be in a band anymore, we’re grown ups now,’ so I think it’s kind of transcending that.”

“We’re definitely not in the camp where we think that music is a young man’s game," Kretzmer said.

"No Autobiography" will be available for purchase in spring 2015.

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.

One Florida Student Turned Studying Into Art

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To study for her biology I final in December, Van Truong, a sophomore at the University of Florida, decided to take a different approach.

"I knew I had to study for this exam, and I knew I’d be writing on this white board for hours. So I thought, 'Wouldn't it be funny if I did it in a form where people didn't know how to feel about it?'" Truong told The Huffington Post.

So she went to Smathers Library on the Gainesville campus and got to studying. While people around her memorized lists and made flash cards, she used a white board to write out all her notes -- in the form of Van Gogh's "Starry Night."

After three hours, her masterpiece was complete:

van

"I knew if I had to read through a packet of notes, I’d fall asleep," Truong said. "I don’t know if I would’ve lasted through three hours just going through notes."

Truong said she chose to recreate "Starry Night" because of its composition. Unlike a portrait of a person, which she thought would look disjointed if made out of individual lines of biology notes, words and sentences could look like Van Gogh's brush strokes.

Truong is no stranger to making art outside of a studio. A few years ago at the beach in Port Orange, Florida, near her home, Truong and a friend recreated the Mona Lisa using seaweed that had washed up on shore.

mona lisa

When she finished the "Starry Night" recreation, Truong went to the students on the other side of her white board and asked them to take a picture. Soon, the board gained fame on campus. It lasted a few weeks before someone erased it, Truong said. The fact that she picked such a well-known painting probably helped.

"People would be more likely to erase someone else's work if they didn’t recognize the image," she said.

But before the art got erased forever, Truong said she wished more people had interacted with it by adding their own embellishments. She added that she plans to repeat the same studying strategy in the future, leaving other art-filled white boards around the library.

And as for the biology final?

"I did 20 percent better than I did on the past two exams," Truong said.

(h/t The Alligator)

Dancing Prison Inmates Welcome The Pope To The Philippines (VIDEO)

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Nothing says "Welcome to the Philippines" better than a group of dancing maximum security prison inmates.

Ahead of Pope Francis' five-day visit to the country, the famed dancing inmates of the Cebu Provincial Detention and Rehabilitation Center (CPDRC) put on a special performance in honor of the Pontiff.

Unlike their lively routines to "This Is It" by Michael Jackson and Psy's "Gangnam Style," the dance dedicated to the Pope was more solemn and serious.

The 2,160 inmates opened their performance moving to a liturgical Catholic song. They then performed (starting at 6:30) the "Pope dance," as locals are calling it, to "We Are All God's Children," which the Philippines chose as the official theme song for the Pope's visit.

The Pope has no plans to stop in Cebu, but the facility's hired choreographer Vince Rosales said the performance was the inmates' way of welcoming him to their country.

"I did not expect that this will happen in my life," inmate Servacio Pillado told local news site Sun Star Cebu in the Tagalog language. "I feel like crying yet I don't understand the feeling when I was dancing."

Cebu Provincial Government wrote on their Facebook page that the "song, the choreography and the dancers themselves touched the hearts of the viewers."

Sun Star Cebu reported that the group also entertained the audience, which was comprised of officials of the Philippine National Police and Cebu City Police, with a friendly three-round boxing match and seven more dance routines.

Dancing was introduced to CPDRC almost ten years ago to encourage a sense of accomplishment and teamwork among the inmates, according to NPR. It started with marching drills, but eventually evolved to fully choreographed dance routines. A series of YouTube videos that went viral turned the inmates into instant Internet sensations.

Below, watch the dancing inmates rock out to "This Is It" by Michael Jackson, with the late icon's actual choreographers.

Gordon Parks' Never-Before-Seen Photos Of 1950s Segregation

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Gordon Parks was only a teenager when he left his hometown of Fort Scott, Kansas. The youngest of 15, Parks chose to make a living for himself after his mother passed away, and wound up becoming the first African American photographer for Life Magazine.

Only two years after his first Life assignment, Parks returned home for a photo essay on segregated education. Journeying to Fort Scott and other Midwestern cities nearby, Parks photographed his childhood classmates, capturing their faces, families and homes while recording details about their occupations and incomes. The photo essay, for reasons that remain unknown, was never published, and most of the images went unseen.

And then Karen Haas, curator at MFA Boston, stumbled upon an image of Parks' that changed everything.

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Untitled (Outside the Liberty Theater), 1950


"The museum decided to do a rather major publication on our African American collections across all our departments," Haas explained in a phone conversation with The Huffington Post. "I was asked to write the entries on the African American photographers because it was a particular interest of mine. One of the photographs by Gordon Parks was sort of a mystery -- it's simply titled 'Outside the Liberty Theater' and depicts a young couple outside a segregated movie theater. I contacted the Gordon Parks foundation and together we sorted out the fact that this was a photograph taken in Fort Scott, Kansas and related to a larger story that's widely unknown because it was never published in Life Magazine. That's really where it all began."

"They've never been exhibited together before, many of them have never been shown at all. They're completely unknown; the foundation didn't know the picture, no one knew what it really was. It's not that surprising that for a magazine photographer. Without that anchor to a story there's no reason for them to see the light of day again. There was this trail, this little thread I was following to figure out the story from this picture.

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Husband and Wife, Sunday Morning, Detroit, Michigan, 1950


From this original image, an exhibition was born. Haas mimicked Parks' journey to revisit his old classmates from an all-black elementary school, visiting Kansas City, Saint Louis, Detroit and Chicago -- everywhere except Columbus, Ohio, to see what remained of the spaces Parks immortalized. "For Parks, it became this trip back into his past to present this national issue to the mostly white readership of Life Magazine through the lens of his own life."

The poignant images depict everyday life for African Americans in the 1950s -- playing pool, reading a book, watching a baseball game -- all under the regulations of segregation. Along with the images, Parks recorded details about his former classmates current lives, for example, that Norman Earl Collins was doing quite well, making $1.22 an hour at Union Electric of Missouri.

"What I love about the pictures is the way I feel as though when I look at the expressions on their faces I can see the pride each of these families felt standing in front of their houses," explained Haas. "Parks made an effort to pose his subjects in front of their houses with these strong nuclear families -- the way so many families in Life Magazine are posed to begin with. That white middle class family pose. To pose African American families in front of their homes, I think, would have been quite startling to the readership. I'm fascinated by the gaze. Each of them trusting their friend, not only this fellow African American, but someone who'd grown up in Kansas with them. What they'd experienced together, the poverty, the childhood struggles. And now he's the famous New York photojournalist, he's a success story. And each of them is trusting him, telling him their stories."

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Tenement Dwellers, Chicago, Illinois, 1950


Not surprisingly, from the moment the 42 photographs were installed on gallery walls, the reaction from museum employees and visitors was overwhelming. "It's been really wonderful talking to people around the galleries and hearing their reactions. We've been struck by how contemporary it feels, how timely these issues are, obviously, even today. Here was a photographer, he'd only just begun at Life Magazine less than two years earlier. They assigned him this story on segregated education and he's already given the relative free reign to focus the story around his own childhood. It doesn't look dated to me. It feels like there is a lot we can talk about."

This isn't the first time a Gordon Parks exhibition has hit close to home. His "Segregation Story," on view at the High Museum in Atlanta, depicts an Alabama family living under Jim Crow segregation in the same decade. Parks' images, despite capturing an altogether different time, still speak to a nation where issues of racism are pronounced, whether looking at police killings or the Oscar race.

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Untitled, Fort Scott, Kansas, 1950


One of Haas' main hopes for the exhibition was connecting to the children of Parks' subjects -- the subjects, as well as Parks, are all deceased. "The children were my hope," she said. "I spent a lot of time doing genealogical research. I tried to find a number of the children and had no luck, until the other day, the phone rang. It was this little girl from one of the pictures, who is now in her late sixties. She's retired and lives in Arizona and we just had the most amazing conversation about her mother and her mother's friendship with Gordon Parks and how she was able to do many of the things her mother wasn't able to do in life. Her daughter has gone on to get a teaching degree, a doctorate, she's travelled the world. It was incredibly emotional."

"To think, I can email her the pictures and I can read her her mother's yearbook quote and I can look at the picture of her playing the piano and what that meant. I can look at what an image of an African American girl sitting at a piano on the South Side of Chicago would have meant to Life readers back in 1950. That was a real sign of people's commitment. They were investing in an expensive musical instrument for their child, in aspirations for their future."

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Mrs. Jefferson, Fort Scott, Kansas, 1950


The exhibition, full of beauty, suffering, pride and injustice, is both powerful and heartbreaking. Gazing upon the images, we're struck by a combination of amazement and horror, at the strength these subjects possessed and the struggles they endured. The bittersweet imprint is reminiscent of Parks' own feelings upon his graduation:

"Twenty-four years before I had walked proudly to the center of the stage and received a diploma. There were twelve of us (six girls and six boys) that night. Our emotions were intermingled with sadness and gaiety. None of us understood why the first years of our education were separated from those of the whites, nor did we bother to ask. The situation existed when we were born. We waded in normal at the tender age of six and swam out maladjusted… nine years later."

"Gordon Parks: Back to Fort Scott" runs until September 13, 2015 at MFA Boston. See a preview of the exhibition below.

A Community Art Festival Honors MLK Jr., In The Spirit Of Corita Kent

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Corita Kent, the ex-nun-turned-artist who rose to fame in the 1960s, used graphic design and poster art to protest the Vietnam War and advocate for Amnesty International. At nearly the same time, Martin Luther King, Jr., as most of the world knows by now, led a monumentally significant movement to fight for civil rights and equality in the United States. Both were inspired by their own theologies, eventually influencing decades of activists with their individual modes of social action.

So it makes sense that the Pasadena Museum of California Art would take the opportunity to celebrate the giants in the same weekend. The art haven is staging the Kent-centric exhibition "Someday is Now: The Art of Corita Kent" this summer, presenting 30 years worth of the designer's printmaking, posters, banners and pop-inspired advocacy. In anticipation of the show, and in tribute to Martin Luther King Day, the museum is staging a community arts festival aptly named "Get With The Action."

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Sister Mathias (IHC choral director) leading Mary’s Day Parade, Immaculate Heart College, Los Angeles 1964. Reproduction permission of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles.


The festival, including a procession, original art-making and a picnic with food trucks, will take place on Saturday, January 17 from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at All Saints Church in Pasadena, California. Inspired by Kent's own community arts festivals held in the 1960s -- “Mary’s Days," the procession will begin at All Saints Church and proceed to the public health organization Day One and finally the Pasadena Museum of California Art.

"'Get With the Action: A Community Art Festival' is a tribute to the contributions of both Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Sister Corita Kent, and their commitment to the Civil Rights Movement, the War On Poverty, and the Peace Movement," the museum wrote in a press release for the event.

possible

a passion for the possible, 1969, Silkscreen print on paper, 23 1/8 x 12 inches, Collection: Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles, CA. Photograph by Arthur Evans, courtesy of the Tang Museum at Skidmore College.


Check out more information on the festival over at the PMCA website. For a preview of "Someday is Now," check out the images below, and head over to our past coverage of the great ex-nun here.

Glorious Tumblr Examines The World From An Artwork's Perspective

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Considering all the time we've spent looking at art, we're ashamed to say we've never quite considered what exactly they are looking at.

Enter Masashi Kawamura and his tumblr "What They See," which captures the world from the perspectives of famous artworks, inviting us to see through their (painted and sculpted) eyes. Spoiler alert: It's mostly other artworks, windows, or the artwork's own crotch.

pop

Kawamura explained to Hyperallergic how he was inspired to begin the project when his "eyes met with the ‘Study of a Young Woman’ by Vermeer" and he became "curious how she and the other ‘arts’ saw us." Through his project, Kawamura turns inanimate artworks into "characters living in the museum."

Ever want to experience life from the POV of a Modigliani muse? Take a look below and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

Will Andres Serrano Sue Over Theft of Piss Christ Copyright?

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This article originally appeared on artnet News.
by Brian Boucher

andre

Artist Andres Serrano recently discovered his controversial work Piss Christ was being sold by the Associated Press when it was notably pulled from the AP's image-licensing bank over events related to the Charlie Hebdo attack. And he's pissed.

"I was unaware that the image was sold by the AP since I never authorized them to do so," Serrano confirmed to artnet News over email from Paris. "It's something that I will have to look from a legal perspective."

The incident arose initially in the aftermath of the massacre last week of cartoonists at the French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo. The AP was accused of hypocrisy for continuing to license Serrano's controversial 1989 image while it opted not to distribute images of the covers of the French magazine's cartoons. Some observers have branded the cartoons anti-Islam (see Accused of Charlie Hebdo Censorship, AP Removes Piss Christ Image).

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Andres Serrano's Piss Christ before it was removed from the AP website.

Serrano's work, which shows a crucifix submerged in the artist's own urine, has raised the hackles of religious people ever since it was created (see Christians Pissed About Piss Christ, Again). And again, it's inspiring ire.

Back in the public eye, the photograph has been at the heart of recent debates over whether it's equally offensive to lampoon Christianity as it is to satirize Islam. Catholic League president Bill Donohue, in an interview with NewsMaxTV, told one reporter that while he wouldn't support a Catholic murdering Serrano, if it happened, the act would be partly the artist's own fault: speaking in the hypothetical, he said, “Had he exercised restraint, he wouldn't be dead."

Right-wing commentator Rush Limbaugh sees hypocrisy on this issue at CNN, according to the transcript of a recent broadcast: “You can still find pictures of a crucified Jesus in a jar of urine, the famous work of art by Andres Serrano called Piss Christ. You can still find that at CNN. CNN still has a picture of that illustrious work of art posted. But they're not gonna show potentially offensive images of the prophet."


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Academy President Responds To Oscar Firestorm

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Responding for the first time to the firestorm of criticism over the lack of diversity in this year's Oscar nominations, film academy president Cheryl Boone Isaacs says the all-white acting slate inspires her to accelerate the academy's push to be more inclusive. She also hopes the film industry as a whole will continue to strive for greater diversity.


The first black president of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences spoke out Friday night in an exclusive interview with The Associated Press about the Oscar nominations and the widespread criticism that followed.


All 20 of this year's acting contenders are white and there are no women in the directing or writing categories. After the nominations were announced Thursday morning, the hashtag #OscarsSoWhite started trending on Twitter.


The Asian Pacific American Media Coalition issued a statement Friday saying the nominations balloting "obviously reflects a lack of diversity in Oscar voters as well as in films generally."


Yet Boone Isaacs insisted the academy is "committed to seeking out diversity of voice and opinion" and that outreach to women and artists of color is a major focus.


"In the last two years, we've made greater strides than we ever have in the past toward becoming a more diverse and inclusive organization through admitting new members and more inclusive classes of members," Boone Isaacs said. "And, personally, I would love to see and look forward to see a greater cultural diversity among all our nominees in all of our categories."


A 2012 survey by the Los Angeles Times found the academy was 94 percent white, overwhelmingly male and with a median age of 62. A more recent survey determined the percentage of older white males had dropped by one point, the Times said. But with nearly 7,000 members and no requirement to retire, diversity is going to take some time.


Boone Isaacs declined to address whether she and the academy were embarrassed by the slate of white Oscar nominees, instead insisting that she's proud of the nominees, all of whom deserved recognition.


She explained that while each branch comes up with its own criteria for excellence and each nominates its colleagues, all voting is individual and confidential.


For instance, only directors can suggest best director nominees and only actors can nominate actors. But the entire academy membership can submit suggestions for best picture.


"There is not one central body or group of people that sit around the table and come up with nominations," she said. "It really is a peer-to-peer process."


With all the accolades the civil rights drama "Selma" has received since its Christmas opening, some felt its failure to garner nominations for director Ava DuVernay or star David Oyelowo reflected a racial bias.


"What is important not to lose sight of is that 'Selma,' which is a fantastic motion picture, was nominated for best picture this year, and the best picture category is voted on by the entire membership of around 7,000 people," Boone Isaacs said.


Besides best picture, the film received just one additional nod — for original song — in what was widely viewed as a significant snub. But fans shouldn't feel that way, she said: "It's nominated for the Oscar for best picture. It's an award that showcases the talent of everyone involved in the production of the movie 'Selma.'"


Boone Isaacs says the five best actor nominees — Bradley Cooper ("American Sniper"), Steve Carell ("Foxcatcher"), Benedict Cumberbatch ("The Imitation Game"), Eddie Redmayne ("The Theory of Everything") and Michael Keaton ("Birdman") — "are all at the top of their game."


"There are quite a few actors this year at the top of their game," she said. "There are five nominees and this year, these were the five."


Diversity outreach is spread among the academy's 17 branches, she said, since existing members recruit new ones.


"This is a membership organization, so we are all involved in this discussion and moving the subject of diversity forward," she said. "It's very important for us to continue to make strides to increase our membership and the recognition of talent."


In its Friday statement, the Asian Pacific coalition said the responsibility for diversity in film should be industry-wide.


"It behooves Hollywood — as an economic imperative, if not a moral one — to begin more closely reflecting the changing face of America," the statement said.


Boone Isaacs agrees, saying that as the academy "continues to make strides toward becoming a more diverse and inclusive organization, we hope the film industry will also make strides toward becoming more diverse and inclusive."


Though she repeatedly stressed the Oscars are a competitive process and that she's proud of the year's nominees, Boone Isaacs acknowledged that diversity needs to be mandatory in both story and storyteller.


"It matters that we pay attention to, again, the diversity of voice and opinion and experience, and that it doesn't slide, it doesn't slide anywhere except for forward," she said. "And maybe this year is more just about let's kick it in even more."


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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy .

Jennifer Aniston: 'Almost Just As Good To Be No. 1 Snubbed Than To Be Nominated'

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It would be naïve to assume that as a top celebrity in Hollywood, Jennifer Aniston could get any role she wanted. But the actress revealed Friday that she was drawn to play a mourning addict in the upcoming film “Cake” because she had her own doubts about herself. “I needed to do it so I could prove to myself that I was able to do it. So I wasn’t sitting there frustrated that I wasn’t getting certain parts because they knew something I didn’t know -- which was that I couldn’t do it,” Aniston told The Huffington Post Friday afternoon in Los Angeles.

Seated on a couch in a hotel suite at the Four Seasons, settled near the sunlight and in the path of a warm California breeze, it’s clear that Aniston is a pro. She has tirelessly promoted “Cake” ever since it premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival in the fall (she is also an executive producer), attending as many screenings and Q&As as possible with the hopes of ushering the film into the Oscar race. It worked, until it didn't: Aniston's performance was overlooked when this year's nominations were announced on Thursday.

After hearing that so many were shocked and even outraged that she missed out on an Oscar nomination for "Cake," Aniston's eyes welled up momentarily -- not out of sadness, but actually of gratitude. “I was amazed at how many messages of ‘Shocked!’ ‘Fuck ‘em!’ and ‘Robbed!’ I got,” she said. “I found it quite endearing and flattering that I had so many people rooting for me. It was almost just as good to be No. 1 snubbed than to be nominated,” she laughed, wearing her famous hair blown straight with a low cut white collared shirt that revealed almost as much as her Critics' Choice Movie Awards look from the evening before (she even wore similarly layered necklaces). “Now I don’t have any pressure.”

jennifer aniston

It's this kind of attitude that has carried Aniston through a career that spans more than 20 years (she starred in 238 episodes of “Friends” over a 10-year period and has also been in nearly 40 films). And yet “Cake” is not her first turn at drama. She received both praise and admiration for 2002’s “The Good Girl” and has tried serious tones, successfully, in films like “The Break-Up” and “Derailed.”

But there is something different about “Cake.” “It’s something I hadn’t done before. To take on such a wonderfully layered, complex character,” Aniston said.

Referring to the support group she gets kicked out of for being so negative, the fistfuls of prescription painkillers she washes down with alcohol, the weight she gained, the massive scars along her face and the chronic physical pain her character endures every day, Aniston views Claire Bennett with great empathy.

“She’s dark because she’s stuck. She’s depressed and she’s in extreme pain, physically and emotionally,” she said.

The character she plays suffers the consequences of an unexplained accident that renders her practically unable to do anything for herself. (Her housekeeper, played by Adriana Barraza, is her closest ally.) But the biggest pain of the film is the loss of someone very close to her, which has left Claire paralyzed in mourning.

“She feels that if she gets unstuck and heals herself, gets off the drugs and the booze, goes to her physical therapy and gets better, she feels she will forget [that person]. She will forget her loss,” Aniston said.

cake

And yet it wasn’t the darkness of the role that worried Aniston the most. Or the lack of makeup. Or the weight gain. It was the drugs.

Being sure that the film accurately portrayed addiction was the biggest challenge, Aniston stated. “I sent it to a psychopharmacologist, a therapist and also someone who helps heal people with chronic pain,” she said.

“I wanted to understand what the effects of narcotics mixed with booze are when you’re in pain. Are you getting high? Is it numbing you? The opiates make you feel some euphoria, but what about when the drugs are lessening in your body? There is a physicality that comes along with that.”

As inspired as Aniston was by the role -- including the six weeks of preparation she did on her own -- and the willingness to try it with a less-seasoned director, Daniel Barnz, she doesn’t believe she could have done it any earlier in her career.

When asked if there is something particular about where she finds herself in her personal life or her career that made her want to do the film, she responded simply and without hesitation: “I have a level of ease right now in my life. I have an unbelievable partner who supports me and loves me and makes me feel like there’s nothing I cannot do,” she said, referring to fiancé Justin Theroux.

“There is something about having a partner who supports you that kind of allows you to have a real ‘fuck-it’ attitude. I gotta just go for everything, cause if I fall down on my face, I got my buddy right here to dust me off and say let’s keep going.”

jennifer aniston

But the keeping-on is taxing for stars in her position, particularly women. While plenty of publications, including the New York Times, have written about her performance in “Cake,” headlines are more often something like "Jennifer Aniston, Angelina Jolie Avoid Red Carpet Run-In."

Just Thursday night in L.A., the two stars shared the red carpet at the Critics' Choice Movie Awards and apparently it was the first time this has happened since 2009.

“That stuff is getting better. She made such a beautiful movie,” Aniston said of the media coverage that often pits the two women against each other. “But they’re not focusing on why we are on the carpet together. They’re focusing on the catty bits and the drama, and there’s no drama.”

jennifer aniston

When asked how she remains sane in a industry where she is constantly being critiqued, one day on a "too thin" list and the next on a "she’s let herself go" round-up, Aniston considers it carefully.

“You don’t listen to it. Sometimes you’ll come across something by accident. But you have a core group of friends and family and everybody knows the truth and you know the truth,” she explained, referring to the cyclone of rumors in the media.

“So if you know the truth, but someone else is trying to tell you that you’re 6’9,” you’re like -- I’m not, I’m actually only just 5’5”. And they say no you’re a 6’9” Asian woman. And I say no! I’m actually not. What if someone said that to you? You’d laugh.”

Considering her Oscar "snub" and the heaviness of a movie like “Cake,” Aniston’s taking it in stride is either a product of her many years in the spotlight, or the result of a deeper relationship she seems to have cultivated with gratitude.

The first to compliment someone else’s performance, she made sure to note Oscar nominee Julianne Moore’s speech the night before at the Critics' Choice Awards and to mention her film “Still Alice.”

“People want to see human stories. We watch them because we have empathy and we learn and we have compassion for people,” Aniston said. “‘Still Alice’ is so beautiful. Julianne is extraordinary. It brought me to my knees.”

"Cake" opens nationwide on January 23.


Heartbreaking Photo Series Reveals The True Toll Obesity Can Take On A Family

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At his heaviest, Hector Garcia, Jr. weighed 636 pounds.

After being ridiculed for being overweight as a kid, he began dieting in high school, but the weight kept coming back due to poor eating habits and, likely, a genetic predisposition to obesity. At times confined to his home, Garcia told the San Antonio Express-News he couldn't remember a time when he was truly happy.

"It's hard to fight for my life when I feel that my life is not a life," he said. "It's existence. Existence is not enough for me."


hector garcia src="http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2503644/thumbs/o-HECTOR-GARCIA-900.jpg?6" />

Nov. 9, 2010. At almost 600 pounds, Hector Garcia, Jr. found simple daily tasks like bathing a challenge. He struggled to walk across the hall from his bedroom to the bathroom so that his mother, Elena, could wash him after cutting his hair. A month before, Hector started dieting after he realized he was close to his highest known weight, 636 pounds. (Lisa Krantz/San Antonio Express-News/ZUMA Press/Corbis)




Sixty-nine percent of Americans over the age of 20 are overweight, and 35.1 percent are obese, according to the CDC. Obesity increases a person's risk for numerous health conditions, including heart disease, stroke, Type 2 diabetes, sleep apnea and certain cancers. Roughly 3.4 million adults die each year around the world as a result of being overweight or obese.

Garcia allowed Express-News photographer Lisa Krantz and health and fitness reporter Jessica Belasco to follow him for four years starting in 2010 to capture the toll obesity takes on individuals and their families. "My life is a cautionary tale," he told the paper.

Around the year 2000, Garcia elected to have gastric bypass surgery, according to the Express-News. After the operation he lost close to 400 pounds, but he slowly gained all the weight back. "It helps you lose weight, but it doesn't teach you how to eat," he told the paper. "People think it's the miracle pill. I got news for ya. You still have to work at it."

In 2012, Garcia had surgery to replace both knees, which had been severely damaged by his weight. In order to undergo the procedure, he lost nearly 350 pounds. But complications of the surgeries led to disappointment and depression, a lack of exercise and return to seeking comfort in food, and by 2014, his weight was back to nearly 500 pounds.

"I overeat because food never rejects me," Garcia told the Express-News. "But the truth is, it's actually rejecting me now, because it's killing me. It's going to reject me up to the point where it takes my life if I'm not careful."

On Dec. 8, Garcia struggled to breathe and collapsed into a chair. Paramedics were called to the house, but it was too late. The exact cause of death is unknown, according to the paper.

A few of the powerful moments from Garcia's life as captured on camera by Krantz are below. Visit the Express-News to read the whole series.


hector garcia src="http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2503632/thumbs/o-HECTOR-GARCIA-900.jpg?6" />

Sep. 22, 2014. Confined to his chair and house, Garcia peeked into a bag holding a 20-piece box of Chicken
McNuggets brought to him by his mother. Mondays were always "cheat days" while dieting, but in recent months Garcia admitted that most days had become cheat days as his motivation to lose weight dwindled. (Lisa Krantz/San Antonio Express-News/ZUMAPRESS.com)




hector garcia src="http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2503640/thumbs/o-HECTOR-GARCIA-900.jpg?6" />

April 20, 2012. After losing almost 300 pounds, Garcia no longer needed a walker, but his knee pain was still debilitating. He continued to walk laps in the pool up until his knee surgery. Garcia was not always bowlegged, but as he put on weight as a teenager, his knees were most affected. (Lisa Krantz/San Antonio Express-News/ZUMA Press/Corbis)




hector garcia src="http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2503658/thumbs/o-HECTOR-GARCIA-900.jpg?5" />

June 10, 2014. Garcia's weight was again nearing 500 pounds. After four knee surgeries, he needed to use a walker for support again and felt his knees were unstable. The Garcias often had trouble finding motorized scooters at stores but found two for Garcia and his mother, Elena, on this grocery shopping trip. (Lisa Krantz/San Antonio
Express-News/ZUMA Press/Corbis)




hector garcia src="http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2503636/thumbs/o-HECTOR-GARCIA-900.jpg?6" />

Jan. 11, 2011. Garcia winced as he prepared for an EKG test by employees of the Visiting Physicians Association. (Lisa Krantz/San Antonio Express-News/ZUMA Press/Corbis)



hector garcia src="http://i.huffpost.com/gen/2503654/thumbs/o-HECTOR-GARCIA-900.jpg?6" />

Dec. 8, 2014. Garcia's body is removed from his home by contractors with the Bexar County Medical Examiner's office after he said he couldn't breathe and collapsed.(Lisa Krantz/San Antonio Express-News/ZUMA Press/Corbis)

Maddie Ziegler Tries To Teach Clumsy Billboard Editor Her Dance Moves For 'Chandelier'

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If you have two left feet, you're already two steps ahead of Jason Lipshutz.

The Billboard Pop editor -- and self-proclaimed "Most Awkward Dancer Alive" -- recently sat down with Maddie Ziegler, the 12-year-old dancing prodigy who stars in Sia's music video for "Chandelier," to learn her moves.




We won't lie to you: Even with Maddie's expert input, Lipshutz doesn't quite nail the dance, though he does get the basics down.

WATCH Lipshutz's attempt, above, and the original video for "Chandelier," below:

These Photos Show Japan's Incredible Metamorphosis After World War II

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After Japan's surrender in World War II, the country rapidly changed from an imperial nation under an emperor, to a democratic and demilitarized state.

Much of Japan lay in ruins after the war, devastated by air raids and the atomic bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Yet the country's economy grew so fast that by 1964, Tokyo hosted the Olympic Games. Japan adopted a new, progressive constitution, allied with the United States and enshrined limits on the use of military force.

A new exhibition at the Open Eye Gallery in the U.K., organized by The Japan Foundation, shows Japan's transformation during this period through the work of 11 leading Japanese post-war photographers. "These two decades constituted a period truly brimming with creative energy – a time in which democracy led to the restoration of vitality and free photographic expression," the Gallery explains.

Take a look at some of their striking images of post-war Japan below.

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