Quantcast
Channel: Culture & Arts
Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live

Can You Identify These 98 Foods Cut Into Identical Cubes?

$
0
0
Had M.C. Escher been a foodie, this is something he'd have come up with.

"This" being a photo of 98 different raw foods cut into perfect 2.5 cm cubes by Dutch artists Lernert and Sander. The artists created the OCD-worthy masterpiece for de Volkskrant, a Dutch newspaper, for a spread on food that was published late last year:



Looking to identify each individual food cube? Here's a cheat-sheet, courtesy of the fine folks over on Reddit.

Limited editions of the print can be purchased here, via the artists' website.

H/T Bored Panda

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Stunning Portrait Series Of People With Tattoos Proves 'Beauty Is Not Only Ink Deep'

$
0
0
Tattoos are a part of a person's beauty, and a new photo series proves it.

Photographer Niall Patterson is currently fundraising to publish a book of portraits and narratives from his project "Beauty Is Not Only Ink Deep." Patterson has been photographing people with tattoos and asking them about the meanings behind them, criticisms they've received, and how their ink affects their views on beauty.

beauty is not only

"That you are carrying a piece of art around all the time. Lots of tattoos have a story to them; they make people talk to each other. They create friendships."


"The idea originally came to me when I was deciding to get a tattoo myself and I came across a lot of negative feedback off the web and from my family," Patterson told The Huffington Post. "I set out to do this project to prove to myself and to others that beauty is not only ink deep -- the people that I am working with are beautiful in their own right, tattoos or no tattoos."

beauty is not only
"My tattoos represent the people I love."


Learn more about the project here, and check out more stunning images below.

beauty is not only ink deep
"Beauty is just being who you want to be, no matter what people think."






beauty is not only
"I feel that all of my tattoos represent how I felt at that moment in my life. They make me what I am today."






beauty is only
"The 'you're too pretty to have tattoos' or 'what are you going to do on your wedding day with your tattoos.' I'm going to look awesome as hell, that's what!"






beauty is not only
"Tattoos are a sign of independence, allowing a person to show their own creativeness, passion and personality in the form of artwork."






beauty is not only
"Well overall the world has become more accepting over the last 5 years (hopefully for good!) but there is still some discrimination, this is why I don't have my hands or neck done."






beauty is not only
"I have never experience discrimination, luckily. Many people I know and love think that tattoos are a mistake because one day we come to regret them, but not me. You should never regret any decision you make because everything happens for a reason."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

7 Major 'Game Of Thrones' Theories That Actually Can't Happen On The Show Now

$
0
0
It's tough out there for a "Game of Thrones" fan. Your favorite characters are always dying, your friends keep changing their HBO Go passwords and now the show is deviating from the books more than ever.

tv show gifs
Image: HuffPost/HBO

We're talking Littlefinger is returning to King's Landing, Barristan the Bold has died and, oh yeah, Sansa is marrying Ramsay! May the Seven help us all ...

To top it all off, now George R.R. Martin is saying the show has become so different that shocking twists he has planned for the book just won't be able to happen on HBO.

In honor of all the twists fans of the show will never see, here are seven major theories that likely would only happen in the books:

1. Robb Stark's wife is alive, and she's pregnant.


Image: BlogSpot

Breaking a marriage pact is definitely not the smartest move, but flaunting your new wife in front of the family you disgraced is just straight up dumb. That's why in Martin's novel, A Storm of Swords, the Starks never bring Robb's wife to the Red Wedding. She stays at Riverrun, where the Lannisters and Freys eventually put the castle under siege.

After the castle is surrendered in the book, Jaime Lannister notes that the girl has "narrow hips" and is "not a girl to lose a kingdom for," which is in contrast to an earlier Catelyn Stark chapter:

She was pretty, undeniably, with her chestnut curls and heart-shaped face, and that shy smile. Slender, but with good hips, Catelyn noted. She should have no trouble bearing children at least.

This has led to the belief that Robb's wife may have been switched out before the castle was surrendered and may even be pregnant with the King in the North's heir.

Why it can't happen in the show:
Robb's wife is pretty dead at this point. The character from the books, Jeyne Westerling, was replaced by Talisa Maegyr in the show. In the books, Jeyne is reportedly appearing in the prologue to Martin's The Winds of Winter, but Talisa was murdered in the show at the Red Wedding.

The North remembers ...

2. Tywin was secretly poisoned by Oberyn and was already dying when Tyrion killed him.

tywin
From Reddit to A Forum of Ice and Fire, it's widely accepted that Oberyn had already poisoned Tywin before Tyrion finished the job. A number of clues support this: Oberyn was a poison expert; Martin specifically has Pycelle mention a poison called "Widow's Blood" during Tyrion's trial, which "shuts down a man's bladder and bowels, until he drowns in his own poisons"; and, of course, Tyrion found Tywin on the toilet, where he seems to have been for a while.

Why it can't happen in the show:
Perhaps the strongest piece of evidence that Tywin was poisoned is the disgusting stench his body gives off, which isn't mentioned in the show. His body, for whatever reason, is decaying so poorly and smells so bad that it even makes Tommen cry. The fact that the stench and other gross details were left out of the show makes it appear that this possible storyline was cut.

3. Tyrion's first wife is alive, and he has a daughter.


Image: Tumblr

Tyrion was actually married one time before Sansa, but, in "Game of Thrones" style, it ended tragically. Tywin thought she was a commoner after money, so he had Jaime convince Tyrion that her love wasn't real and then made Tyrion watch as Lannister guards raped her. (Holy crap! Maybe Tyrion should've loaded that crossbow a couple more times.) Her name was Tysha, and as user nekrohsis explains on A Forum of Ice and Fire, we may not have seen the last of her:

There's a theory that the Sailor's Wife, a prostitute in Braavos, is actually Tysha, as evidenced by her trick of wedding the men who bed her, her fluency in the Common Tongue, and her daughter, the golden-haired Lanna (for Lannister?) who is the right age to be Tyrion's daughter.


Why it can't happen in the show:
In the HBO version, Tyrion kills Tywin after he keeps calling Shae a whore, but in the books Tywin is actually calling Tysha a whore. Shae seems to have replaced Tysha in the show as Tyrion's true love. Because of that, it's doubtful she'll be included.

4. The Night's King is secretly helping Bran.

niths
On his journey to the Three-Eyed Crow (or Raven, whichever you prefer), Bran meets someone dressed like a man from the Night's Watch. This dude's hands are black, he wears a scarf to cover his face and he also doesn't breathe. In the books, this guy is known as Coldhands, and a popular theory was that his true identity is Benjen Stark. Unfortunately, Martin seems to have shot that down in an early book draft, so now a leading theory is that Coldhands is actually the Night's King.

Why it can't happen in the show:
Coldhands should've shown up when Bran first started his journey beyond the Wall, so he was clearly cut from the HBO show. Plus, we've already seen the Night's King turning babies into ice people, so this theory is just for the books.

5. Daenerys has a nephew, and he's after the throne.


Image: Tumblr

In A Dance with Dragons, you meet a character named Young Griff, whose secret identity is supposedly Aegon Targaryen, Rhaegar's son. He was one of the kids Oberyn accused the Mountain of killing. The story goes that Varys switched babies before the Mountain got to them and smuggled Aegon out of King's Landing to safety. There are various theories as to if he's a true Targaryen or not.

Why it can't happen in the show:
As Vanity Fair explains, the part of Aegon hasn't been announced for this season, and the show has already gone past the point where the character comes in. It appears Dany may be the last Targaryen after the throne after all.

6. Brienne gets killed by Lady Stoneheart.

brienne
In the books, Brienne discovers Catelyn Stark has become a zombified version of herself after she received the gift of life from Beric Dondarrion. Zombie Catelyn is known as Lady Stoneheart and is hellbent on revenge against those who wronged her family. Brienne's storyline is left on a cliffhanger in A Feast for Crows, and you're led to believe she was hanged by Stoneheart's men for not promising to kill Jaime Lannister.

The theory says she was in fact hanged and possibly brought back to life by Lady Stoneheart in the same way Stoneheart was brought back by Dondarrion. In A Dance with Dragons, Jaime's thoughts on Brienne's appearance supports the theory that she didn't escape the noose:

Gods be good, she looks ten years older than when I saw her last. And what’s happened to her face?


Why it can't happen in the show:
It's already been reported that there aren't official plans to have Lady Stoneheart in the show, so this whole storyline appears to have been cut.

7. Jojen was sacrificed and gets eaten by Bran.


Image: Tumblr

After arriving at the Three-Eyed Crow, Bran is given paste that makes him feel ill at first and looks like blood. It's theorized that this contains Jojen Reed's blood and that he was sacrificed so his greendreams could help enhance Bran's abilities.

In addition to the paste, Jojen, who supposedly knows the day he will die, gets increasingly depressed on the journey; Bran can't find Meera and Jogen after eating the paste; and there are ominous clues leading up to the paste moment, such as this one about Jojen's somber mood:

“I’d hoped that when we found your three-eyed crow … now I wonder why we ever came.”
For me, Bran thought. “His greendreams,” he said. “His greendreams.” Meera’s voice was bitter.


Why it can't happen in the show:
Jojen Reed was killed by a wight in the Season 4 finale, and then he was blown to pieces by a giant fireball for good measure. Also, Bran reportedly won't be appearing in Season 5. Still, Meera should probably sleep with one eye open.

Though they may differ, it's probably best to just accept the show and the books the way they are, or there's always Cersei's strategy ...


Image: PerezHilton

All images HBO unless noted otherwise.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

My Struggle With Binge-Eating Disorder

$
0
0
Binge-eating disorder is characterized in the DSM-5 as "recurring episodes of eating significantly more food in a short period of time than most people would eat under similar circumstances," and it currently affects 1-5 percent of the general population. Sally Slater spoke candidly to The Huffington Post about what it's like to live with binge-eating disorder. Her interview has been edited and condensed for this illustrated story.

The content of this post may be triggering to some readers.



Need help? Call the National Eating Disorder Association hotline at 1-800-931-2237.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Cicely Tyson, Oprah Winfrey Recognize African American Achievements In TV During Paley Center Tribute

$
0
0
The Paley Center for Media hosted a star-studded event Thursday evening celebrating the 35th anniversary of BET's launch, as well as the groundbreaking achievements of African-Americans in television over the years.

The guest list was basically a who's who of black America. Everyone from Oprah Winfrey, Cicely Tyson, Larry Wilmore, Tracee Ellis Ross, Lee Daniels, Kerry Washington, Michael Strahan and Phylicia Rashad. Winfrey kicked off the night with an opening monologue, during which she expressed her gratitude for the evolution of African-Americans contributing to some of today’s most successful shows on television.

“When I was growing up there were so few people of color on television, but when there was one of us we would end up missing it because we would be calling everybody else saying, ‘it’s coming on right now. Turn on 'Ed Sullivan.' It’s coming on,’” she said. “So part of the power of tonight’s event will be to appreciate and to honor our history as we continue to be an interval part of the entertainment industry.”

One of the evening’s many heartfelt moments occurred during Cicely Tyson’s speech in recognition of her illustrious career. The iconic actress went on to recall the time where she received backlash for her 1963 role as secretary Jane Foster on the CBS drama series "East Side/West Side." The breakthrough role -- which featured Tyson wearing a natural hair style -- marked a first for a black actress and sparked a nationwide hair movement.

“This has been a wonderful evening and an emotional evening for me watching the positive strides we’ve taken over the years. We’re not there yet, but we’re going to get there,” Tyson declared. “I have been especially moved by the moments that were a flashback for me… when I first appeared on the air with a natural and received barrels of negative letters that had to do with the fact that I was disgracing the role of the image of black women when I was in a position to glorify it.”

“Well, finally at last I am ecstatic to say that we as a race of people have come to recognize and accept the fact that our pride and glory is our hair... that doesn't mean you can't wear your hair the way you want to.”

Check out photos from the evening below:

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Photography Student Photographs Gorgeous Women Who Aren't Afraid To Take Up Space

$
0
0
divas





"By the time I was five, I was a little diva," glorious queen Stevie Nicks once said. The word diva, according to Merriam-Webster dictionary, is defined as "a famous and successful woman who is very attractive and fashionable." Mix that understanding with Beyoncé's wise words, "a diva is a female version of a hustler," and you have an idea of a diva's power; a confident woman who is not afraid to show it.

Photographer Gabrielle Meit, a student at New York's School of Visual Arts, was inspired by the many divas in her life, even the strangers walking down the street, when brainstorming topics for her photography thesis project. Particularly, she was stirred by stunning, confident women who didn't conform to the body types often propagated as "beautiful" by the mainstream media. Unfortunately, the artistic canon isn't all that more open-minded.

divas

"What inspired me to create this project was the understanding that the people and things that I considered beautiful were not necessarily what the general population considers to be beautiful," Meit explained to The Huffington Post. "Through viewing some works of artists who inspire me I realized that full-figured women were rarely shown at all, especially in a positive light. I immediately wanted to take my camera and shoot these women the way that I see them, as beautiful, inspirational and complex."

Meit's series -- through fierce poses, striking style and bewitching auras that are impossible to look away from -- captures the many shapes of beauty, at least in NYC today. "These are women who understand the complexities of weight, and all that those complexities might bring and yet are confident and comfortable in their skin. They embrace who they are and are not afraid to take up space in a world that has certain beauty standards and set expectations for them."

As performance artist Orlan once told us: "We have all eternity to be skeletal." Behold, the dazzling divas who prove you don't have to render yourself invisible to look damn good.



-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

HuffPost's Here To Make Friends Podcast Does A Deep, Dark Dive Into 'The Bachelorette'

$
0
0
It’s 2015. By now, reality TV is a young adult, but it hasn’t grown out of "The Bachelor" franchise. Despite its bizarre dating rituals, low success rate, and questionable racial and gender politics, the stable of shows is, if anything, more popular than ever.

Do people love "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette," or do they love to hate it? It’s unclear. But here at Here To Make Friends, we both love and love to hate them -- and we love to snarkily dissect each episode in vivid detail. This season of "The Bachelorette" promises plenty to love to hate: In the very first episode, it will pit two women against each other to prove their wifely desirability to a group of bros with bad haircuts who are just there to promote their careers. Female empowerment!

here to make friends

In HuffPost's inaugural Here To Make Friends podcast, hosts Claire Fallon, Culture Writer, and Emma Gray, Senior Women’s Editor, prep for the May 18 premiere of "The Bachelorette," Season 11. Side-eye is cast upon the two-bachelorette ratings ploy ABC tried this season (sorry, Britt and Kaitlyn) and uncouth contestants with impossible professions (what’s an amateur sex coach?)

Plus, former Bachelor contestant Jay Overbye joins the podcast to chat about his experience as one of two bachelors cast in season 6!



You can check out our future episodes of Here To Make Friends and other HuffPost Podcasts on The Huffington Post's Sound Cloud page. Thanks to our producer, Katelyn Bogucki, our editor Jorge Corona, and our guest Jay Overbye.

Also, check out the HuffPost Here To Make Friends podcast on iTunes and make sure to rate and review the show, too.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Here's What Happens When You Give Florists Thousands Of Flowers And 48 Hours In An Abandoned House

$
0
0
tulips hangng





Late one evening this month, a woman appeared in the second-story window of an abandoned house overlooking a Detroit freeway. A spotlight illuminated her face as she flung handfuls of white petals down to the crowd gathered outside a venue that felt more like the setting of a dark fairytale than a fundraiser.

Branches of bright yellow forsythia hung over the doorways, catching visitors’ hair as they walked through the home, now owned by florist Lisa Waud. Grape hyacinths sprouted up through the floorboards that a month ago had been hidden by several feet of debris, left behind by from the house's former owners. White flowers sat in the crumbling toilet. Moss oozed out of the corners. Foliage pushed through one wall’s wooden slats, exposed by the worn-down plaster.

vert front side of room


This was Waud’s trial run for the “Flower House,” an exhibition planned for October in which florists from around the country will fill 15 rooms of a vacant house with natural installations.



Last year, Waud bought two neighboring deserted homes in Hamtramck, a small city within Detroit’s borders, from a foreclosed property auction for a total of $500. One of the homes will be transformed for the forthcoming exhibition. The May 1 preview took place in the former storefront on the first floor of the other house, where televisions were repaired decades ago, a neighbor told Waud.










This month’s smaller installation promoted Waud’s crowdfunding campaign to raise $50,000 -- about a quarter of which Waud said she will use to commission a mural from local artist Louise Chen, known as Ouizi, and secure the Flower House ahead of this fall event. The rest would go toward deconstructing the homes after the exhibition, clearing the land and paying Indiegogo fees.

The preview show also gave florists the chance to test out ideas for the immersive exhibition, which allows them to experiment beyond the confines of their professional work and clients’ requests.



person exploring house


“It was the best week of my creative life,” Waud, who owns floral studio Pot & Box, said about the opening and preparation. “Don’t tell any of my brides, but I think when there’s a budget challenge, when there’s any kind of challenge, that’s when true creativity steps up.”




flower wall


It took the florists 48 hours and about 4,000 flowers to create the installation. They expect to use between 60,000 and 100,000 stems for the upcoming exhibition.










Waud originally planned to fundraise for the flowers themselves. But as flower farms across America got wind of her project, more and more sent donations through the wholesalers she uses. The blooms for October's installation will also be donated.

“It was a pretty joyful thing, as these trucks kept pulling up," she said.

Some of the plants, however, were grown closer to home -- the forsythia, for example, was harvested from a nearby freeway median.











The Flower House team received everything on their wish list of 32 seasonal flowers, from popcorn viburnum to dog eye euphorbia. Much of what they asked for was greenery, which evoked an untamed forest despite the obvious human touch.

“My style, and the style of the florists I roll with, is this wild, natural style,” Waud said. “I think that’s what was reflected [with the foliage], looking like it was kind of overtaking this house.”

flowers vert


For October’s exhibition, each florist will design a room and order specific flowers in advance. In contrast, for the preview, Waud and 13 of the partnering florists worked collaboratively and used whatever was donated.











“At first I wanted it to be very contemporary ... but when you invite other people into your project it’s not just you,” Waud said. While she had pictured a minimal approach, she said others ended up incorporating more from the house, hauling up furniture from the basement.

“I was very thankful I wasn’t stuck in my vision,” Waud added.



vert scene of desk


Waud’s plan for the Flower House began without a location or much else beyond a mental picture of flowers covering every surface of an environment and a feeling she wanted to evoke in visitors, one of awe.

The project has since evolved to include an emphasis on sustainability and a long-term plan for the properties, just two of the thousands of vacant buildings within Detroit's borders.










Waud will partner with nonprofit Reclaim Detroit to deconstruct the homes after the exhibition. Unlike demolition, deconstructing salvages the majority of materials rather than throwing them away.

Her campaign, which lasts through mid-June, has raised $6,000 so far. Waud acknowledged that $50,000 is an ambitious goal, but said she plans to continue the project if she does not reach it.



flower mountain


After deconstruction, she intends to return the properties to productive use, cultivating a farm to grow flowers for Pot & Box. The wilted clippings from the installation will become mulch, and the ones from the recent preview are already composting in preparation.











“I really do feel like it’s become a very Detroit story,” Waud said about the sense of responsibility and aim to improve the community that have grown along with her project. “I don’t know that this Flower House could have happened anywhere else.”







people at hous

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


TV Network Under Fire After Omitting Breastfeeding Scene From Broadcast

$
0
0
Many fans of the Starz series "Outlander" were up in arms this past Sunday night when Showcase, the television network that broadcasts the show in Canada, aired a censored version of the newest episode. Specifically, they were upset to see that the network cut a scene that shows Jenny, a character who had recently given birth, express milk from her engorged breasts.

"Outlander" is a time-travel drama set primarily in 18th century Scotland and in the past has featured a fair share of nudity and violence, including rape and murder. Some Twitter users pointed out the double standard in censoring a breastfeeding-related scene while keeping the moments that show breasts portrayed in a sexual way.










Actress Laura Donnelly, who plays Jenny on the show, expressed her excitement about the scene in an interview with Vulture last month. "We're very used to seeing breasts displayed sexually on-screen, and I thought this was an opportunity to show breasts for what they're really there for, in a completely nonsexual manner, that really turns the tables," she said, adding, "It's an absolute necessity at that point for her, and she doesn't think twice about it. It's not something that should be hidden away in any sense, and it's certainly nothing to be ashamed of."

In a statement to The Huffington Post, Christine Shipton, Senior VP and Chief Creative Officer of Showcase's parent company Shaw Media, said that the scene's omission was not intentional. "Showcase is the proud home of 'Outlander' in Canada. As with all of our previous Sunday night airings, it was our intention last night to air the newest episode of 'Outlander' uncut. However, as a result of an error, an edited version of the episode 'The Search' was broadcast in its place," she wrote, adding that Showcase would re-broadcast the uncut version of the episode on Sunday, May 24 at night and during the daytime slot on May 17 ("edited for daytime appropriate language only").

The network posted a similarly worded apology on Facebook, but many fans remained displeased. "I call B.S." Stacey King commented. "Why was there an edited version at all?" Maryann DiMarco-Rhodes asked.

Whether or not it was truly an error, this incident has sparked conversation about the portrayal of nursing in media and how that reflects current attitudes about breastfeeding, particularly in public. And if there's one takeaway, it's that mothers will advocate for their right to feed their children and normalize the sight of breastfeeding in today's society.

H/T The Stir



Like Us On Facebook |
Follow Us On Twitter |
Contact HuffPost Parents

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Pulitzer Prize-Winning Poet Franz Wright Dead At 62

$
0
0
Franz Wright, the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, died at 62 years old on Thursday at his home in Waltham, Massachusetts. His publishing house Alfred A. Knopf confirmed the news.





"Franz gave us so much," Deborah Garrison, his longtime editor at Knopf, said in an email to The Huffington Post. "He lived for poetry and was a riveting voice -- I think the most irreverent believer we ever met on the page. And then the most reverent unbeliever, too, as he surveyed the gifts that life gave even those who are brought low. He wrote fearlessly about mental illness, addiction, and loneliness, but at the same time celebrated the small beauties around him and the larger beauty of language, which truly kept him alive. And so witty! Only Franz could have written 'The only animal that commits suicide / went for a walk in the park...' ! Just to mention one of my favorite examples ('The Only Animal.')"

" ... He managed to write poems in which the choice to live feels continually renewed, not just an urgent daily requirement for the poet but a call to arms that includes every single reader," Garrison added in a statement on Knopf's blog.

Wright, whose father was another Pulitzer Prize-winning poet, James Wright, was born in Vienna, Austria and is best-known for his 2003 collection, "Walking To Martha's Vineyard," which won the Pulitzer. Other works include "Wheeling Motel" (2009), "Earlier Poems" (2007), "The Beforelife" (2001), "Kindertotenwald" (2011) and "F" (2013).

He often wrote about isolation, illness and gratitude, and in a Q&A contest arranged by his publishing house, Wright spoke of his perspective. "Of course I would like to believe myself a person of hope, and yet it seems to me that hope and despair are two of the illusory polarities (which include life and death)," he said. "One cannot exist without the other, for one thing -- and for another, and speaking here strictly for myself, the spiritual condition of hope derives from the obvious hopelessness of every mortal's physical condition, the death sentence we are all living under."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

The Ancient Wonders Of Palmyra Are At Risk Of Destruction By ISIS

$
0
0
Islamic State fighters on Thursday reached the outskirts of the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra, one of the most important cultural heritage sites in the Middle East.

"If I.S. enters Palmyra, it will spell its destruction," Syria's director of antiquities, Maamoun Abdulkarim, told Agence France-Presse. "If the ancient city falls, it will be an international catastrophe."

Palmyra lies at the crossroads of several ancient empires, and is packed with the ruins of 1st and 2nd century temples and monuments that reflect Islamic, Greco-Roman and Persian history. UNESCO says the World Heritage site is "one of the most important cultural centers of the ancient world."

Fighters of the Islamic State, also known as ISIS, are battling government forces for control of the city as they advance west in Syria, amid a parallel offensive in Iraq.

Palmyra's antiquities have already been damaged by fighters on all sides of Syria's four-year civil war, an anti-government activist told The New York Times. Residents now fear the extremists will raze the ancient city if they manage to capture the site.

The militant group has already destroyed a string of cultural heritage sites in Iraq that fell under its control, including Hatra, Nimrud and several ancient sites in Mosul.

The extremists have released videos of fighters smashing, shooting and bombing precious monuments in Iraq, claiming to destroy idolatrous figures in the name of religion. However, Iraqi officials say that behind the propaganda, the group is also selling off artifacts to fund its wars in Iraq and Syria.

palmyra syria
A view of the ancient oasis city of Palmyra, March 14, 2014.


palmyra syria
Syrians walk in the ancient oasis city of Palmyra, March 14, 2014.


palmyra
The ancient oasis city of Palmyra, March 14, 2014.


palmyra syria
A view of the ancient oasis city of Palmyra, March 14, 2014.


palmyra syria
Sculpture depicting a princess from the ancient Syrian city of Palmyra at the city's museum, March 14, 2014.


palmyra syria
The Tetrapylon (Monumental Entrance) in Palmyra, March 14, 2014.


palmyra syria
The ancient theater in Palmyra, March 14, 2014.


palmyra syria
The sanctuary of Baal in Palmyra, March 14, 2014.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Mimi O'Donnell, Philip Seymour Hoffman's Longtime Partner, Speaks Out About His Death

$
0
0
Philip Seymour Hoffman died 15 months ago at 46 years old of acute mixed drug intoxication, and his life partner, Mimi O'Donnell, with whom he had three children, never spoke publicly about the incident. Now, in an interview with the New York Times, she discusses what her family's life has been like since the actor's death.

“There are so many people who have written beautiful books about grief, who have been able to say it much better than I, but I guess I would say that, after a year has passed, I’m able to function, if that’s the right word, or be in the world a little bit differently,” O'Donnell told the Times.

Hoffman and O'Donnell met in 1999 when they were both working on the set of the play "In Arabia We'd All Be Kings," and she has continued to work in the theater world. She's now serving as the artistic director at the Labyrinth Theater Company, and is the director of its new production, "Nice Girl." She was named the beneficiary of Hoffman's estate after his death.

O'Donnell told the Times that a return to the theater helped her grieve because, "It makes you remember there are other emotions," she said. When talking about the children she shared with Hoffman, she said, "I was pretty stubborn in my falling apart. And my kids saw all of it, because they should. What, am I going to hide it from them? I don’t want them to hide it from me."

For more, head to the New York Times.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Howard Fineman Shares His Formula For A Perfect Commencement Speech

$
0
0
After years of lectures and late night cram sessions you've finally made it to graduation. But before crossing the stage, diploma in hand, and embarking on the next step in your journey, you have one more rite of passage to experience -- the commencement speech.

HuffPost Global Editorial Director Howard Fineman, who has given a few commencement speeches over the years, joined HuffPost Live on Wednesday to share his wisdom about how to craft the perfect grad speech.

"First of all, you have to realize that the kids are hammered. So they really don't care what you're saying particularly," he said. "But if you're going to try to reach them at all, keep it very simple and very direct."

Staying honest and true to yourself is also key, Fineman said.

"Don't try to impress them by being too cool. Don't do the selfie thing. Don't take a picture of yourself with the kids in the background," Fineman explained. "Don't mention hip hop artists. Don't do any of that because they will roll their eyes and think even less of you than they already do."

Humility can go a long way in commencement speeches, Fineman added. Instead of looking at the speech as another lesson, keep in mind that the students are just ready to kick back and let it all sink in.

"They've just had four years of lectures. The last thing they want to think about, really, at that moment, is the rest of their lives," he said. "For most of them they're thinking, 'Wow, I've gotten through this thing. Let me just relax here for a minute and take a deep breath before I move on.' I think you have to be on their side."

Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Howard Fineman here.

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

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

'The Mindy Project' Officially Finds A Home At Hulu

$
0
0
Hulu has officially picked up "The Mindy Project" for a 26-episode fourth season. It will join Hulu's Original Programming slate, the streaming service announced on Friday. The news comes a week after Fox dropped the show from its fall lineup, fueling rumors that Hulu would save the show.

“'Mindy' has been a beloved member of the Hulu family, so this deal is a natural extension of our relationship,” said Craig Erwich, senior vice president and head of content at Hulu, in a statement. “With so many of her fans already catching up and tuning in to the series on Hulu, we know her millions of fans will be eager to find out what Mindy has in store for the next chapter.”

“I am thrilled 'The Mindy Project' has found a new home on Hulu, where so many of our fans are already watching the show. It's such an exciting place to be,” said Mindy Kaling.




"We are proud of the fresh, hilarious, smart storytelling on 'The Mindy Project,'" said Universal Television’s Bela Bajaria. "Mindy, along with the writers and actors, surprise us every week. They have made us laugh (a lot), cry and think. We are excited about our partnership with Hulu and look forward to sharing our amazing comedy with the show’s many loyal fans for seasons to come.”

A premiere date has yet to be announced.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Purdue Takes A Stand For Free Speech, No Matter How Offensive Or Unwise

$
0
0
Purdue University has become the first public institution of higher education to adopt a free speech policy called the "Chicago principles," condemning the suppression of views no matter how "offensive, unwise, immoral, or wrong-headed" they may be.

The board of trustees passed a measure endorsing those principles on Friday. Purdue President Mitch Daniels plans to address some of the same points in his remarks at the Indiana university's commencement ceremony this weekend.

The Chicago principles were crafted and approved at the University of Chicago in January and has since been adopted by the faculty at Princeton University.

The free speech principles caught Daniel's eye when they were first released, he told The Huffington Post, and he saw the potential for them to spread to other campuses. He called officials at Chicago to ask permission to copy their statement.

"We didn't see how we could improve on the language," Daniels said. "That captures what we think is right here."

The Committee on Freedom of Expression, a faculty group at the University of Chicago, was organized in July 2014 following what the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE) dubbed "disinvitation season" that spring, when student activists across the country attempted to block or un-invite controversial commencement speakers.

Then in November, students at the University of California, Berkeley, attempted to block Bill Maher from speaking at their winter commencement over his past comments about Muslims. Such an irony, the TV host couldn't help but note. Exactly 50 years earlier, Berkeley had been the home of the Free Speech Movement.

The Purdue policy states, "It is for the individual members of the University community, not for the University as an institution, to make those judgments for themselves, and to act on those judgments not by seeking to suppress speech, but by openly and vigorously contesting the ideas that they oppose." Nearly identical language appears in the Chicago version.

"We looked at it, our trustees looked at it. We said, you know, this says exactly what needs to be said. We're going to protect all kinds of speech, including the kind we think is ridiculous and completely wrong, and we're going to insist everybody else respect -- at least on our campus -- people's right to be heard," Daniels said.

Asked how he would respond if students attempted to un-invite a speaker at Purdue, Daniels answered, "I would politely tell them, 'Thank you for your advice, but no, we're not that kind of place.'"

University of Chicago law professor Geoffrey R. Stone, who chaired the free speech committee, said there was "consensus pretty much from the beginning on the basic principles" of the statement. Stone is excited to see other schools adopting the same ideas, especially in light of recent speech debates on campus.

"My own personal view is that the level of intolerance for controversial views on college campuses is much greater than at any time in my memory and that it is most unfortunate," Stone said. "College is a time to learn to deal with challenging, unsettling, and even offensive and hateful ideas. In the real world, we are inevitably confronted with these ideas, and college should prepare our graduates to know how to respond to such ideas courageously, effectively and persuasively."

Greg Lukianoff, president of FIRE, said that much of his career has been spent defending free speech against higher education administrators. But over the last two-and-a-half years, he said, "the language policing" started coming more from the students.

"It's really distressing to me and disappointing to me because I enjoy defending students," Lukianoff said.

He can't say what caused the change and hesitates to attribute it to social media, but he did concede the Internet has made it easier for students to interact only within "echo chambers" where they feel comfortable.

"You end up having people who are less prepared to deal with general, fundamental debate," Lukianoff said. Moreover, he expects to see battles over expression "get worse because so many other things are getting better," freeing people to give speech issues more prominence.

Purdue also plans to overhaul particular policies flagged by FIRE as potentially violating the First Amendment.

Both the Chicago and Purdue statements instruct community members to "not obstruct or otherwise interfere" with an opponent's speech, but leave open the possibility for the university to restrict defamation, genuine threats, harassment that "unjustifiably invades" privacy or "expression that violates the law."

"As we've said before, a university violates its special mission if it fails to protect free and open debate," Purdue trustees chair Thomas Spurgeon said in a statement. "No one can expect his views to be free from vigorous challenge, but all must feel completely safe in speaking out."

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.


Entire First-Year MFA Class Drops Out in Protest at the University of Southern California

$
0
0
LOS ANGELES — Citing “the University’s unethical treatment of its students,” the entire class of first year MFA students at USC’s Roski School of Art has decided to leave the school, according to a statement they released today. The seven students listed a number of grievances leading to their decision, beginning with a significant decrease to the generous tuition subsidization that they had expected before their acceptance to the program. They also criticized the school’s administration that “did not value the Program’s faculty structure, pedagogy or standing in the arts community.” As a result, they say, the Program Director left in December 2014, followed by the resignation of tenured professor Frances Stark.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

How Amateur Musicians Are Shaking Up New York's Classical Music Scene

$
0
0
The Park Avenue Chamber Symphony (PACS) has performed at Lincoln Center and Carnegie Hall, toured China, and is a three-time winner of the American Prize Competition in Orchestral Performance -- but the orchestra members are not professional musicians.

PACS, based in New York City, is technically an amateur group, but its performances are of professional quality. The musicians are not paid to be in PACS and many are successful professionals in law, medicine and finance. The group is one of many non-professional orchestras in New York, including the Brooklyn Symphony Orchestra, New York Repertory Orchestra, New York Late-Starters String Orchestra and the 75-year-old Doctors Orchestral Society of New York.

orch

"Just because you're not making a living in music now doesn't mean that your performance level is not good or that you're not creating performances of very high artistic merit," music director David Bernard told The Huffington Post.

Bernard began the orchestra 15 years ago, observing that there was a thriving amateur musician scene in New York City. Other amateur groups can be more casual, centered around community -- "people are looking for different things, and they're all valid," Bernard said -- but Bernard wanted to build one for musicians dedicated to high musical quality.

"It's much more satisfying for me that we can really put together the quality that we've been able to produce," said concertmaster David Edelson, who has been in the orchestra for about 10 years.

orch2

When he's not playing the violin, Edelson is an internal medicine doctor at a private practice he runs in Great Neck, New York. He had previously played music at a professional level and said he missed that caliber.

"This became my home because of the level of commitment and the level of seriousness of the players," Edelson said.

Musicians have to audition to be accepted into PACS, but Edelson says he wanted to be sure of the quality of the orchestra before trying out. He listened to their recordings to see if they were up to his standards. It's this kind of dedication to excellence which makes the orchestra function so highly.

"[Orchestra members are] very motivated, very accomplished people who are masters at achieving multiple priorities, are masters at focus and dedication," Bernard said. "They apply that to all parts of their lives."

rehearsal

PACS is performing their final concert for the season this weekend at All Saint Church in New York, New York. They will be playing an impressive lineup: a Schumann symphony, Bach concerto with soloist Yevgeny Kutik, and the dazzling "Symphonic Metamorphosis on Themes of Carl Maria von Weber" by Hindemith.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Bryan Fox's Dark Photographs Conjure Images Of Pain In Los Angeles

$
0
0
rain



Iowa-born and Pennsylvania-raised Bryan Fox identifies himself as a "quintessential hyphenate." Already a writer and director, the multidisciplinary creative recently delved into the world of photography as well. His first exhibition, entitled "WE. ALONE." took over downtown Los Angeles' Think Tank Gallery last week, allowing viewers to contemplate what brings us together as human beings, no matter how dark the answers may be.

cocktail
Cocktail Party


"Every piece in the show is incremental to the story," Fox explained to The Huffington Post. "It's about acknowledging that we all have pain and we must accept our flaws. It's about the darkness that we possess as we go through life. We all have something difficult and tough that is ours and ours alone. No matter who you are. That is a universal truth."

Fox's photographs capture everything from an alienated guest at a cocktail party to a Laura Palmer-esque frozen corpse to a man walking alone through the eerily empty streets of Times Square. "But the show ends with a series of bathtub and shower photographs that to me represent a sort of cleansing. It is a testament to the human spirit that we survive and work through it to have catharsis."

blue
Blue Series Eyes Closed


"The inspiration for the night was to make an introduction for myself to show what I can do as a photographer and an artist," Fox continued. "I tried to create a whole experience utilizing a special location in the Garment District downtown where you found a neon sign placed in hedges blocking an alleyway. Once you found it, you followed a trail of candles to a freight elevator to go up and into the space. Discovering the gallery and the art and the aesthetic of the different rooms made the guests feel something special."

Fox's debut photographs were only on view for guests who visited the pop-up space on May 9. For any *NSYNC fans reading, the gallery specified that "JC Chasez was heard debating which cityscape photo to buy!" Next year, Justin Timberlake.





-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Bathroom Graffiti Study Suggests Men Really Like 'Your Mom' Jokes

$
0
0
Academic studies can be fascinating... and totally confusing. So we decided to strip away all of the scientific jargon and break them down for you.

The Background
Bathroom stalls are one of the few corners of the IRL world where people can scribble out their unfiltered, anonymous thoughts with no expectation of repercussions or judgement. And since restroom patrons have traditionally been divided according to gender, they provide unique testing zones to see how men and women communicate when granted the rare privacy of a public bathroom stall. If these are spaces where people can express their controversial or socially unacceptable feelings, will there be a discernible difference between the secret thoughts roaming in the minds of men and women? Thanks to research on the topic dating all the way back to Alfred Kinsey's seminal 1953 study, Pamela Leong, a researcher at Salem State University, had a hunch that the sexes would approach their respective bathroom graffiti pretty differently.

The Setup
For her study, Leong photographed the graffiti in 10 single-sex bathrooms at Salem State University in Salem, Massachusetts. After gathering a total of 202 graffiti samples, she analyzed the content and identified trends.

The Findings
Bathroom graffiti in men's restrooms was "impersonal, vulgar, competitive and aggressive," according to Leung, as well as more sexually explicit (think: crude sketches of breasts and genitalia). The largest chunk of men's graffiti comprised of insults, sometimes expressed by disparaging a previous graffiti artist's female loved one. In fact, one drawing of a vagina elicited replies ranging from responders claiming to have had sex with the artist's girlfriend to "Well it is your mom's pu**y." As Leong put it, in this context: "Masculinity, then, comes at the expense of women's reputations."

Women's bathroom graffiti, on the other hand, was predominately supportive and philosophical, focusing on love, art, menstruation, religion and politics. Sexual themes were nearly absent. Here's a sampling of women's replies to graffiti: "AMEN"; "Thank you"; "Keep preaching sister!!!"; "It will be [better]. I promise. Don't ever give up." In contrast, when a person in the men's bathroom wrote that he was gay and autistic, the reply he got was "FYAD," short for "fuck you and die." Oy vey.

The Takeaway
Just like the Internet has taught us, it's easy to be a big, strong anonymous man, even while defecating. Let's hear a round of golf claps for the male poets of America's restrooms, shall we?

graffit

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

'When They Were Kids' Cartoons Perfectly Depict Rihanna And Other Fashion Icons As Children

$
0
0
It looks like Rihanna was always a "bad gal."

rihanna

Fashion Cartoonist, an anonymous doodler who has been featured in the trade publication Business of Fashion as part of its Fashion Funnies section, has released a new set of adorable cartoons.

The images, which depict fashion icons and celebrities as "children," are a welcome light-hearted contribution to an industry that has the tendency to take itself pretty seriously. The cartoonist, who chooses to stay anonymous, explained in an e-mail to The Huffington Post:

"My blog is, in its own way, a tribute to the extraordinary personalities that populate the fashion world. I believe that, while fashion is definitely a very important and serious business, sometimes we take it too seriously. My cartoons put fun, irony and humor back into it!"


Fashion Cartoonist posts standalone images like the one of Rihanna, as well as nods to happenings in pop culture. Elton John's feud with Dolce & Gabbana got the cartoon treatment, as well as Pharrell and Robin Thicke's legal troubles. Even Iris Apfel is included, just off the heels of the release of her documentary.

Preach. To see more from Fashion Cartoonist, head to the blog and Instagram.

iris

elton

pharrell robin thicke

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

Viewing all 18505 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images