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M.H. Abrams, Influential Critic And Norton Anthology Founder, Dead At 102

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NEW YORK (AP) — M.H. Abrams, an esteemed critic, teacher and tastemaker who helped shape the modern literary canon as founding editor of the Norton Anthology of English Literature and joined the elite himself by writing one of the 20th century's most acclaimed works of criticism, has died. He was 102.

Abrams' death was confirmed to The Associated Press on Wednesday by Cornell University President David J. Skorton, who declined to give details. According to the website of the Ithaca-based university, where he was a longtime member of the English department, Abrams died Tuesday at the retirement community Kendal at Ithaca. No cause of death was given.

While at Cornell in the 1950s, Abrams was asked by publisher W.W. Norton to lead a team of editors compiling excerpts of vital English works. The first edition of the Norton Anthology came out in 1962 and was an immediate success. Abrams stayed on through seven editions, into his 80s, as the book became required reading — or perusing — for millions of college students.

Abrams also wrote several books, notably the 1953 publication "The Mirror and the Lamp," a groundbreaking work of literary theory that celebrated Byron, Keats and other British Romantic poets and popularized a field of study that emphasized how authors' lives and feelings influenced their work. "The Mirror and the Lamp" was ranked No. 25 on a Modern Library list of the greatest English-language nonfiction books of the 20th century.

In the years before "The Mirror and the Lamp," the Romantics had been effectively denigrated by T.S. Eliot, who found Byron to have a "disorderly mind, and an uninteresting one" and believed Keats and Shelley "not nearly such great poets as they are supposed to be." He valued reason and restraint, stating that a poem's meaning should be clear.

But Abrams countered that the Romantics changed and enriched the history of poetry by freeing the emotions and imagination. The Romantics broke from the ideal of capturing the real world (a mirror) and instead composed "lamps," illuminating the poet's personal vision.

"The first test any poem must pass is no longer, 'Is it true to nature ...?'" Abrams wrote, "but a criterion looking in a different direction; namely, 'Is it sincere? Is it genuine?'"

Abrams' other books included the influential social and political history "Natural Supernaturalism" and "The Milk of Paradise." In July 2012, the essay collection "The Fourth Dimension of a Poem" was published to mark his 100th birthday. In July 2014, he received a National Arts Medal for "expanding our perceptions of the Romantic tradition and broadening the study of literature."

A son of Russian Jewish immigrants, Meyer Howard Abrams was born and raised in Long Branch, New Jersey. As a child, he spoke Yiddish until age 5 and loved reading so much he would borrow up to three books at a time from the library and then return the next day for more. He was a scholarship student at Harvard University — and one of the few Jews then permitted at Harvard — and later won a scholarship to Cambridge University. He joined the Cornell faculty in 1945 and established himself as the teacher of a popular introductory survey class, with students including such future literary stars as the novelist Thomas Pynchon (who submitted a term paper so accomplished that Abrams suspected — wrongly — it was plagiarized) and the critic Harold Bloom.

Known fondly to Bloom and others as "Mike" Abrams, he modeled his work for Norton on his literature course. At the time Abrams was commissioned for the anthology, each book a student read in many English departments "was treated as an object in itself, to be read and interpreted and admired independently of its historical setting," he told The Associated Press in 1999.

Abrams and his colleagues "believed that to understand literature you had to understand its place in history and culture."

Abrams experimented with content and form. When he was an undergraduate at Harvard, anthologies were grim, square volumes with double-column printing on each page — printed as if the verses of Homer were no different from a table of prime numbers. Abrams innovated with single columns and the kind of fine, thin paper used for high-priced Bibles, making the anthology portable. The preface of the first edition promised a volume that "can not only be carried everywhere, but read anywhere, in one's own private room, in the classroom, or under a tree."

The anthology was conceived when the canon was overwhelmingly white and male, but Abrams and his fellow editors opened up over the following decades, including women and "post-colonial" authors such as Salman Rushdie, Chinua Achebe and V.S. Naipaul. Norton, meanwhile, issued numerous separate anthologies that included volumes on African-American writers, Latinos and nonfiction authors.

Abrams married Ruth Gaynes in 1937. They had two children.

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You Can Stay In Kurt Cobain & Courtney Love's Former Apartment With Airbnb

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Nirvana fans can now get closer than ever to the late Kurt Cobain. The musician's former Los Angeles apartment, which he lived in with Courtney Love, is up for rent on Airbnb.

According to Vulture, the singer-songwriter and Love lived in the apartment from 1991 to 1992 during the height of Nirvana's fame. Brandon Kleinman, the current tenant who's lived in the apartment since 2011 and has been renting out one bedroom for a couple years, told Vulture his experience living around music history. "Once every 60 days or so," Kleinman said, "I’ll get a weird, older gentleman, a rocker-type dude, sort of a burnout, knocking on the door, saying, ‘Do you know what used to happen here?’"

But apparently the apartment's history hasn't created a high demand for renting the space. Kleinman says he's only rented out the one bedroom, one bath section of the apartment "four or five times a year" and that his landlord didn't even tell him about Cobain and Love's history there until after he signed the lease. "He kept it a secret because he wasn’t getting great tenants when he advertised the apartment’s backstory," Kleinman said.

In his Airbnb listing, Kleinman alleges that Cobain wrote "Heart-Shaped Box" in the home's bathtub, although the story has never been confirmed. A leak in the bathtub was apparently also the reason the couple moved out of the home when Love was eight months pregnant with Frances Bean Cobain. Reps for love were not immediately available for comment about the bathtub story or apartment listing.

Photos of the apartment surfaced online last year after a Seattle police department developed rolls of film from the scene of Cobain's death. The photos, which were reportedly taken by a press photographer after the couple moved out, show the apartment littered with trash, pill bottles and graffiti. But don't worry, Kleinman has cleaned up the place quite a bit.

If you can't make it out to LA's Fairfax district to stay in the apartment, you can always spend a little time with Cobain and Love in Brett Morgen's upcoming documentary "Montage of Heck," which premieres on HBO May 4.

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#EmpowerALLBodies Is What A Truly Diverse Plus-Size Campaign Looks Like

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Body love activist Jes Baker was disappointed by the lack of diversity in Lane Bryant's #ImNoAngel campaign, so she made her own series of ads.

Baker's #EmpowerALLBodies photo series shows plus-size women of all shapes and sizes -- not just those who would be considered "models."

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In an open letter to Lane Bryant CEO Linda Heasley, Baker explained why she was unimpressed by #ImNoAngel: "You’ve presented the 'ideal' plus body: hourglass, perceivably 'healthy', cellulite-free, able bodied, cis-gender, and 'conventionally' beautiful."

Baker gathered a group of diverse models, including herself, and worked with photographer Jade Beall to show what a truly diverse plus-size underwear campaign would look like.

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Baker also offered suggestions about how Lane Bryant could improve when it comes to diversity and asked the company to consider including:


Cellulite; 90% of women have it. Bellies; many plus women don't have flat torsos. All abilities; we’re all inherently sexy. Transgender women; they're "all woman" too. Small boobs and wide waists; we're not all "proportional." Stretch marks and wrinkles; they're trophies of a life lived. And this is just the beginning!


Check out more images from this amazing campaign below.

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7 Teen Movies Based On Shakespeare That Would Make Him Roll Over In His Grave

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Happy birthday, William Shakespeare! Well, happy death day, at least. We observe both the birth and the death of the Bard on the date he died, April 23, though his birthdate has not been confirmed.

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Billy, not yet rolling in his grave.


Here's what we do know: This is the 399th anniversary of Shakespeare's death, and his outsize importance to Western culture looms as large as ever. Christopher Marlowe would be lime-green with envy over the popularity of his one-time rival's plays; there are entire theater troupes devoted to performing Shakespeare, and the finest actors jockey to commit their portrayals of Hamlet and Lady Macbeth to film.

Oh, and then there are the remixes. "West Side Story," "Kiss Me, Kate," A Thousand Acres -- many of Shakespeare's plays were themselves retellings of historical events or classic tales, and the appeal of the narratives has only grown with his magical touch. One can't help but wonder, however, if some of these adaptations would make the great wordsmith squirm, especially the vast array of teen flicks cannibalized from his oeuvre. "Twelfth Night" as a teen sex comedy? Umm... okay.

In fact, the cross-dressing comedy seems to have particular appeal for the makers of teen movies. "Twelfth Night" adaptations have been set on high school soccer teams, motocross events, and journalism competitions. No matter where, a lovely lady gets to prove an easy point about girl power while some fake homoromantic tension is ginned up between the lady in drag and the man she falls for. Lowbrow gold.

Of course, in Shakespeare's time, the constant cross-dressing (movie-makers could also try "As You Like It," though for some reason they seem stuck on "Twelfth Night") was far more practical and complex than it is today, as all of the female parts were played by boys or young men. Not only was it fairly easy for these actors to be "convincing" in male garb, the device was a knowing wink at the audience, who knew the actor was a man playing a woman pretending to be a man. Somehow Amanda Bynes in a wig doesn't carry quite the same impact.

So, in celebration of the past 399 years of Shakespearean spin-offs, I rounded up seven teen-geared movies based on Shakespeare's plays and tried to look at them through the Bard's eyes:

shestheman

"She’s the Man"

"Twelfth Night" isn’t as popular as "Romeo and Juliet," as Shakespeare plays go, but somehow it’s inspired just as many teen-geared adaptations. Apparently movie execs love putting girls in drag and making homoerotic jokes (until she’s revealed to be, thankfully for heteronormativity, a girl). "She’s the Man" was an Amanda Bynes vehicle back when she was still a star, and featured Channing Tatum before he really was one. Bynes plays Viola Hastings, a girl who pretends to be her brother to get onto a soccer team. And so, we have a typical girl in film-quality male wigs shouldering the weight of a Shakespearean masterwork. Oh, boy.

The Bad: "She’s the Man" makes the mistake of many adaptations that lack confidence in their spin: It overcompensates by rigidly adhering to unnecessary details. Thus, Viola remains Viola, and Duke Orsino, her love interest, remains... Duke Orsino. Yes, Channing Tatum plays a teenage soccer star named Duke. Orsino. They play for a boarding school called Illyria. Gosh, I wonder what play this is based on.

Maintaining the same characters does not a successful modern adaptation make, however. In drag, Bynes (surprise surprise) looks like an overgrown nine-year-old, and nothing like her brother, Sebastian, and yet we’re supposed to believe, for the purpose of the plot, that people can’t tell them apart. She and Duke are roommates at Illyria, which seems to have been set up to create as many (apparently) romantic moments as possible -- Viola/Sebastian hugging Duke too long, Viola/Sebastian jumping into Duke’s arms when she sees a spider, Viola/Sebastian casually telling Duke how hot he is. Thigh-slapping every time.

Oh, and of course, there’s the hilarity of Duke’s squeamishness about possibly having a gay or bisexual friend. Shakespeare at least had the sense to find it all poignant rather than fodder for cheap homophobic jokes and forced genital exposure at soccer games.

The Good: This is a really good movie to watch with your best friend over a few glasses bottles of wine. And listen, it’s probably best if we just don’t tell William about this one.


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"Just One of the Guys"

"Twelfth Night" makes yet another appearance! It’s not quite as excruciating for Billy W. this time, we hope. In this 1985 comedy, Terry Griffith, a gorgeous and studious high school journalism student grows frustrated that her beauty prevents others from taking her career aspirations seriously. She dresses as a boy, transfers schools, and prepares to receive the accolades she deserves, while, of course, falling in love with a new classmate who thinks she’s a dude (lol).

The Bad: Acting chops were clearly not high on the list of requirements for the cast of the movie, but that's not the most grating offense. Using Shakespeare as an excuse for jockstrap pratfalls and pants-stuffing gags seems a bit cheap, and this juvenile flick skimps on neither.

Comic relief is also provided by Terry’s 15-year-old brother, whose sex obsession is so luridly over-the-top it’s not even chuckle-worthy. "Ha ha, teenage boys are all borderline, if not actual, sex predators!" this movie winks. I’m not sure Billy W. was totally above the teen sex comedy genre, but he would probably have appreciated a bit more subtlety, especially for an adaptation of the elegant "Twelfth Night."

The Good: It may not be saying much, but, at least in comparison to Gwyneth and Amanda, Joyce Hyser makes a pretty convincing, and even dashing, young man. It’s not difficult to imagine popular girls swooning over the becostumed Terry. And there’s a little satisfying social commentary in there; after Terry’s journalism teacher suggests she be a model instead, she rages at her brother, “Your [porn-covered] room is why my life is totally screwed up! You guys think beautiful women are nothing but decorations!” Sad but, well, pretty much true.

Terry also has to learn that her distracting sex appeal wasn’t the only thing holding her back -- even as a boy, her writing needs some work -- so lessons are handed out all around. Society, consider yourself fixed!


getoverit

"Get Over It"

This Kirsten Dunst flick revolves around a high school musical production of "A Midsummer Night’s Dream," and the all-too-familiar love quadrangle playing out among the cast. It’s hard to say what’s more bizarre: That a major teen rom-com was based on "A Midsummer Night’s Dream" (y’know, the one with magical fairy dust) or the campy, absurd execution. There are flashbacks encased in cartoon thought bubbles. There are daydream sequences set in poorly produced magical forests. There’s Shane West. Oh, yes, there’s Shane West.

The Bad: Ben Foster (current sexual awakener of the queenly Robin Wright) plays the saddest of sad sacks; dumped by his childhood crush/high school sweetheart Alison, he spends the entire movie moping around like a wounded puppy with poor emoting skills. For some inexplicable reason, Kelly (Kirsten Dunst), his friend’s younger sister and a theater geek, takes an interest in him, helping him land a role in the school musical to impress Alison.

Unfortunately, Alison is now dating Striker (Shane West), a former boy band member who has landed in their regular high school (of course) and has a truly ludicrous British accent. It’s so bad that whenever he speaks it's impossible to pay attention to what he's actually saying because you're trying to figure out what the hell kind of accent he's trying for. Other characters insinuate that he’s faking it to impress the ladies, but one might suspect the director had to add in those lines after cringing through West's accent, which I would describe as more "burnt tongue" than "British" at least 80 percent of the movie.

Throw in those tacky, low-budget flashbacks and daydream sequences, and the modern viewer has likely had enough. But what would break Shakespeare’s heart? Probably the cheesy song-and-dance numbers inserted directly into his script. "A Midsummer Night’s Rockin’ Dream" was NOT the plan.

The Good: Despite Ben Foster’s dullness, Kirsten Dunst manages to sell her hopeless crush on him, injecting a bit of almost Bard-worthy pathos into this ridiculous movie. Oh, and the real star is Martin Short, god among comic character actors, who reinvigorates the Bottom archetype as the insanely egotistical, ridiculously untalented high school theater director. Watch the movie, but watch it for Short, who transforms into a clown worthy of Falstaff. And Shakespeare, well, he knew the importance of being humorous.


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"Romeo + Juliet"

It’s dangerous to hate on this movie -- who among us is not a 12-year-old girl circa 1997 when it comes to Leo? -- but Baz Luhrmann has much to answer for here. He tries to violently force together Shakespeare’s anachronistic dialogue with a futuristic, Medieval-punk setting, and drenches the whole affair in his patented glitter and flash and head-banging music. The result: confusion, incoherence, and strained suspension of disbelief.

The Bad: If you’re determined to use Shakespeare’s original words, I’m afraid you have to commit to a bit. If a character refers to his “sword,” he just can't be wielding what is clearly, to the audience, a gun. Meanwhile, the script has been heavily chopped down, making more room for bloody action sequences and breathless Claire Danes and Leonardo DiCaprio embracing in a pool. None of the actors seem particularly adept at performing Shakespeare, which is its own specific skill for the modern player, leading to very puzzling scenes wherein no one’s lines can be understood.

The Good: Okay, so we all love some Danes and DiCaprio, especially when they’re having a romantic wet T-shirt contest. I’ll allow it. Seriously, the actors have the youthful innocence and fervor to sell their roles, and the chemistry to make us believe in their romance. Maybe that’s the most important part of "Romeo and Juliet," anyway. There's probably a reason Shakespeare chose to make his own adaptation of the old tale to begin with.


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"Shakespeare in Love"

Yes, I know it won an Academy Award (and is not technically a teen movie). I don’t care. This movie is for hormonal 15-year-old girls who want the kind of romance Freddie Prinze Jr. can’t provide. (I would know.)

The Bad: This version of history is so glossy it’s hard to take it seriously. Despite Gwyneth Paltrow's/Viola’s unlikely access to extremely realistic wigs and false mustaches (remember, this is Elizabethan England), she looks and sounds like a teenage girl. Despite the famously bald and lumpy portrait of Shakespeare we’ve all seen, Joseph Fiennes portrays him as a lean, hirsute dreamboat.

For the convenience of the film’s sappy narrative, Shakespeare and Viola meet when she sneaks into an audition for his new play: "Romeo and Juliet," believed to have been written in 1597. They begin a very sexual adult relationship when he discovers her true identity -- not the sort of behavior typically condoned by the real Shakespeare, at least among his female characters. When she leaves him, a few months later, to accompany her new husband to Virginia (a colony that, um, did not yet exist), he begins to write "Twelfth Night," inspired by his cross-dressing love. "Twelfth Night," a play dated to around 1602 (that's five years later, for those keeping score at home).

Historical accuracy cannot stand in the way of love.

The Good: "Shakespeare in Love" is unbearably sentimental -- at one point, they recite Romeo and Juliet’s love poetry to each other while making love -- but hey, Shakespeare himself wrote that dang poetry. He couldn’t have been that appalled by people savoring the romance of his words, the invocations of bounty’s boundlessness and love’s depth. The film even works in a little of his bawdy humor. And would Shakespeare really mind being played by doe-eyed Joseph Fiennes? Maybe he’s not rolling all the way over.


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"O"

One of the most truly gut-wrenching of Shakespeare’s tragedies, "Othello" presents particular challenges to the modern adaptation. For example, given contemporary views on women’s sexuality, death no longer seems like a rather harsh punishment for infidelity, but a totally psychotic one. This makes Othello’s post-murder realization of Desdemona’s innocence difficult to sympathize with, from the modern eye. Shouldn’t he just have not murdered her to begin with? This doesn’t even get into the questionable racial politics of a black protagonist cast as a volatile killer. All of which is to say that "O" is a surprisingly effective update, given the problematic plot. Still...

The Bad: "O" got off to a demonstrably bad start. Originally slated for April 1999, the film was put on ice for a couple years after the Columbine High School shootings. The violence of the "Othello" remix, which is set on a high school campus, surely seemed too painfully timely.

And those racial problems? They don’t disappear, though we’re set up to view Odin James (Mekhi Phifer) as the victim of psychological manipulation and entrapment by Hugo (Josh Hartnett), his jealous basketball teammate. Roger Ebert pointed out that Odin’s initials are, ahem, O.J. -- did we really need a reminder that there’s a real black star athlete out there who is widely believed to have killed his white romantic partner? Ick.

Plus, the domestic violence issues: At first we feel outraged that Des’s father doesn’t want her to date Odin, but given that his response to perceived infidelity was to kill her, it seems like old dad was right, even if Hugo drove O to the brink of the crime.

The Good: Hartnett and Phifer, as well as Julia Stiles as Des, are perfectly cast and bring nuance and humanity to their roles. And given the near-impossibility of updating "Othello" for today, this adaptation does a remarkably solid job. It furnishes Hugo with a credible motivation; invests much of the runtime in depicting Hugo’s ingenious scheming and Odin’s mental unraveling, complete with insomnia and illicit drugs, to make his reckless crime more comprehensible; and it makes Shakespeare’s tale seem profoundly relevant and alive today. The script is even, at many points, beautiful. The original playwright would probably give it an approving nod -- for teens, at least. (Maybe they’re not ready for the real thing.)


10thingsihateaboutyou

"10 Things I Hate About You"

"The Taming of the Shrew" is a rough play to update for modern life -- perhaps the roughest among Shakespeare’s comedies, if not his whole oeuvre. The plot revolves around the quest for an obedient wife, and the happy ending depends on the titular shrew becoming one. Somehow, though, "10 Things I Hate About You" isn’t entirely awful. Maybe it’s Heath Ledger, or rockin’ nineties fashion, but the movie is pretty lovable.

The Bad: Okay, so let’s get this out of the way: The ending still involves an independent woman finding “happiness” via romantic love. Thank God she found a man, said feminists everywhere! Also, who are these modern parents who insist that younger siblings can’t date until their older siblings do? Find another plot device for the 20th century, people.

The Good: While "The Taming of the Shrew" is the story of Petruchio conquering his recalcitrant wife through food deprivation and emotional abuse, "10 Things I Hate About You" makes Kat (Julia Stiles, a.k.a. the shrew) the star of the show. Can we talk about how badass Kat is? Though a teen rom-com heroine, she is a feminist who reads Sylvia Plath and listens to riot grrrl music. Sure, she needs to tone down her bad attitude a bit, but it’s also kinda refreshing that she allows herself to act abrasive in a world where women are expected to smile and act accommodating. Kat isn’t a shrew, but she is definitely not a nice girl.

Heath Ledger’s Patrick (Petruchio), meanwhile, isn’t a devious manipulator, but another antisocial teenager with some rough edges that need to be sanded down. He accepts money from Cameron, who wants to date younger sister Bianca, to get Kat into the dating game, but as teenagers in rom-coms so often do, he realizes that he’s actually starting to fall for her. Whoopsie! He has no real designs to change her personality -- though, fortunately, they both warm up a bit once they find they can relax with each other. That’s love.

Oh, and Kat’s sonnet? Truly inspired use of the Shakespearean sonnet form. Way to turn the poem completely around in its last two lines -- the Bard would be proud.

For more on the Bard, check out: "Here's What Actually Happens In Shakespeare's Most Famous Plays."

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HuffPost Love And Sex Podcast: When A Bunch Of Dominatrixes And Their Slaves Start Their Own Nation

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In an article for Good Magazine published in March, writer Mark Hay gave readers a rich glimpse into The Other World Kingdom: a femdom -- or female dominant -- micronation formally situated in The Czech Republic where dominatrixes and their slaves created a thriving community.

Inspired by Hay's piece, co-hosts Carina Kolodny and Noah Michelson explore the topic in this week's episode of The HuffPost Love+Sex Podcast and ask the question: Can a fetish group start and sustain its very own nation?

To find out the answer and learn more about this micronation, Kolodny and Michelson spoke to Hay as well as a femdom couple, Lady Femina and her husband Tony, who traveled to The Other World Kingdom and then returned home with more than a few stories to show for it.



If you want to download and/or listen offline, head to iTunes or Stitcher.

This podcast was produced by Katelyn Bogucki with additional production by Jorge Corona. Like Love + Sex? Subscribe, rate and review our podcast on iTunes and don't forget to listen to the other HuffPost Podcasts. We recommend HuffPost Weird News.

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Disney Challenges Kids To Use Their Best STEAM Skills To Imagine The Future

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All aboard!

American education is moving forward with full STEAM, and Disney has hopped on board with a special challenge.

In anticipation of their upcoming movie "Tomorrowland," the Magic Kingdom has teamed up with Xprize to launch Disney’s Create Tomorrowland - Xprize Challenge. The competition asks kids ages 8-17 to harness their best STEAM skills (science, technology, engineering, arts and mathematics) to create an idea for a new invention that may exist in the future. Contestants are then challenged to present this imagined idea and explain the impact their innovation would have.

STEM (science, technology, engineering and math) has been in the forefront of U.S. education most prominently since President Obama launched “Educate to Innovate” in 2009, but the acronym has since been amended by some educators to add an “A” to the equation, and include arts in its mission.

Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) has advocated for this addition with its STEM to STEAM initiative, which provides resources and case studies that support why adding the arts to STEM is necessary. "Innovation needs the arts education component to truly flourish," RISD President John Maeda told the Wall Street Journal.

To learn more about the challenge and how to enter, click here.

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Model For Norman Rockwell's 'Rosie The Riveter,' Mary Doyle Keefe, Dead At 92

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The model that inspired Norman Rockwell's famed "Rosie the Riveter" painting, Mary Doyle Keefe, died Tuesday at the age of 92. Keefe died in Simsbury, Connecticut after a short illness, her daughter told The Hartford Courant. The painting is often confused with J. Howard Miller's popular "We Can Do It!" posters.

While Keefe might not have been a household name, many people are familiar with "Rosie the Riveter," Rockwell's painting depicting the strength and courage of American women during World War II. Rockwell later apologized for portraying Keefe's petite body as heftier than it actually was.

"I did have to make you into a sort of a giant," Rockwell wrote in a letter to Keefe, according to The Associated Press.

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Rockwell was Keefe's neighbor in Arlington, Vermont when he asked the then 19-year-old telephone operator to pose for some photos, from which he created his painting. At the time, she was paid just $10. The image, which landed on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post on May 29, 1943, showed a flame-haired "Rosie" eating a sandwich in blue jeans, with her rivet gun in her lap and her feet resting on a copy of Hitler's "Mein Kampf." It's no surprise the painting soon became an important part of American history and culture.

Keefe went on to receive a dental hygiene degree from Temple University. According to an obituary released by Carmon Funeral Home, she is survived by four children, 11 grandchildren and five great-grandchildren. Memorial services will be held Friday followed by a funeral on Saturday. Her family requests that in lieu of flowers, donations be made to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.





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Amid Mexico's Drug Wars, Vigilante Groups Are Taking The Law Into Their Own Hands

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Amid the violence caused by Mexico's drug wars, armed vigilante groups in both Arizona and Mexico are taking the law into their own hands. The groups are the subject of a new documentary, Cartel Land, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival this week. Director Matthew Heineman joined HuffPost Live on Wednesday to discuss his new film. Watch the conversation in the video above.

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Giraffes Dominate The High Dive In This Mesmerizing Animated Short

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All the thrill of Coney Island diving horses, none of the animal-welfare concerns: this glorious animation, "5 Métres 80," directed by Nicolas Deveaux at Cube Creative Productions, has it all. Plus, giraffes' slinky necks are clearly made for graceful dives and midair acrobatics.

You may remember Deveaux from his acclaimed 2004 short animation, "7 Tonnes 2," which depicted an elephant performing high-flying gymnastic tricks on a trampoline. The giraffe-focused video, released in 2013, was a follow-up to the elephant short.

We highly recommend that you watch every second of this stunning video, which is simultaneously ridiculous (giraffes performing diving tricks!) and touching (tinkling music plays as a giraffe softly snuffles at a camera!). While the dives performed are, yes, fantastical, the so-natural-it-seems-real movement of the animals makes you almost believe in the impossible.

H/T Colossal

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Watch These Cops Rockin' Out To Pop Songs Like Only Superstars Could

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What's a pair of cops to do when they hear a couple of pop hits? Jam out, of course!

In a video uploaded to YouTube, everyone's favorite Taylor Swift-singin' cop, Cpl. Jeff Davis from the Dover Police Department, is back, and this time he's joined by Cpl. Demetrius Stevenson for a serious singalong sesh or #DashCamDuet.

The pair rocks out to Lil Jon and DJ Snake's "Turn Down for What" and Magic!'s "Rude" among several other hits. But at the 1:31 mark, you can totally tell that Iggy Azalea's "Fancy" is just Davis' jam.

The sass attack that the two unleash will leave you craving a little in-car karaoke.

H/T Right This Minute

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Report Finds Few Colleges Have A Shakespeare Requirement For English Majors

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NEW YORK (AP) — As Shakespeare would say, "We have seen better days."

The American Council of Trustees and Alumni has found that less than 8 percent of the nation's top universities require English majors to take a course focused on Shakespeare. The study, "The Unkindest Cut: Shakespeare in Exile 2015," found that only four of the nation's 52 highest-ranked universities and colleges by U.S. News & World Report have a Shakespeare requirement.

Michael Poliakoff, vice president of policy for the Washington, D.C.-based council and lead author of the study, called the findings "a terrible tragedy."

"It is with sadness that we view this phenomenon," he said by phone. "It really does make us grieve for the loss to a whole generation of young people who would look to a college or university for guidance about what is great and what is of the highest priority."

The report was released Thursday on what is believed to be Shakespeare's birthday in 1564. It comes a day after the new musical "Something Rotten!" opened on Broadway that mocks The Bard as a rump-shaking word thief.

The schools that still ask English majors to study the Bard are Harvard University, the University of California-Berkeley, Wellesley College and the U.S. Naval Academy.

The report notes that English majors are often future English teachers and many will graduate without studying in depth the language's greatest writer.

"The Bard, who is the birthright of the English speaking world, has no seat of honor," the report says. "A degree in English without serious study of Shakespeare is like a major in Greek literature without the serious study of Homer."

But William Gleason, the chair of the Department of English at Princeton University, said it's impossible for students in his department to ignore The Bard. Learning about Shakespeare is a requirement in an introductory course that all English majors take and all theater majors must take a Shakespeare class to graduate. Plus, any examination of social issues inevitably leads back to Shakespeare. "He was usually there first," he said.

"He is such a vital presence in everything we teach, even if he's not the sole focus of a course," said Gleason, who specializes in American literature and culture. "Shakespeare exerts such an influence that it would be a mistake to think we could ever dismiss him."

The report argues that many colleges are downplaying the classics in favor of survey courses that introduce various styles of thought, such as Duke University's "Creatures, Aliens and Cyborgs."

"Rather than studying major literary works in depth, students are taught the rationale for and applications of critical approaches that are heavily influenced by theories of race, class, gender, and sexuality," it said.

The report urges trustees, alumni, donors and administrators to stop "a vicious circle of cultural illiteracy" by reviewing curriculums and re-evaluating what students need to learn.

"There is more common sense outside the academy and it's important for these voices to pull us back to the things that are right in front of us for us to cherish and to grow from," Poliakoff said.

The council calls itself is "an independent nonprofit committed to academic freedom, excellence and accountability at America's colleges and universities."

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Online: http://www.goacta.org

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Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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Photographer Captures His Best Friend's Last Day

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On Mother's Day 2011, photographer B.D. Colen got an unexpected call from his college best friend, Rev. Bill Potter. Potter, a 62-year-old Episcopal clergyman and a heavy smoker who had spent months volunteering at Ground Zero, was dying of lung cancer.

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A few weeks later, Colen, who teaches documentary photography at MIT, traveled to visit Potter at a hospice in New Hampshire. It was clear when he arrived that Potter didn't have much time left. Colen asked the family if he should take photographs; they said yes. The result is a series of hauntingly beautiful images documenting the end of one man's life.

The resulting black-and-white snapshots give a glimpse not only into Potter's final hours, but his family's efforts to surround and celebrate their loved one. Colen's lens captures the perspective of an individual embedded in the emotional outpouring; situated at Potter's side, peering into his room from the hallway, fixated on a peripheral embrace. At the same time, it's clear that the camera was a physical barrier between one friend and another, in a most solemn moment in time.

"As is often the case in such difficult situations, my cameras and working gave me distance that I needed; I could concentrate on telling a story, on creating images, and could delay, at least for a few hours, the crushing sadness I knew would come," Colen wrote in his artist statement.

Potter died 14 hours after the last of these images were shot. The full set of photographs can be seen at the Social Documentary Network.

"Bill was a truly special person, a son of privilege who cared most about those without privilege, someone who was deeply religious but was pragmatic enough to get a masters degree in urban planning 'in case the God thing didn’t work out,'" Colen told The Huffington Post by email. "Throughout his life, he worked for social justice, even when doing so threatened his career, such as when he was performing one of the first gay marriages at a time when the Episcopal Church was at war with itself over that issue, or defending an Imam in Newark against deportation efforts after 9/11."

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Disclosure: The writer of this article took a journalism class with B.D. Colen in 2010.

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NASA Celebrates The Hubble Telescope's 25th Birthday With Gorgeous Photos Of Space Fireworks

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Happy birthday, Hubble!

The celebrated space telescope turns 25 on Friday. To mark the anniversary, NASA set the instrument loose to gaze at some fireworks -- that is, space fireworks. Hubble captured the spectacular photos of stars being born in "Westerlund 2," a cluster of 3,000 stars that is in Gum 29, which NASA describes as a "raucous stellar breeding ground" in the constellation Carina.

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Westerlund 2, set in the stellar breeding ground of Gum 29.


"Hubble has completely transformed our view of the universe, revealing the true beauty and richness of the cosmos,” John Grunsfeld, an astronaut and the associate administrator of NASA’s Science Mission Directorate, said in a written statement announcing the anniversary. “This vista of starry fireworks and glowing gas is a fitting image for our celebration of 25 years of amazing Hubble science.”

The Westerlund cluster measures between six and 13 light-years across, NASA says. It's about 2 million years old, which in astronomical terms is fairly young. The thin pillars that fork out from the nebula are each several light-years tall. They owe their unique shape to the "torrents of ultraviolet light and hurricane-force winds of charged particles" that bombard them from the nearby stars.

Since its launch on April 24, 1990, Hubble has orbited the Earth almost 137,000 times and made more than 1.2 million observations of over 38,000 celestial objects, according to the Space Telescope Science Institute. The institute notes that Hubble's data archive, which grows by an average of 829 gigabytes each month, has so far been cited in more than 12,800 scientific papers.

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Photographer Gives Homeless Youth Control Of Their Images In Powerful Photos

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There’s more to LGBT homeless youth than the stereotypes used to describe them. A deeper level exists -- a level the Reciprocity Foundation wanted the world to see.

The foundation, which is dedicated to helping homeless, runaway and foster care youth in New York City, started a project titled "See Me: Picturing New York’s Homeless Youth" in an effort to give the youth control of their image. Co-founder Taz Tagore hopes the photos will shatter stereotypes associated with the group.

"If you conjure up an image in your head, it is most likely a young person living on the pavement with a collection cup and maybe a dog," she said in an email to The Huffington Post. "But in reality, most homeless youth are not living directly on the streets. They find temporary shelter, couch surf, rent rooms and generally live in a situation of housing insecurity."

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Based on her experience with the youth, many are kicked out because of their sexual orientation or are trying to escape a "dangerous situation in which the best decision was to leave." Their homeless status also does not mean they’re unemployed, as many people believe.

"They work as hard as any other New Yorker," she said. "They often work twice as hard -- or have to work twice as hard -- to take care of themselves."

The Reciprocity Foundation asked award-winning photographer Alex Fradkin to take the powerful photos. Fradkin established deep relationships with all his subjects. "I met these youth one year ago and plan to photograph them for at least another year, if not longer," he said in an email to The Huffington Post. "The truth is that our relationships are much deeper than photographer-subject. The youth feel like members of my family and community."

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According to the project's website, "See Me: Picturing New York's Homeless Youth" will premiere next month with a full-color book and large-scale exhibition to celebrate the Reciprocity Foundation's 10-year anniversary. Essays will complement the photos to describe the lives of the youth beyond their homelessness. According to Fradkin, learning more about these young people aside from their housing status is the message of the project. A deeper look at their lives reveals that homelessness doesn't define them.

"There is more to a homeless youth than their experience of homelessness. They have talents and dreams -- they are more than their wounds."

See more photos from "See Me: Picturing New York's Homeless Youth" below.

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H/T BuzzFeed

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19 Dramatic Animals Who Think All The World's A Stage

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CURTAINS UP!






1. I'M MORE OF A SOLO PERFORMER.


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2. I'M NOT AVAILABLE FOR AN INTERVIEW AT THE MOMENT


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3. THIS IS YOUR NIGHT. THE NIGHT BELONGS TO YOU.


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4. I'LL TAKE MY STANDING OVATION NOW.


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5. LOOK, 'THE TIMES' SAID I WAS A SMASHING HIT.


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6. DRAW ME LIKE ONE OF YOUR FRENCH GIRLS.


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7. NO COFFEE? UGH DEPRESSO.


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8. EVERYTHING I KNOW I LEARNED FROM TYRA.


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9. HAYYY.


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10. LATER, HATERS.

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11. DANCING IN A TUX IS MY THING. I KILL IT AT WEDDINGS.

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12. THIS IS NO SWEAT FOR A SUPER ATHLETE LIKE ME.


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13. NOTHING IS GOING TO STAND IN MY WAY.


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14. YOU SEE THE STARS IN THESE EYES?


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15. I'M BASICALLY A SHOW-STOPPER.


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16. I'M READY FOR MY CLOSEUP.


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17. TURNT.


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18. #FITNESSGOALS.


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19. CAN I LIVE.


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Student Accused Of Sex Assault By 3 Women Files Lawsuit Against Columbia And Art Professor

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NEW YORK (AP) -- A Columbia University student sued the school Thursday, saying it failed to protect him against harassment when a female student went public with claims he raped her after school and law enforcement authorities rejected her case.

The lawsuit was filed in Manhattan federal court by Paul Nungesser, a German citizen who said onetime friend Emma Sulkowicz has repeatedly and publicly called him a "serial rapist," resulting in national and international media attention.

Defendants include the school, its board of trustees, President Lee C. Bollinger and Professor Jon Kessler. The lawsuit sought unspecified damages.

"Columbia University's effective sponsorship of the gender-based harassment and defamation of Paul resulted in an intimidating, hostile, demeaning ... learning and living environment," the lawsuit said.

Robert Hornsby, a Columbia spokesman, said the school had no comment. Email messages requesting comment from Bollinger and Kessler were not immediately returned. The suit was filed three days after a judge tossed out another gender-based lawsuit brought by a male student against Columbia University.

In his lawsuit, Nungesser said a Columbia-owned website had presented as fact that he sexually assaulted Sulkowicz, a senior majoring in visual arts. It said that the school allowed Sulkowicz to carry a mattress into classes, the library and campus-provided transportation as part of her senior thesis, that Kessler approved the "Mattress Project" for her course credit and that Sulkowicz's pledge to carry her mattress to graduation may prevent Nungesser and his parents, who'd like to fly from Germany, from participating in graduation ceremonies.

"Day-to-day life is unbearably stressful, as Emma and her mattress parade around campus each and every day," the suit said.

As a result of publicity that resulted in media reports in 35 countries, the lawsuit said, Nungesser "has been subjected to severe, pervasive ... and threatening behavior by other Columbia students, believing that Paul is a `serial rapist,' whenever Paul has appeared at university activities."

The complaint also said he wants to stay in the United States, where he has been dating a girlfriend for over a year, and is seeking consulting work in New York, though job prospects have been "severely jeopardized" by the school's support of Sulkowicz.

In an email responding to a request for comment, Sulkowicz wrote: "I think it's ridiculous that Paul would sue not only the school but one of my past professors for allowing me to make an art piece.

"It's ridiculous that he would read it as a `bullying strategy,' especially given his continued public attempts to smear my reputation, when really it's just an artistic expression of the personal trauma I've experienced at Columbia. If artists are not allowed to make art that reflect on our experiences, then how are we to heal?"

Sulkowicz has argued her case was badly mishandled by the school disciplinary panel after she reported in 2013 she was raped in her dorm months before. She was among 23 students who sued Columbia last year, saying it mishandled sexual assault cases. She also attended President Barack Obama's State of the Union address in January at the invitation of Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y.

The Associated Press normally does not identify people claiming they were sexually assaulted, but makes exceptions when the alleged victim has spoken publicly on the subject.

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Associated Press writer Colleen Long contributed to this story.

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Early Fetish Comics Depict Fantasy Land Where Buxom Women Rule (NSFW)

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Warning: The imagery in here gets sexy. Consider yourself warned.



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Red lips. Leather whips. Corsets and garter belts. High heeled boots and very long limbs. Though these erotic accoutrements may manifest themselves, for many of us, primarily in the realm of fantasy, they're all part of the everyday for fetish-happy artist Eric Stanton.

The comic artist and illustrator creates jam-packed NSFW images, where Amazonian babes tower over feeble men, unless, of course, they're being pleasured by them. The erotic visionary, all too overlooked in his time because of his sultry subject matter, is finally getting the attention he deserves. His work will accompany that of similarly lewd mind -- Elmer Batters -- in an exhibition titled "Bizarre Life," presented by Taschen Gallery in Los Angeles.

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Stanton was born in Brooklyn in 1926 to a Russian mother and Italian father. He started drawing at age 12, and became fully immersed over the next five years while bedridden with three consecutive spells of pneumonia. From the start, he had an affinity for the ladies.

"I had nothing to do," Stanton told photographer Eric Kroll, who compiled a book on the artist in 1997. "I grabbed some comic books and did some tracings and things like that. That's how I started to learn and the first time I started drawing sexy girls, heroines, just for fun. I didn't show them to anybody but, even so, my stepfather told my mother: he mustn't be drawing these type of things. My mother said to him: let him draw what he wants."

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After stints serving in the army and working as a waiter, Stanton got a job in the comic business in 1948, working for newspaper strip cartoonist Boody Rogers. Soon after, he garnered a position under Irving Klaw, a New York publisher who focused in drawings of pin-up girls. Not surprisingly, in Klaw's eyes Stanton was a hit.

Klaw encouraged Stanton to toy with bondage and similar taboo indulgences in his work, and as cartoon censorship waned throughout the country, Stanton responded accordingly. His signature subject was the Amazonian woman, a voluptuous dominant figure who effortlessly tamed men into submission. Combining the pulpy eroticism of Tom of Finland with the feminine ideal of Robert Crumb, Stanton created a deliciously naughty cartoon world, where women ruled and men were grateful to be trampled on.

The dominant visualization of desire at the time, the pin-up girl was characterized by her sweet, girl-next-door demeanor and frisky-yet-never-explicit flirtatiousness, Stanton seriously turned up the heat. Sure, both pin-ups and Stanton's BDSM-tinted take on the genre cater toward male fantasy. But the latter imagery got men off by depicting women getting off, which, then, was a step in the right direction. Some see his work as an empowerment of female sexuality, others a caricature of female-domination; whichever side you choose, you must admit, Stanton's women call the shots.

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"I have always loved Amazons," Stanton told Dian Hanson for Taschen's The Dominant Wives and Other Stories. "The word itself is exciting. I've invented variations such as the Tame-azons who tame men. Being short and a little shy as a young man, I loved the idea of big, strong, aggressive women who would use their strength to wrestle me down."

Stanton's deliciously lurid depictions feature men and women scuffling and tussling, dancing and arguing and spanking and whipping and engaging in all kinds of action-packed pursuits. "Bisexuality? Masochism? Sadism? Bondage? Pissing? Name whatever you like, I have done it," Stanton said in an earlier interview. "Because they are all important to my readers."

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They also sometimes feature surprise appearances by Stanon's alter ego Sir D'Astardly, recognizable by his evil-looking goatee. Oftentimes, pain and pleasure are rendered as close kin, as a woman straddles a man's face with her crotch, in what could either be a form of oral sex or a new kind of headlock. The raunchy images prove Robert Crumb's famed words to be true: "The comics are where all the crazy subconscious stuff comes out."

In the 1970s Stanton's work rose in popularity, appearing on X-rated movie posters, stationary, and other commodity goods. His work wasn't fully recognized as "art" until 1984, when the first ever exhibition of his work went on view at New York's Danceteria. The artist passed away in 1999.

Now, in 2014, the influence of Stanton's work is obvious, his imprint visible everywhere from Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs to Madonna's "Human Nature" music video.

There was a time when Stanton's work would never have graced gallery walls. Thankfully, the time is over.

"Bizarre Life –- The Art of Elmer Batters & Eric Stanton" is on view until May 24, 2015, at Taschen Gallery in Los Angeles.






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This Artist Worked With Prisoners To Beautify Life In One Of France's Harshest Prisons

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Artist David Mesguich is deeply proud of his latest work. “It is projects like this which upset the sense of fatality!” he exclaims. His pride stems from the extraordinary nature of his project: instead of a gallery or museum, Mesguich has been working to beautify one of France’s harshest prisons.

Last February, Mesguich worked with prison inmates who were receiving medical and psychological treatment to paint two immense murals against backdrops of gray cement and barbed wire. His goal, he says, was, “to show the prisoners... that beautiful and positive things can still come from inside them.”

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Marseilles’ Baumettes prison is one of the most notorious in France. Earlier this year a scandal erupted when inmates posted images of themselves on Facebook posing with money, drugs and weapons. The proliferation of forbidden goods and weapons among prisoners highlighted Baumettes’ critical shortage of staffers.

In 2012, then-French Prison Inspector General Jean-Marie Delarue denounced Baumettes' prison conditions in a damning report, referring to them as “inhuman” and citing severe overcrowding, vermin infestations, building decay and high rates of violence between inmates.

For Mesguich, working in this prison was a deeply personal project. “I encountered the prison world very early on, due to a rough upbringing,” he says. “As a young boy, I visited a number of prisons, and, as an adolescent, I knew of Baumettes, where my father was incarcerated. So, since childhood, I have reflected on isolation and separation.”

This reflection led him to the idea of a “monumental” project: two murals, each over six-feet high, painted by six prisoners in the complicated conditions that accompany incarceration.

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“It was not simple to put this in place, because the constraints of the prison environment determine the way the work can happen,” Mesguich explained. “For example, I did not have the right to use a ladder to reach the top of the mural when the prisoners and the nurses were with me. And time for work on the mural was limited to two hours for the prisoners. So I came back during off-hours, between noon and two, and continued alone at the site with the ladder. The rest of the time, I waited in a room while the time passed.”

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Working in a prison was a deep calling for Mesguich, who has frequently taken his artwork to the streets. But his work also poses the question of the real benefit this type of project might have for inmates.

Sociologist Jean Bérard, a professor at the University of Montreal, has worked on the history of French prison reform. According to him, “It is difficult to respond on behalf of [the prisoners] about what such an initiative can bring to them. But the limits of such initiatives are known: they involve a minority of prisoners, and cannot radically transform the way an institution of imprisonment operates.”

For Didier Fassin, sociologist and author of The Shadow Of The World: An Anthropology Of The Penal Condition, the initiative is compelling -- although difficult to assess without commentary from the inmates.

“It transforms the prison space, and brightens it, while emphasizing by contrast the ugly and oppressive character of the metal gates, the barbed wire, and the walls,” he says. “This being the case, the question is more general, as is the case with cities. Making murals in a city does not change its reality.”

But what is essential for Mesguich is the fact that “these creations bring humanity to a place where it is lacking.” He did not wish for the inmates to serve as the manpower for the realization of his project. What he wanted was for them to participate at his side in the creation of a shared work. And so the murals bear his signature, but also those of the prisoners who worked on them: Marco, Noël, Momo, Jeoffrey and Michel.

This article was originally posted on HuffPost France and translated into English. It was adapted for an American audience.

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Christopher Walken Sings More Than Ever Before In 'When I Live My Life Over Again'

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We've seen Christopher Walken act in both comedies and dramas, dance on stage and on screen and also request more cowbell. Singing is also nothing new for the 72-year-old Oscar winner, who performed in the 1981 musical film "Pennies From Heaven," the 2007 remake of "Hairspray" and, most recently, as Captain Hook in NBC's "Peter Pan Live!" last December. But now, Walken is singing more than ever before in his latest film "When I Live My Life Over Again."

In the movie, which premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival last week, Walken plays fictional aging crooner Paul Lombard, who's trying to make a comeback. Paul is the type of singer who hit his peak in the '80s and has long since been forgotten -- but his records are still the go-to for a solid make-out sesh. (Paul's daughter Jude (Amber Heard) has an awkward experience with this during a hookup in the film.)

While writer-director Robert Edwards didn't have a specific actor in mind when writing the role, only looking to craft a Frank Sinatra-inspired figure, there's something remarkably Walken-esque about Paul. John DeFore writes in his review of the film for The Hollywood Reporter that Walken was made for this role, and we couldn't agree more.

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Sitting down with Walken and Edwards in the cozy, fire-lit drawing room of Robert De Niro's Greenwich Hotel, the actor told The Huffington Post that he connected with Paul over their mutual love of music and admiration of the the Rat Pack. "I come from a family in show business, I’ve been doing that for a long time, musical theater, live audiences," Walken said. In the film, Paul's nostalgic for the era of Sinatra and Sammy Davis Jr., which Walken could empathize with. "In high school I had those suits with the ties. So the whole retro thing, it was easy."

But what wasn't so easy was singing so much original music in the movie. "I never sang well enough really, I think, to be a professional singer," Walken said. "We’ll see. I always thought I should’ve been able to sing better than I could." After watching Walken as Paul in "When I Live My Life Over Again," it's surprising that the actor had any doubts about his musical ability as he sings the titular song. Something about Walken playing a classic crooner just works. When asked about his iconic dancing (i.e. Fat Boy Slim's "Weapon of Choice"), which doesn't appear in the movie, Walken said in comparison to his singing, "Yeah, I’d be more comfortable [dancing]."



Those who tuned in to NBC's "Peter Pan Live!" will remember watching Walken dance and sing live as Captain Hook. While Walken attributes the "miraculously smooth" broadcast to mere luck (while knocking on the hotel's wood paneling), he admitted how terrifying the whole experience was.

"I knew on December 4 at 8:00 this thing was gonna [happen], but about three days before I woke up and I thought, ‘Wait a minute,’" Walken recalled. "And then I started getting scared, and every day leading up to the day of it, I thought, ‘Ooh.’ It was one of those things that I never realized. Picture it, you have one chance and there’s 40 million people watching. I’ll never do that again."

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This is far from the end of Walken's singing, however. The actor is voicing orangutan King Louie in Jon Favreau's live-action animation hybrid of "The Jungle Book" and Walken revealed that there will indeed be music. Look forward to watching the actor sing King Louie's "I Wanna Be Like You," originally belted out by Louis Prima in the 1967 movie, as well as a song with Bill Murray, who voices Baloo the bear.

But even after over 60 years in the business, Walken still hasn't lost his desire to give audiences a good show. The actor said that all he hopes for with "When I Live My Life Over Again" is that people will genuinely like it. "I hope it’s good," he said. "I just want, when people say you know, ‘I thought it was good,’ I want to believe them."

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8 Artists Who Explore The Beauty Of The Aging Body

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Wrinkles, lines, scars, spots. There are many ways time leaves its mark on the human body. Mainstream culture typically dreads the aging process and all its defining characteristics -- gray hair, sagging skin, translucent complexion. Of course, the transformation is not optional. And it doesn't have to be detrimental either.

Artists obsessed with the human form have long illuminated the nuanced process of growing older, its complex effects on the body and on the soul. The following icons, through painting, drawing and photography, explore the process of aging while challenging the dominant, negative perception of it. From series of confrontational nude self-portraits to a photographic documentation of aging drag queens, the following images capture the many particular joys, pains, fears and thrills of the aging process.

As Betty Friedan famously said: "Aging is not 'lost youth' but a new stage of opportunity and strength." We reached out to a selection of artists who visualize this sentiment better than we ever could. Behold, the words and images of eight artists providing visibility and respect for the aging body.

1. James Hosking

"Aging fascinates me as it something we all face. But, for the most part, society chooses to ignore or obscure truthful representations of aging. With age can come confidence. With my subjects, rather than perceiving imperfections, their age empowers them. It gives them freedom to realize who they want to be."

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Beti Grace in her room at the America Hotel


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Donna backstage at Aunt Charlie's Lounge


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Olivia gets ready to perform at Aunt Charlie's Lounge



2. Joan Semmel

"I painted in layers so that the evidence of age would not be erased by virtuoso paint handling. The sensuality of the flesh permeates these paintings, a sensuality that is not confined to youth. I had entered into a relationship with artist John Hardy, with whom I lived for 21 years before he passed away in 2014. These late years were empowering and rewarding in every sense, something I hoped to communicate through my work.

"The issues of the body from desire to aging, as well as those of identity and cultural imprinting, have been at the core of my concerns. The carnal nature of paint has seemed to me a perfect metaphor, the specifics of image, a necessary elaboration. The last 45 years of work, I think, reveal my ongoing interest in both process and relevance."

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Transitions, 2012, Oil On Canvas. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York


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Recline, 2005, Oil On Canvas. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York


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Skin Patterns, 2013. Oil On Canvas. Courtesy Alexander Gray Associates, New York




3. Mickalene Thomas

"Despite her great beauty, my mother, like most people, struggled many times in her life. Then, she had to learn how to cope with the failure of her own body. Yet, in spite of her illness, my mother was widely adored as a bright, lively and wildly fun character and was my muse throughout my career."

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Sandra: She's a Beauty, 2009, C-Print. Courtesy of Mickalene Thomas and Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


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Madame Mama Bush, 2012, C-Print. Courtesy of Mickalene Thomas and Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.


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Still from Happy Birthday to a Beautiful Woman, 2012, Digital Video. Courtesy of Mickalene Thomas and Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.



4. Marna Clarke

"I didn't realize when I began this project five years ago that I would end up embracing it as a tribute to my life of 70 years, to living long enough to have experienced marriage, motherhood, grand-motherhood, satisfying creative work, deepening love, good friends, a twilight romance. I thought I was simply chronicling my aging. When I began showing the work, it seemed to resonate with all ages. I also shocked some with the sight of naked older bodies. I am obviously comfortable around nudity. I feel it is a natural aspect of life.

"I started with photographing my body ... face, hair, torso, hands, feet. I expanded these to include pictures of my daily life, my partner, my fears and fantasies and dreams."

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5. Andi Schreiber

"When I was in my 30s a friend talked about being in her 'invisible 40s.' At that moment, with two young children very attached to me, I couldn't conceive that anything in my life would change. I felt vibrant and necessary. I'm older now and it shows. My most fertile years are behind me. There's also been a shift in way I think about and carry myself ... This series is an extension of that idea and one that allows me to take stock of where I am right now -- as a parent, a partner and a woman at midlife."

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6. Antonio Finelli

"I am continuously obsessed by the sloughing of the body through time. In fact, I don't like to represent in a drawing the oldness itself but rather the passage of time that ends necessarily in this human state. I am deeply in love with the human body, with the skin -- its most external layer, that absorbs and records all the experiences of our life -- but most of all I am interested in a body's evolution, its transformation, throughout the years. I am intrigued by the signs, lines, points, which enrich our cutis year after year and testify all the changes of our lives."

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7. Isadora Kosofsky

"I am drawn to people who are in emotional conflict with themselves or those around them. The emotions in a story inform the visual interpretation of the subject; all my images are spontaneous, and the composition and makeup of an image reflects the emotion of that specific moment. Photographing the elderly body reveals struggles and desires of a person that have been left unmet. Documenting aging reminds me of documenting adolescence, as both are periods of identity and confusion. Both subject and photographer realize that embracing vulnerability is a means to achieve clarity and purpose."

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8. Sarah R. Bloom

"I have been taking self-portraits as my primary form of artistic expression since 2006 and began shooting in abandoned buildings in 2007, when I was 38 years old. I seek to adapt to my changing body, mindset and circumstances. I see myself as an extension of these abandoned spaces, using them as an echo of the push/pull of our identity as we age. There is light and dark, sadness and beauty, fear and acceptance, a folding into and a pushing out all at once. I work towards reclaiming my place in the world and defining my mid-life as one of transformation rather than crisis."

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