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'Sherlock' Premiere: Holmes And Watson Are Awesomely Reunited

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It's been two years since Holmes fell to his seeming death in the Season 2 finale of "Sherlock." Of course, fans saw him at the end of that episode somehow alive, but John Watson didn't know that. And so he's been grieving all that time. He also found a way to move on by falling in love.

Unfortunately, Sherlock picked the worst time -- and possibly the worst way -- to tell his old friend that he was alive. First of all, he waited two years. Two years during which he knew John was completely wrecked by his "death." Second, he revealed himself moments before Watson was about to propose to his girlfriend.

What he didn't anticipate was John's reaction. Because he doesn't really get people, he simply couldn't fathom that John would be enraged at having been lied to for so long. What followed was a sequence both poignant and hilarious as Sherlock tried to explain himself, and John viciously attacked him over and over again. After each attack, the action picked up at a new restaurant; the group presumably having gotten tossed from the previous one.

“It’s a blend of comedic acting ... A+ directing and cinematography, and deeply emotional character moments," wrote Bustle's Alanna Bennett of the scene. "One should never underestimate the power of Martin Freeman’s face, for the journey it takes throughout this scene — and throughout mere nanoseconds — is truly ridiculous, and truly astounding.”

Season 3 of "Sherlock" continues Sundays at 10 p.m. EST on PBS.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

'The Following' Premiere: Death And Resurrection

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For a moment, "The Following" season premiere picked up events immediately following the double shooting of Ryan and Claire. While both were rushed to the hospital, Claire didn't make it. Jump to a year later and Ryan had fallen off the wagon. Now only five month sober, he's pulled back into the FBI investigation into a new group of killers wearing life-like Joe Carroll masks for the anniversary of Carroll's death. Ryan feigns ignorance, but that's because he's working his own investigation.

He knows there are other cult members out there, and he's not convinced Joe is dead. By the end of the hour, he was proven right -- even if he doesn't know it yet. Going by the name Daryl, Joe is now fully bearded and living with a woman and a young girl in a remote rural setting. The pieces are in place. What kind of game will they play this season?

Sydney Bucksbaum of Zap2It said this premiere felt like a reboot. "With a ton of new characters (hello, Sam Underwood pulling double duty as the world's creepiest set of twins ever), new situations (Ryan Hardy's a vigilante?) and new alliances (Ryan and his niece Max vs. the FBI), Season 2 was officially reset," she wrote. Buddy TV's Eva Des Lauriers noted the changes as well, writing, "It's true that it has deviated a lot from season 1 in style and look, but it is a good change. The writing is better, the acting is better and it still packs a gruesome punch."

"The Following" settles into its regular timeslot on Monday, January 27 at 9 p.m. EST on Fox.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Move Over Tina And Amy: The Stars Of 'Camp Takota' Are Here To Stay

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If Tina Fey and Amy Poehler are Hollywood's current reigning funny female friendship, we think it's safe to say that YouTube stars Hannah Hart, Grace Helbig, and Mamrie Hart are the Internet's heirs apparent.

All three are endlessly hilarious on their individual channels, but together they are an absolute online video tour de force.

Hart, Helbig and Hart teamed up recently to create the feature film called "Camp Takota," a movie about a woman who returns to sleep-away camp and old friends after many years. Unsurprisingly, hilarity and hijinks ensue, and the chemistry between the three is clearly evident from the recently released trailer, which is above.

"We've synched up in more ways than just our periods," Helbig told The Daily Dot about her friendship with Hannah Hart. "We'll pick each other up and find out that we're wearing the same outfits. It's horrible."

Female friendships this strong deserve to be celebrated, and so it's fitting that the film is scheduled for a Valentine's Day release.

Brit Marling Will Help You Read Your Notes During An Interview At Sundance

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It's difficult to explain how stressful it is to cover a film festival without seeming ungrateful. I wouldn't want to be anywhere else right now than at the Sundance Film Festival, so I appreciate how lucky I am to be here. That written, it's not easy. Park City, Utah is a surprisingly spread-out city, and Sundance itself often requires a person to be in two places at the same time, preparing interview questions whenever there's time (which is usually while watching a movie in the dark). That leads us to this interview with Brit Marling, where I couldn't read my own handwriting. Luckily, Marling was kind enough to help.

Marling is at Sundance to support Mike Cahill's sci-fi effort, "I Origins." Michael Pitt and Marling play brilliant scientists who discover a link between the human eye and the possibility to disprove the existence of God. As they dig deeper, their research uncovers more and more spiritual implications.

When I arrived at the interview location off Park City's Main Street, I was told to wait in a couch for further instructions. Without warning, Marling sat down, ready to begin. Marling is about all a person in my position can ask for out of an interview subject: thoughtful and engaged. Eventually, I gave up even trying to read my notes at all, which lead to the kind of loose conversation that's always more fun anyway.

This is the way interviews should be. You're told to sit in a corner and then with no warning, boom...
[Laughs] Somebody drops in your lap!

This movie is fascinating.
Oh, I'm glad. That's a nice thing to hear you say.

What would be a bad thing?
"That movie sucked." You'd never say that probably to anyone.

I just don't say anything.
Right. You'd just be like, "Mm…that was interesting," maybe. I much prefer honesty. But I'm like that with my friends, too. Like I have friends who, if I see something and they're not that moved by it, then it's like, "Hm, okay, good." And you know then when they give you praise that you've really earned it.

Michael Pitt's character is really into eyeballs.
Really into eyeballs.

It's very different than something like "Another Earth," which had this concept, but there's another thing going on while this concept is happening. "I Origins" is very on-target with its concept. Does that make sense?
Totally. "Another Earth" had this a high concept, but then a very micro-drama at the center that was kind of separate in the way they were kind of related to one another. There was so much more inherently wound. Like Michael, his character, Ian Gray, and my character, Karen, are scientists and we are doing the exploration ourselves, and we make the discovery and the discovery about Ian's would be a high-concept idea.

You know what's bad? At a film festival you don't have time to prepare for an interview like you do in a normal life.
Of course, yeah.

So I'm writing down questions while watching another movie in the dark -- my handwriting is awful and now I can't read anything.
Let me try to decipher. [Marling takes my notebook] "Do you get a boycott?" "Boy scout"?

Oh, that says "big budget." Since you seem to only do these interesting movies, I'm wondering if you get offered huge big budget stuff and just turn it down because you only want to do this kind of stuff? Do people come to you with hokey stuff and you're like, "no"?
Yeah. It doesn't mean that I'm not interested in big-budget filmmaking. I mean, I think a movie, whether it's made for $100 million or $10, I'd be down to do it.

There's obviously great big-budget films, but you don't seem to pop up in a throwaway romantic comedy.
No. I mean, if it was a great, new, fresh take on the romantic comedy that was kind of subversive and, you know, two people navigating a love story in a way you've never seen it before -- I'd be totally down because I love comedy as much as I love drama. And I love the silly as much as I love the serious. But it has to be good. I mean, I think that the reason I feel that way is life is really short -- and I don't ever want to find myself on set being like, "Well, I just have to get to the end of the shoot." I can't work that way. I don't know how to work that way. I have to feel a really passionate -- I have to be moved.

So you don't buy into the "one for them, one for me" attitude that some people incorporate?
No. I mean, I wish that I did. In some respects, maybe it would be nice if I did. And also, I have the luxury of not having a family to support; I'm on my own in the world, so I can decide to live in my tiny apartment in the east side of Los Angeles and not worry about putting kids through school or something.

Right. That's where usually the "one for them" comes in, right? "I'm going to do 'Joe Dirt,' or something, and put my kid through school."
Totally. And maybe at some point in my life, I'll be in that position. That's why right now, while I have the freedom to choose and the luxury to choose, I really want to be a part of the stories that I feel matter or are new. And certainly I like to play roles that are not like the ones we often see for women. You know?

Does that bug you? Specifically, what roles do you see for women that you don't like?
I think just the idea that women have to be one of the categories. Have you ever heard of the Bechdel Test?

I'm quite familiar with it.
Okay. I mean, it's kind of shocking ...

It's a little flawed, but it's a good barometer.
It's a good barometer. It's the idea that two women in a film, both have names.

"Gravity" doesn't pass it.
Right. That's right. "Gravity" is a good example of how it's flawed. But it does mean something that usually the women in the film are talking about the male protagonist. Usually, they don't have an identity outside of their own. They're there as foils to reveal things about the men around them. You don't often find them acting with a lot of agency or driving the action in the film. And that's fine.

When you read a script, do you put that test to the script?
Well, I just discovered that test recently, so I haven't. But when I read something, it has to be that she's got to stand strong or be impervious -- women can be vulnerable and weak and all these other things, too. It just -- it's not just men. It's not, like, a woman in there as an afterthought. I think we're starting to see more of that. But there's also ...

Or the Manic Pixie Dream Girl.
Yeah, the Manic Pixie Dream Girl -- shrew, prostitute, mother. You know? And I guess as a woman, you're often looking for ways to navigate the world that feel more, I don't know, better than the ones that are often out there. So I think about that when I take a role. Maybe that's weird.

I don't think that's weird. I think that's good.
Okay. Well, if you think it's good ...

Well, keep in mind, I don't know what I'm talking about.
Yes, you do!

No, I don't.
You totally gave yourself away earlier. You know exactly what you're talking about.

How did I give myself away?
Well, first of all, you're honest. Most people when they sit down are trying to put up a certain show for each other -- a presentation. And you're just like, "I wrote these notes in the dark; can you read them?"

I don't think that's "honest." I think that's called "unprofessional."
That's when you won me over. That's not unprofessional ... like, I'm just fascinated to hear your point of view on things.

That's very kind of you to say.
Isn't that what we're all doing here? Otherwise, we'd be making things in a vacuum, you know? I mean, we make stories to connect. And if you start talking about your mother or your psychotherapist with somebody that you shouldn't, that's on you.

Wait, has that happened to you?
I don't think I'm a cagey person; I think I'm pretty open. But, I think if somebody puts themselves in a situation where they're revealing more than they feel comfortable with because of the public, then that's on them. I mean, the less I know about an actor, the more able I am to surrender to the illusion they're creating. If I don't know where they're from or what their parents did for a living when they were growing up -- the less you know, the better. The more you're able to surrender to the character. So, I do think there's some part of me as an actor that tries to protect some nucleus of who you are to do your job well.

I think we're out of time. Thanks for reading my notes for me.
You should see my handwriting in the dark.

See, like you said, that's too much information. Now if I see you writing in a movie and the penmanship is perfect, I know it's all a lie.
[Laughs] "Oh she's lying!" All right, I won't tell you any more.

Mike Ryan is senior writer for Huffington Post Entertainment. You can contact him directly on Twitter.

One Direction's 'Story of My Life' Infused With Motown Soul (VIDEO)

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Postmodern Jukebox is back with a very special cover of a pop hit that includes the powerhouse singing addition of Miche Braden. The modern song made more vintage this time around? "Story of My Life" by boy-band sensation One Direction!

Watch as the tune gets a masterful infusion of Motown soul mixed with New Orleans-style jazz in the cover above from ScottBradleeLovesYa. It is sure to make your day.

John Lithgow On Being 'So Married' To Alfred Molina In 'Love Is Strange'

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John Lithgow plays a gay man in a 39-year relationship with his life partner and love of his life, played by Alfred Molina, in Ira Sachs' new film, "Love Is Strange." The couple has wonderful friends, a beautiful New York city apartment, and after the first scene of the Sundance Film Festival premiere, a brand-spanking-new marriage certificate. But after Molina's character loses his job at the Catholic school where he works, the pair face a major life change as they have to sell their home. Breaking off and living with close family friends, Lithgow and Molina's characters dip into a new life and love structure that affects everyone in their immediate circle.

The Huffington Post sat down with Lithgow at the Sundance Film Festival to talk about how he's never played a simpler role, exactly what is strange about love and (naturally!) what life is life post-"Dexter."

Highlights from our conversation below.

How did you get cast in this film?
It came to me from my agent and he told me the role, but then told me that Alfred Molina would be playing George. I loved the script and I loved the idea of working with Alfred, who I admire tremendously as an actor. He has also been a friend since the early ‘90s, but we had never acted together. We had mutual friends who had sort of brought us together over the years, so we were pretty good friends -- but now, after this film, we are incredible friends.

It is such an intimate movie. It is quiet in a way that many of Ira Sachs’ films ["Keep the Lights On"] are.
Especially for both Fred and me, who are larger-than-life characters.

Was it easy for you to get into a more quiet space?
Nothing felt hard about this movie. A lot of it had to do with Ira but so much of it had to do with Fred. I guess I was a little bit self-conscious about playing a gay relationship, but only fleetingly. I just knew it was going to be fine and I knew it was going to work well. It came so easily. I’ve been married for 32 years. Fred’s been married for 30 years. For both of us, our main reference point was our marriage.

The opening scene really shows some of the main dynamics between you two.
We are so married in that scene. Just the irritability. Basically saying to each other you are behaving the way you always behave. Well of course I am, it’s me! [laughs]

Do you have a favorite scene from the film? The scene where you two are singing and playing the piano with friends after getting married was my favorite.
That was the very first scene we shot. It was so joyous. I love the scene with Marisa Tomei where I’m getting on her nerves by talking too much. She’s great. She is extremely responsive as an actor. That scene had all the markings of a sitcom scene, all the comic timing. I loved the notion of playing someone who is so loved and at the same time can be so annoying and so self-absorbed. It's like me, to tell you the truth [laughs].

Are you and Alfred similar to your characters in the film?
We both felt our reference point was our marriage, but that was the secondary one. Our primary reference point, for both of us, was really ourselves. When I first met with Ira, I said I was so excited about doing this film because I wouldn’t have to do any acting. And he said what do you mean? It just seemed so simple. Until now, I’d say the simplest role I’ve ever played was Roberta Muldoon in “The World According To Garp.” Roberta was more herself than she’d ever been because of her sex change. She finally felt whole.

The title “Love is Strange” gives us a lot to think about. What do you think is strange about love in this film?
The moment when the title really resonates with me is the final scene where Joey [actor Charlie Tahan] is skateboarding with the girl as the sun is setting. It’s a weird kind of New York day and we see his face, this sort of impassive face. You know what his thoughts are, because in way, we’ve seen the whole movie through his eyes. And you pan over to this girl, whose face is also impassive. And they’re just skateboarding.

Until then, you thought maybe Joey was gay. And his parents were certainly anxious about that. And it’s like love takes so many different forms. The great redemption of the film is that it accepts all those forms of love. Even the prickly and difficult and failing parts of love. And there is this very interesting truth now that young people accept homosexuality far more than older people.

Also, to tell you the truth, that song that you loved at the piano in the beginning, that was originally supposed to be the 1950s R&B song “Love Is Strange.” But we couldn’t get the rights to it. They let us use the title, but not the song. Do you know the song?

[Editor note: Lithgow then proceeds to sing “Love Is Strange,” including the woo-woos]



I hate to put you on the spot, but our readers are such ravenous “Dexter” fans. How is life post-Dexter? Were you happy with how it ended?
Well I‘ve been post-"Dexter" for about three years now. Yeah, regarding it ending, I just felt melancholy for all of them. And I watched it, to be honest, with dwindling interest over time, but watched mainly out of loyalty to all of them. It was a fantastic time that I had on the show. All wonderful people -- Michael [C. Hall], the best of the lot.

Sandusky's Son Hopes To Use 'Happy Valley' Documentary To Empower Abuse Survivors

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STATE COLLEGE, Pa. (AP) — The son of former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky participated in a documentary about his father's sexual-abuse case and hopes to become an advocate for child victims.

Matt Sandusky told the Centre Daily Times (http://goo.gl/YGc0dH) that he took part in "Happy Valley" because he has become strong enough to tell his story and wants to speak out to help other survivors. The 100-minute film, debuting this week at the Sundance Film Festival, explores whether it was an open secret that Sandusky was molesting boys. "For me and all survivors it is important to have control over the timing and setting of (the) disclosure," Matt Sandusky told the newspaper.

Sandusky had been listed as a defense witness at his father's 2012 trial, but he instead disclosed through lawyers that he had also been abused and didn't take the stand. Jerry Sandusky, convicted on 45 counts involving 10 boys, maintains his innocence and is appealing his conviction. He is serving a 30- to 60-year prison term.

Matt Sandusky declined to elaborate on his comments in the film, but he said he discusses his childhood, the abuse and his relationship with family. He is one of six children adopted by Jerry and Dottie Sandusky. He petitioned last year to legally change his name, and that of his wife and four children.

"I hope that people will begin to understand what I have gone through," he told the newspaper. "My role in the film was to share the perspective of a survivor, to give survivors a voice."

An online trailer advertises the film, made by "The Tillman Story" director Amir Bar-Lev, as a "complicated and tragic tale." Matt Sandusky watched the film in a recent private screening.

The film, which debuted Sunday, has a few more Sundance screenings scheduled this week. It's not yet clear if or when it will come to Pennsylvania.

Matt Sandusky praised the victims who went public.

"There were many victims in this case who came forward for the trial. I have immense respect for their strength," he said. "And because of those guys, I had the courage to come forward to the authorities to tell what I had to tell — the truth."

Matt Sandusky said he hopes to start a nonprofit in the State College area to advocate for child sex-abuse victims.

"It is something I am determined to do," he said. "My ultimate hope is to empower other survivors."

Ryan Hemsworth Wary Of Becoming The Millennial 'Weird' Al Yankovic

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One look at Canadian producer Ryan Hemsworth’s Twitter account and it’s clear why he is the DJ to represent the generation known as the Millennials. Listed as one of Rolling Stone’s “50 Things Millennials Know That Gen-Xers Don’t,” Hemsworth is aware that his moody remixes of current hits as well as his nostalgia-clad online presence (his Twitter profile features an animation of him holding the Pokemon character Pikachu) has created a very fine demographic of followers.

“I understand why they’d say that,” Hemsworth says, of his direct association to said generation group. “I think it’s because of the stuff that I reference, the nostalgia; I can’t seem to not bring it up on my Twitter but I’m just being myself and being goofy online and people respond to that on a personal level.”

As much as Hemsworth embraces the Internet and its ability to connect him with thousands of fans in such an immediate environment, he hopes that his cartoonish personality doesn't devolve into parody. He adds, “I’m realizing there's a line and I don't want to become too cheesy.”

Hemsworth, who has been known to project kooky images of classic video games and Internet memes at his live shows, admits that people who attend his show now regularly shower him with gifts such as Pokemon cards which get thrown onstage while he performs. He assures that these items are welcome but the man his label bio notes is sometimes called “The Internet Zack Morris” and “The Remix Ryan Gosling” wants to remind both his supporters and himself that he's serious. “I don't want to be Weird Al Yankovic.”

And of course his musical output is nothing like Weird Al’s, though it may boast just as many cultural references. Last year, Hemsworth put out two releases, his "Still Awake" EP followed by his Last Gang Records debut album, "Guilt Trips."

"I've kind of been put into this DJ work whether I wanted to or not, but I definitely come from a more rock background,” Hemsworth reveals, when asked why an album matters to an Internet-paced producer like him. "I just wanted to show that I am still a part of the world that I wanted to be a part of and hopefully albums still matter, I think they do."

Another aspect of rock that Hemsworth holds on to, though he can't achieve as easily as putting out a full-length, is the idea of a concert or performance rather than a party at a club, his default venue. In fact, Hemsworth admits that the only time he's ever at the club is when he’s performing, but that he craves the intimacy of a smaller gig.

“I did a live stream from my bathtub once and that was the most fun I had,” he admits, adding that his ideal show would involve a certain sense of closeness as well as some candles, perhaps. "Kind of like when Nirvana did their 'MTV Unplugged' session.

“If I could find someway to make that work, that would be ideal. Huge EDM festivals are just so detached, it doesn’t work in that context.”

Ice Cube And Goodyear Blimp Bring Lyrics To Life For A Good Cause

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GARDENA, CALIF. -- Today was a good day for rapper Ice Cube and A Place Called Home, an after-school youth center in South Los Angeles.

Thanks to a savvy Internet fundraising petition to put Ice Cube's name up in lights on the Goodyear Blimp, donors were able to raise $25,000 for APCH in about two weeks.

In doing so, they also were able to pay homage to a famous lyric from Ice Cube's classic 1993 rap song "It Was A Good Day," in which the rapper describes one perfect day in South LA. The lyric in question: “Even saw the lights of the Goodyear Blimp / And it read ‘Ice Cube’s a pimp.’”

Of course, for a charity effort benefitting youth, the Goodyear Blimp message was a little more family-friendly on Monday, when Ice Cube and students from APCH gathered at the Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. Blimp Base in Gardena, Calif., to see the lyric come to life.

“I knew this song had legs when we did it, and it’s actually my most popular song,” Ice Cube said. “I never knew that 20 years later, people would still be this interested in the song and the lyrics, and that the song would do something this special for some good kids.”

Just moments earlier, the blimp had gone up in the air with messages like “Today Is A Good Day” and “Flying For A Good Cause -- A Place Called Home.” Ice Cube beamed widely and waved from the field, as the blimp dipped low for an in-air photo op.






It was an almost-perfect recreation of the song lyrics. Almost.

"Goodyear decided that using the p-word was not necessarily in their best interests,” said Jonathan Zeichner, executive director of APCH, while laughing. “The real message is about how today is a good day, and we’re not going to quibble with that.”

Zeichner was thrilled that six students from APCH were able to meet Ice Cube. The rapper hails from South LA -- formerly "South Central LA," though the name was officially changed in 2003 -- and is regarded as a hometown hero by some.

“This is the message to our kids: Go out there, make a success of yourself, come back and then contribute to the community,” Zeichner told The Huffington Post. "Stay involved, and don’t abandon the community that you came up with."

The plan to make the song become a reality started last summer, when close friends Jon Barco, Andy Dao, Bryan Denman and Michael Lopez, all of whom have backgrounds in advertising and describe themselves as diehard rap aficionados, came up with the idea for a charity campaign. The four were inspired by blogger Donovan Strain's calculation that Ice Cube's famed "Good Day" took place on Jan. 20, 1992.

"Surely, there must be thousands, even millions, of 'It Was a Good Day' enthusiasts out there who would love to see Ice Cube's Goodyear blimp fly the skies for a good cause," the group's Crowdhoster page explains. "So let's pay homage to this song by making January 20, 2014 the best day ever."

The men cast Dao’s friend Joe Schulhoff in a Crowdhoster video, asking donors to give whatever they could to benefit a South LA charity and to give Goodyear a good reason to put Ice Cube's name in lights.

The campaign went live Jan. 6 and quickly gained momentum. Universal Pictures (which is currently promoting Ice Cube's film "Ride Along"), also caught wind of the effort, and the campaign got some air time on NBC's "Late Night With Jimmy Fallon." On the show, Ice Cube personally promised to help the campaign reach the fundraising goal of $25,000. The only thing that needed to fall into place was Goodyear’s participation.

"Goodyear, it's up to you!" said Fallon.

"Do this before we call you Badyear,” Ice Cube said on the show.

Goodyear confirmed soon afterward that the company could get the blimp off the ground for the good cause, and invited Ice Cube down to the blimp base in Gardena to meet some of the children who have benefitted from APCH.

Kamerie Gibson, a 16-year-old student from Dorsey High School in South LA, was one of six APCH students chosen to meet the rapper and ride on the blimp.

Gibson has to take a bus and a train to arrive at APCH every day after school, and has been a part of the community for six years. Thanks to ACPH, she’s been able to take SAT prep classes, get a tutor and visit Washington, D.C. -- things she wouldn't have been able to do otherwise, she said. This year, Gibson plans to become a mentor to an elementary school student at APCH and visit Chicago.

Zeichner said APCH has a waiting list of about 300 young people, but Monday's fundraiser will help enroll more students.

Gibson admitted that before this event, she only knew Ice Cube from his films, not his music. But her father, an Ice Cube fan, gave her a crash course his discography, especially the song “It Was A Good Day.”

“He put me up on game with Ice Cube and his music. He loves rap music,” Gibson said about her father, who wasn’t able to make it to the blimp base Monday because he couldn’t get time off from his work as a gardener and maintenance man.

“It’s old,” Gibson said about the song. “But it represents days that we have in South Central -- every day is tough, but it’s going to be OK.”

Lindsay Lohan At Sundance To Announce New Film, 'Inconceivable'

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PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — With a film crew capturing every moment, Lindsay Lohan made a high-profile debut at the Sundance Film Festival, announcing a new film and a "fresh start."

The 27-year-old, who is attempting a comeback after well-documented battles with drugs and legal troubles, came to the independent cinema showcase Monday to say she will produce and star in a film called "Inconceivable," set to start shooting in March. A crew from OWN, which is airing a reality series about Lohan, filmed the actress's news conference. Reporters were told that if they asked personal questions, they would be escorted out.

Most performers and producers at Sundance have films showing at the festival and don't come just to announce a planned production — those are usually announced through news releases. But producer and financier Randall Emmett, who sat beside Lohan, said Sundance is "just a special place for us to announce this film." He called Lohan "one of the greatest young actresses of her generation."

Lohan, who emerged from her latest rehab stint last year and remains on probation for a necklace theft and for lying to police about a car crash, said she is grateful to be at Sundance and back in the movie business.

"I've never had the honor of coming here before ... to bring something to the table, which is starting fresh for me," said Lohan, smiling broadly. "And I'm filming my Oprah docu-series right now, so I get to that to the people who have been watching that as well.

"It's a nice change to be back among people that are in the industry that I've been in since I was a kid."

She described the film as a psychological thriller about a woman trying to reclaim something she lost, adding that she "related to the character in a lot of ways."

Emmett said Lohan found the script and insisted they make it together.

"She read the script, she called, she said, 'We're making this movie, are you in or out?'" he recalled. "I said, 'I'm in.'"

Lohan will also help select the director and cast the film, he said, adding that he expects a director to be announced next week.

Emmett said moviegoers "are going to really be shocked when they see Lindsay take this role on." Lionsgate will release the film, he said.

Though Lohan served as an executive producer on her universally panned 2013 film "The Canyons," her producing role is even larger this time around.

"It's therapeutic for me to throw myself into something that really excites me and something that I love to do so much," she said. "There's nothing better than having seen all of your ideas and thoughts that you've been thinking about to come to fruition and to share that with people. I think that's why I've always loved making movies so much. So it's nice to be able to have another position in the film rather than just showing up and being on the set."

No director or co-stars have been announced, but Lohan already has plenty of ideas.

"I even approached Juliette Lewis and was emailing some other people," she said.

And she has a dream co-star: "I don't know if she would do it, but I would die if she did: Jessica Lange."

___

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

Sting And Paul Simon Rehearsing For Upcoming Tour

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PASADENA, Calif. (AP) — Sting and Paul Simon are rehearsing for their upcoming tour, a couple of longtime friends and neighbors preparing to take turns singing some of each other's biggest hits.

It was Simon's idea for the tour, hatched when he came downstairs in their New York apartment building to ask if Sting would be interested. Of course, Sting told him, having first heard Simon & Garfunkel when he was a 15-year-old in England. "He's the master," Sting said Monday by satellite from New York. "If I ever wanted to emulate a literary and literate songwriter, then Paul Simon would be the person I would go to."

They have started the process of selecting the set list for the tour, which opens Feb. 8 in Houston. Sting said Simon has asked him to sing "Bridge Over Troubled Water," and Sting asked if they could include "America."

"Paul had a long partnership with Art Garfunkel for many, many years, and it's not my job to impersonate Art," Sting said. "He has one of the most iconic, beautiful voices in the history of rock 'n' roll. But my job is to interpret and honor the notes and the lyrics that have been written, and I will be me. But I'm delighted to sing songs from that canon."

Simon is eager to sing Sting's songs "Fields of Gold" and "Fragile."

"I think the gentler side of my repertoire interests him," Sting told the Television Critics Association while promoting his PBS special, "Sting: The Last Ship," airing Feb. 21 on "Great Performances."

The two men, separated by a 10-year age difference, first sang together at a charity benefit in New York last year. Sting said he was surprised by how well his voice blended with that of the 72-year-old Simon.

"He will pick up something of my energy, and I'll pick up some of his," he said. "Again, it's a learning experience."

At times, they'll blend their respective bands, the specifics of which are still being worked out.

"It may evolve into a big bash, sort of battle of the bands, if you like," Sting said. "With musicians of that caliber, when you stick them on the same stage, they all raise their game, and there's a little bit of competitive spirit, but a great deal of understanding and sensitivity. I think it's going to be fantastic."

Humanities Majors Don't Fare As Badly As Portrayed, New Earnings Report Says

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People who major in the humanities and social sciences don’t earn as much as their classmates in the physical and natural sciences, math, or engineering, but the gap is not as wide as has been portrayed.

That’s the message of a new report from the Association of American Colleges and Universities, which represents liberal-arts colleges and universities, on the eve of the association’s annual conference.

The report, which was also produced by the National Center for Higher Education Management Systems, refutes what it calls “assaults” on the humanities and social sciences, using Census Bureau data to show that the income gap between humanities and social-science graduates and others narrows over their careers.

Humanities majors may earn an average of $5,000 less than professionals and preprofessionals right out of college, it says, but they make an average of $2,000 more by the time they reach their 40s.

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Still, humanities and social-science majors persist at making less over the course of their lives than engineers and people with degrees in the physical and natural sciences and math, the report concedes. They can expect average peak earnings of $66,185, compared to $64,149 for professionals or preprofessionals, $86,550 for workers with degrees in the physical and natural sciences and math, and $97,751 for engineers.

The unemployment rate for humanities and social-science grads is also higher at every age than that of their counterparts in other fields, albeit only four-tenths of a percentage point higher for those in their 40s. And the report says there is an oversupply of humanities graduates with degrees in foreign languages and linguistics, the visual and performing arts, theology, and biological sciences.

The humanities have been fending off attacks from everyone from policymakers to comedians. “What do you say when you find a liberal-arts major on your porch,” goes one old joke. “’How much do I owe you for the pizza?’”

Only eight percent of students now major in humanities disciplines, according to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, down from a peak of more than 17 percent in 1967. Fewer of last year’s freshmen said they went to college “to learn about things that interest me” than to get a better job, UCLA’s Higher Education Research Institute reports. And governors in Florida, Wisconsin, and North Carolina have questioned whether taxpayers should continue to underwrite humanities departments, while some businesses will no longer pay their employees’ tuition for programs that do not provide specific vocational skills.

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About 40 percent of the nation’s 9.6 million humanities bachelor’s degree holders go on to get graduate or professional degrees, increasing their median annual incomes by $19,550—still a smaller premium than is earned by anyone else with graduate degrees, except professionals and preprofessionals—the AAC&U report says.

The top jobs for humanities and social-science majors include teaching, law, social work, sales, marketing, finance, and retail. While 40 percent of humanities and social-sciences graduates work in areas outside their fields of study, they also have disproportionally significant roles in social-services professions such as social work and counseling.

This story was produced by The Hechinger Report, a nonprofit, nonpartisan education-news outlet based at Teachers College, Columbia University.

Bunny Hidden In Mandela Statue Ear Causes Stir In South Africa (PHOTOS)

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JOHANNESBURG (AP) — A new, 9-meter (29.5-foot) sculpture of Nelson Mandela is billed as the biggest statue of the South African leader. It also has a tiny, barely visible quirk: a sculpted rabbit tucked inside one of the bronze ears.

South African officials want the miniature bunny removed from the statue, which was unveiled outside the government complex in Pretoria, the capital, on Dec. 16, a day after Mandela's funeral. The department of arts and culture said it didn't know the two sculptors, Andre Prinsloo and Ruhan Janse van Vuuren, had added a rabbit, said to be a discreet signature on their work. The bronze rabbit, sitting on its haunches with one floppy ear, is about half the height of the ear canal.

"It doesn't belong there," said Mogomotsi Mogodiri, a department spokesman. "The statue represents what everyone in South Africa is proud of."

His department said in a statement that there are discussions on "how best to retain the integrity of the sculpture without causing any damage or disfigurement."

Translation: pull the rabbit out of the ear without botching the statue. The giant work stands with arms outstretched, symbolizing Mandela's devotion to inclusiveness, outside the Union Buildings, where the body of the prisoner who opposed white rule and became South Africa's first black president lay in state after his Dec. 5 death at the age of 95.

Telephone calls and emails sent by The Associated Press to the artists were not immediately returned.

Earlier this week, South Africa's Beeld newspaper quoted the artists as saying they added the rabbit as a "trademark" after officials would not allow them to engrave their signatures on the statue's trousers. They also said the rabbit represented the pressure of finishing the sculpture on time because "haas" — the word for rabbit in the Dutch-based Afrikaans language — also means "haste."

Paul Mashatile, arts and culture minister, said the sculptors have apologized for any offense to those who felt the rabbit was disrespectful toward the legacy of Mandela.

The government had appointed Koketso Growth, a heritage development company, to manage the statue project. CEO Dali Tambo, son of anti-apartheid figure Oliver Tambo, said he was furious when he heard about the rabbit, and said it must go.

"That statue isn't just a statue of a man, it's the statue of a struggle, and one of the most noble in human history," Tambo said. "So it's belittling, in my opinion, if you then take it in a jocular way and start adding rabbits in the ear."

It would be, he said, like depicting U.S. President Barack Obama with a mouse in his nose.

Tambo said the artists, who belong to South Africa's white Afrikaner minority, were selected for their talent but also in part because the project was a multi-racial effort in keeping with Mandela's principle of reconciliation. He said their signatures could be added on the statue in a discreet place, perhaps on Mandela's heel.

Shakira's Self-Titled Album Will Hit Stores On March 25

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Shakira took to her official Facebook page this week to announce her upcoming studio album. The 36-year-old singer took notes from Beyonce, whose fifth album, "Beyonce," hit stores in December of last year. The project is called "Shakira."

Led by the album's debut single "Can't Remember to Forget You" with Rihanna, "Shakira" will hit stores on March 25.

"When the time came to put a name to this album, I realized that it’s not exactly a thematic album, though love is and always has been one of my main subjects and sources for inspiration," Shakira wrote on Facebook about her creative process. "It’s also not necessarily conceptual, as some of my albums have been in the past. In the end, what I realized is that throughout the course of creating this body of work, I learned a lot about myself. Though I didn’t realize it at the time, all the directions I began exploring in the initial phases of recording were helping to pave a path for me of rediscovery."

"In the end I realized that I will always be a little bit of everything and I don’t have to choose," she continued. "I am sometimes extremely sensitive, sometimes upbeat, others dreamy and romantic, and even at times a little melodramatic. (Call it the Caribbean blood.) But always authentic and always sincere. Most importantly, I am enough. Imperfections and all. So what I am offering you now is just that."

"Shakira," she finished in the note. "Nothing more. A little bit of rock, a little bit of folk, a little reggae and naturally some dance -- but as always, and above all, a lot of heart."

"Shakira" will be the singer's first English-language album since 2009's "She Wolf." Shakira released her last album, "Sale el Sol," in 2010.

Head over to Shakira's Facebook page to read the note in its entirety and catch "Shakira" in stores March 25.

Men And Women Get All Freaky Friday With This Virtual Reality Device

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Talk about seeing the world through someone else's eyes.

Virtual reality gaming headset Oculus Rift is being used in Gender Swap, an experiment within the interactive, open-source art project The Machine to be Another. As the video above shows, the experiment allows two participants, one of each gender, to virtually switch bodies and see the world (and themselves) as the other person. The notion is to explore ideas of gender, intimacy and mutual respect, according to the clip's Vimeo description.

(Warning: The clip above contains some nudity, so it may be NSFW.)

The experiment works like this: Male and female participants don the head-mounted displays, which have been fixed with first-person cameras. Then, watching the feed from the other participant's camera, each person performs synchronized movements, effectively feeling their own muscles move while watching from the other participant's perspective. In other words, they see the world from their eyes.

While obviously not a perfect simulation, the consistently synchronic actions maintain the sensation of being in another person's body without being distracted by their movements.

Oculus VR angel investor Marc Andreessen, who is now on the board of directors for the company, has said that Oculus Rift "will redefine fundamental human experiences." The Machine to Be Another experiment seems to be doing just that. Future design plans for the project will benefit participants with disabilities and allow those who use wheelchairs to dance, according to its website.

The Oculus Rift found crowdfunding success on Kickstarter in 2012 and is not yet available to consumers.

Photos Of Animals In The Womb Will Blow Your Mind

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You have to see it to believe it. National Geographic producer Peter Chin has been able to "capture" what he thinks best represents a baby animal in the womb.

But as life-like as these photos look to the human eye, Chin and his crew used small cameras and graphics to create these incredible images of 12 different animals for a documentary called "In The Womb: Animals," according to Viral Nova. While the documentary and images date back to 2006, they've been spotted all over Imgur this week.

The documentary series originally launched with a focus on humans in the womb, calling to mind the classic stunning images by photographer Lennart Nilsson from 1965 and this collection of life in the womb as embryos.

Remarkably, these animal photos still give us a somewhat otherworldly glimpse into what life in the womb truly looks like, as each animal has been captured to represent its true features. From mammals to sea creatures, Chin has been able to make even a scary-looking tiger shark seem breathtaking.

Check out these images for yourself and let us know which ones fascinate or make you cringe the most :


H/T Viral Nova




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Richard Hawkins Tours Bob Mizer And Tom Of Finland Exhibition (NSFW)

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(Note: The video above may contain imagery that is not suitable for work or other sensitive environments)

A historically important queer exhibition is currently running at the Museum of Contemporary Art in West Hollywood featuring the works of Bob Mizer (1922-1992) and Touko Laaksonen, a.k.a. "Tom of Finland" (1920-1991).

Titled "Bob Mizer & Tom of Finland," the exhibition is the first to ever feature the work of the two artists simultaneously. Both artists are crucial to the development of queer art and have radical political significance for the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) movement.

The exhibition features not only Finland's iconic drawings and collages exploring male sexuality, but Mizer's rarely seen photo-collage "catalogue boards" and films.

"One of the most interesting things that came about in researching this show was being able to look at the ways gay artists advocated themselves, presented themselves and went about living their lives fully, erotically and richly in the times preceding Stonewall," artist Richard Hawkins told The Huffington Post in an email. "We, of course, call it 'Pride' now –- but when it comes to understanding Tom of Finland’s and Bob Mizer’s modes of dealing with the world’s oppressions in their own day, you might want to use the word 'shameless.'"

Check out the video above to join Hawkins as he tours the exhibition, and head here for more information about the exhibition itself.

Anne Hathaway Is Under The Impression You Needed A Break From Her, But She's Back With Sundance's 'Song One'

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Anne Hathaway's huge 2012 culminated in 2013, when Hathaway won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for "Les Misérables." Since then, however, Hathaway's public life has remained quiet. Save for a cameo in Joseph Gordon-Levitt's "Don Jon" and an unfortunate meeting with a riptide a few weeks ago, we haven't heard much from Hathaway in the past year. Even Hathaway is under the impression that "people needed a break" from her.

That short hiatus, though, ended at Sundance: Hathaway stars in "Song One," which premiered at the prestigious film festival, a film that finds her playing an anthropologist who has to return home to New York city after her musician brother is injured in a serious car accident. While she's home, a relationship starts between her and another musician, who happens to be her brother's idol. (After "Song One," Hathaway also has a featured role in Christopher Nolan's new film, "Interstellar," which is out in November.)

I met Hathaway and first time director Kate Barker-Froyland here in Park City, Utah to discuss their new Sundance film, which had been five years in the making (the two women met on the set of "The Devil Wears Prada"), and Hathaway's role in "Interstellar." (And, as I found out, it's really hard to ignore the fact that Ted Danson happened to be sitting only a few feet away.)

I've been doing this job long enough that I don't get starstruck, but Sam Malone is sitting right there.

Hathaway: I understand completely. The first few time I met Ted, I couldn't do anything but stare at my shoes [laughs]. Do you need to take a breath?

No, I'm good. Thank you, though. Also, I'm glad you're actually here. I was worried with all of the headlines a couple of weeks ago.

Hathaway: Oh! [Laughs] Thank you. Thank you.

Casting Anne Hathaway seems like a casting coup for your first feature-length film. How did that happen?

Barker-Froyland: Basically, we sent the script to Annie and her husband and they said they wanted to produce it -- that they really connected with the script. And, yeah, I wasn't expecting in anyway that she would be interested in the part. So, I was kind of taken aback. I was really happy. And the part was so perfect for you, I started re-writing with Annie in mind.

Before I saw it, based on the title, I assumed this movie would be a movie where Anne Hathaway is singing a lot again.

Hathaway:That misconception has gotten out there, yeah.

It's certainly not "Les Mis" again.

Hathaway: No, no. And it's a very different film than that, but I don't play a singer or a musician -- I play an anthropologist. So, I don't think it would have felt organic at all if all of a sudden Franny had this secretly honed talent. So, it was fun to get to sing and to find a place in my voice that it sounded like it was untrained and tentative and shy. But, I thought, you know, she comes from a musical family so she probably has a nice voice, but just isn't a singer.

You got to sings songs by the band America.

Hathaway: And I got to sing that lovely, lovely song -- and write a new one, writing new lyrics to The Zombies' song.

If you recorded "Anne Hathaway sings the hits of America," I would buy that album.

Hathaway: [Laughing] Okay. I will keep that in my back pocket.

If things start going bad for you career-wise, you'll have that.

Hathaway: [Laughs] And I will have one listener.

Was doing a small film by design after the big year you had in 2012?

Hathaway: I think there's a common misconception about actors -- that we have a lot more control than we do about when things happen. We met on this in 2011 -- I was working on Batman -- and then we developed this script and the music for two years, then we shot it in June. And we had been planning on shooting in the fall and then Chris Nolan called with an offer for a part in his new movie ...

For "Interstellar"?

Hathaway: Yeah. So, we would either have to wait and push until after that -- which nobody wanted to do -- or move it up and have a truncated pre-production, which is what wound up happening. It didn't have anything to do with Oscars or anything like that, it was always the story that I believed in.

It does seem like nice timing, at least.

Hathaway: Oh, I am not complaining about how it's working out [laughs].

Was this a good experience coming from short films to make a feature length film?

Barker-Froyland: Yeah, it was a great experience. I mean, the whole process took about five years. So, it's a much longer process than any of my short films. I just really love writing and I love directing. I would love to direct something else -- it doesn't have to be my own.

You were very much part of our lives in 2012, but we didn't see you much in 2013. I think people miss you.

Hathaway: My impression is that people needed a break from me [laughs].

I don't know if that's true. Regardless, your cameo in "Don Jon" went over well.

Hathaway: I am so proud of Joey and how well that went. You know, I so believe in him as an artist and I was so thrilled when he called and said, "Hey, want to come work on a day and shoot a romantic comedy with me and Channing Tatum?" That's the best invitation ever. And it's really exciting to get to work with your friends -- because I think you care about things more, you know?

You're going to work with Christopher Nolan again in "Interstellar," and here you're working with a first-time director. How do you choose what directors you like to work with?

Hathaway: Well, Kate and I worked together on "The Devil Wears Prada." I didn't know her very well on that ...

So there was a familiarity.

Hathaway: Yeah. And if you look at it that way, David Frankel is endorsing her, Jonathan Demme is endorsing her -- her work has been viewed by a lot of talented directors who all think she is talented. Yes, she's a first-time director, but she already had a reputation as being someone who was going to be a great director. For me, I was just really psyched that she let my husband and me produce -- we had never produced anything before -- so I kind of learned on her film, you know [laughs]?

After watching the "Interstellar" trailer ... Christopher Nolan sure knows how to build anticipation.

Hathaway: He is really in a class by himself as a filmmaker. And the thing that's so cool about this is that he just got honored at Slamdance. They debuted his first film, which was called "Following," which is fantastic. I don't know, I was just thinking about that -- here he is and his career has gone so spectacularly well. And I was thinking about Kate and all of the tenacity and grit she showed in getting this film made. And it's really inspiring to be here and be around people who are really making it happen for themselves, like Chris once had to.

That's why I like coming, too. But, I am very tired.

Hathaway: I'm so sleepy!

Mike Ryan is senior writer for Huffington Post Entertainment. You can contact him directly on Twitter.

Artist Confronts Fear Of Making Out In Very Unconventional Way

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Photographer Jedediah Johnson is far from the first person to be terrified of making out. The rejection, the tongues, the dental hygiene -- there's a lot to fear! But he's one of the few people who have decided to transform the phobia into a delightful art project. He calls it "The Makeout Project."

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Men and women, young and old, even a baby, all serve as subjects in Johnson's unorthodox photography venture. For each image, Johnson puts his hands around the subject's neck, skillfully rounds first base, and snaps the result. The project, which, in theory, revolves around collecting and cataloguing personal experiences, acts as an evolving record of a human interaction that ranges from thrilling to ordinary, terrifying to comforting.

"The kisses vary in length and intimacy," Johnson writes in a statement. "My subjects are all aware of what I’m going to do ahead of time, but in the moment of the kiss anything can happen. The lipstick mark I leave on my subjects invites viewers to imagine the circumstances surrounding the kiss." Intimate or casual, silly or serious, Johnson's project reveals a kiss is never just a kiss.

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Johnson, who has kissed around 100 people thus far, is also out to change the perception of who we kiss and why. "I'm trying to sort of divorce kissing from an intimate act," he told DNA Info. "The idea that a kiss has to be romantic, I'm sort of trying to question that truth."

Aside from getting a lot of action, Johnson's endeavor has also scored him a museum exhibition at the Art Museo at the InterContinental Chicago O’Hare. The exhibition runs from January 15 until April 15, 2014. Check out Johnson's make-out aftermath below and let us know your thoughts in the comments.

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What's In Store For 2013's Breakout Movie Stars This Year?

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Last year's breakout stars are still reveling in their ascent to fame, but we're more anxious to see what 2014 has in store for them. Margot Robbie wowed us with her sultry "Wolf of Wall Street" performance, Michael B. Jordan charmed us on- and off-screen, and Lupita Nyong'o and Barkhad Abdi waltzed their way to Oscar nominations with debut film roles. Each star has a healthy slate of projects on the horizon, as do the likes of Miles Teller and Dane DeHaan. Here's where to find 2013's breakout film stars in the coming months.

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