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Nick Lowe's 'Quality Street' Finds Rocker Crafting Holiday Album Filled With New Tunes

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NEW YORK (AP) — Nick Lowe wasn't exactly filled with the Christmas spirit when his American record company suggested he make his first holiday album.

He's no Scrooge. But for musicians in his native England, holiday albums aren't the coolest thing to do. A song or two is nice, but an entire album? It has the faint whiff of desperation. "Over the course of the afternoon of that day I started examining my feelings and said, well, wait a minute," he said. "This could be a great opportunity to do something that, if not standing a chance of being really good, it might at least be able to work on more than one level. So I changed my mind."

The disc, "Quality Street," is a goes-down-easy blend of rockabilly, crooning, acoustic picking and gospel. Among the dozen songs, "Silent Night" is the only well-known carol, and it is given a Tex-Mex flavor. Lowe's own "Christmas at the Airport" is about a snowed-in traveler, and "I Was Born in Bethlehem" came from imagining meeting Jesus Christ over a cocktail and striking up a conversation.

Lowe, 64, is a late-in-life dad and one can see him singing Roger Miller's lullaby "Old Toy Trains" to his own son.

Before the snow flew, he sat down to discuss the project.

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The Associated Press: Many people choose to do their own versions of centuries-old Christmas carols, but for the most part you did tunes that are new or relatively unfamiliar. Why did you take that approach?

Lowe: We all knew that the hardest part would be gathering material. We wanted to try to avoid the 12 tunes that nearly everybody always does. And if we were going to do very familiar tunes, we wanted to dress them up in a new suit of clothes so they sounded fresh. Essentially we wanted to find tunes that were good songs. There are thousands of good Christmas records to choose from, but they're not necessarily good songs.

AP: No "Grandma Got Run Over By a Reindeer"?

Lowe: That one wasn't considered. At the same time, in order to give the thing some credibility, I think there had to be at least some original tunes there. I thought I could maybe manage one. In the end, I wrote two and a half, the half being the one I wrote with Ry Cooder. Ron Sexsmith came to the studio and a few days later he sent us a song.

AP: Your version of "Silent Night" sounds rather jaunty.

Lowe: It is a great tune. It hasn't stuck around all these years for nothing.

AP: Is it intimidating to write a holiday song, more than other songs? Do you want it to be sentimental and traditional, but not TOO sentimental and traditional?

Lowe: As much as we wanted to do something different and put some effort into it, we also were very aware that you have to sort of buy into the Christmas theme. Christmas is the biggest cliche there is, and you have to sort of join in with it. If it's too arty farty, it's not viewed very well.

AP: Have you ever spent Christmas at the airport?

Lowe: No, I'm pleased to say I haven't. It's sort of nonsense, anyway, as if they would close an airport down over Christmas. I've been snowed in at airports, but not at Christmastime.

AP: The sound is very traditional but hip. What were you seeking?

Lowe: I suppose what I was seeking was for somebody to say that it's the kind of record you could play outside of Christmas, just something that doesn't sound like some bad cash-in. We did enjoy doing it. People weren't rolling their eyes and saying, "Oh, blimey, it's a Christmas record, let's get on with it."

AP: What do you like to play at the Lowe household over Christmas?

Lowe: We are real Christmas record fans at our house. We do start playing them at the end of October, and sometime into January. It's always sort of in the background. There's some rockabilly stuff, Bing (Crosby), Tennessee Ernie Ford — one of my favorites. His voice just sort of says Christmas.

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Online:


http://nicklowe.com


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David Bauder can be reached at dbauder@ap.org or on Twitter@dbauder. His work can be found at http://bigstory.ap.org/content/david-bauder.

New 'Nymphomaniac' Clip Places Charlotte Gainsbourg In Compromising Position (Very NSFW)

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Another day, another lascivious clip -- ahem, "appetizer" -- from "Nymphomaniac."

The latest marks the sixth that's emerged since June, in addition to character posters and a trailer. We've already seen Shia LaBeouf strip down for a graphic sex scene, and now Charlotte Gainsbourg is the subject of what looks like a lewd S&M-style tryst. Titled "Chapter 6: The Eastern and the Western Church (The Silent Duck)," the clip's synopsis offers this mysterious description:

The Eastern Church is often referred to as the Church of Joy, and the Western Church as the Church of Suffering.

Should you make a mental journey from Rome eastwards, you'll find that you move away from guilt and pain, and towards light and joy.

However, what Joe comes to learn is that pain and pleasure can be closer than you'd think.


The LaBeouf clip was removed from YouTube because of its graphic nature, which might explain why this one was posted to Vimeo instead. In it, Gainsbourg, whose character is named Joe, unwraps a racy gift and strips down so it can be put to use.

A cut-down version of "Nymphomaniac," directed by Lars von Trier ("Dogville," "Melancholia"), will premiere in Denmark on Dec. 25 before making its way to other countries in the early months of 2014. No U.S. release has been scheduled, but the full five-hour version is also supposed to hit theaters sometime next year.

Classic Surf Cars From Around The World

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Surfers love telling tales about the best rides of their lives. Usually these stories have to do with their best wave rides, but sometimes it’s the ride that got them there that is more legendary.

Tasmania-born and Oahu-based photographer Sean Davey has been shooting surf culture for over thirty years. He has seen it all, from monstrous waves to some of the more unconventional surf vehicles around the world.

We asked Davey to tell us a little about his iconic surf car shots. His reflections are full of serendipitous photo ops, a couple of the world’s most famous surfers, distant lands, remote breaks, and cars you’d never expect could make the trip.

His experiences will inspire you to hit the road for your own adventure -- surfboard or not. When you’ve got a ride like one of these, it truly is about the journey rather than the destination.

To see Davey’s full collection of surf vehicle photos, check out his gallery on The Inertia.

1. "Plain Place," aka Oakhampton, Tasmania
bug surfboards

This car belonged to my surf buddy Alan Davis, in Tasmania, Australia, way back in the 80's. We used to take this thing everywhere, simply because it was a good economical car for those long missions. He also had one of those home mini component stereo systems inside his glove box. That car was way cool....

2. 7 Mile Beach, Hobart, Tasmania.
car in ocean

This is a classic old Australian 80's Ford Falcon and it was obviously owned by a guy who cared for it well, until this day when he was putting his boat in at the ramp under a much bigger than normal swell. He got bogged. He opened his door right when a wave came, so it went all inside his car. I saw it for sale the very next week.

3. Laniakea, North Shore, Oahu
classic surf car

I was up in the helicopter shooting big wave surfing and we were crossing over Kamehameha Highway just as this old vintage woody was passing by. Serendipitous timing, you could say.

4. City of Melbourne Bay, King Island, Australia
toyota tacoma

This is from King Island, a small island in Bass Strait, just under Melbourne, Australia. King Island is a farming community, world famous for their beef and dairy products especially. This is the only kind of traffic jam you will ever encounter on King Island.

5. West Cape, Yorke Peninsula, South Australia
yorkes surf

This is a mid-70's Australian Ford Falcon which Australian Surfing Life Magazine purchased, then sprayed "Operation Tubequest” on the doors and sent it off into the much-feared South Australian desert knowing that they would get great waves and cause all kinds of mayhem in an area where outsiders were generally not welcome. The trip went for 6 weeks and resulted in three major article features. Before you pack your bags, you should know that this location is just a couple of miles from where they filmed the real Great White sharks for "Jaws."

6. "The Deep, Deep Scrub," near Currie, King Island, Australia
surf forest

A classic old Australian Holden from the late 60’s. These were very rugged vehicles and would go off road to surprisingly great extents. This photo was taken by my late friend Jeremy Curtain. It’s his mate Salty's car. Those boys on King Island pioneered all the island’s surf breaks back in the day, using these cars where there were no roads.

7. Currie, King Island, Australia
classic car surfboard

Again, this one's on King Island, Australia and features an old chevy from the 20's. It belongs to this really nice old guy who let us borrow it for a few pictures. (Thanks, mate.) The surfer is Hath Joske.

8. Currie, King Island, Australia
mullet surfers

Another classic old Australian Holden. This one is from the early 60's. My mate Alan Davis bought it off this old guy who had owned it since new. The thing was awesome. It was the 80's and we named it after the movie “Greystoke.” It was such a fitting name.

9. Huntington Beach, California
huntington beach surf

I was just cruising along one morning and saw this guy with his old Kombi van and asked him if I could shoot a portrait. He was stoked that I was interested.

10. Joel Tudor, Pipeline, North Shore, Oahu
joel tudor

I was walking along one day and just happened upon this scene and instantaneously focused and shot. The scene was lost within seconds. Perfect example of being ready for the moment.

11. Lavinia Nature Reserve, King Island, Australia
surfboard on truck

Another image still from King Island. Loads of the local farmers have very practical utility trucks. This guy just throws his board on his work truck after work and drives down for a surf.

12. Shark's Cove, North Shore, Oahu
painted vans

This is the work of Drew Toonz. One hell of a talented artist who sometimes goes around and beautifies the place by painting up old wrecks that are visually polluting the North Shore. He gives them beauty and humor.

13. Pipeline, North Shore, Oahu
surf limo

It's amazing what you'll see surfers driving up here on the North Shore. Especially out of town surfers. They are typically on a bit of a holiday and something like an old limo would rock as a holiday car, would it not? So yeah, you do see some neat vehicles about the place. The production trucks parked across the street were there for the filming of "Blue Crush."

14. Mark Occhilupo, Bondi Beach, Australia
mark occhilupo

This was during the first coming of Occy the pro surfer. He was young and just about unbeatable. I guess he was hanging out with Rabbit [Bartholomew] about this time because I think this is Rabb's old RX7 with the Queensland license plates. I happened to see Occy waxing up in the Bondi Beach parking lot and grabbed a couple of portraits of him. His wetsuit sponsor at the time was Peak wetsuits. To this day, my Californian friends ask where they can get the old Occy Peak suits.

15. Porky's Beach, King Island, Australia
truck on sand

This is probably just about the right kind of vehicle when driving around rural beachy areas. It's 4wd and it's light, meaning you can push it out if it does get bogged.

16. Huon Highway, Tasmania
surf snow

Tasmanian surfers have their lot to deal with in the winter months. Blizzards are known to happen in the more frontier areas to the west and south. This is what surfers put up with to get a few waves at that time of the year.

17. Ehukai Beach Park, North Shore, Oahu
aloha license plate

I spotted this license plate in the Ehukai beach parking lot one afternoon and was immediately drawn to it for a picture. It is still one of my favourite symbolic images of Hawaii.

Kenny Loggins On The Blue Sky Riders And How His Approach To Music Has Changed

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NEW YORK (AP) — Logic, it turns out, isn't always the way to go, at least not for Kenny Loggins.

Had he listened to that particular little voice in his head, the two-time Grammy winner with 12 platinum records would be kicking back at home right now in Santa Barbara, Calif. Instead, at 65, he's hitting the stage and studio with a whole new act and a whole new sound nearly five decades into his music career. He's got three songs on a CD tucked inside a new "Frosty the Snowman" picture book out on Imagine, Peter Yarrow's imprint.

But he's been making serious music with the Blue Sky Riders, his country rock trio with Nashville's Gary Burr and Georgia Middleman. They have a new Christmas CD, "Finally Home," co-produced by Peter Asher and featuring a tune called "Dream" that has this line: "You take the glory days/I'll take what's on its way/No one can tell me my best days are done."

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The Associated Press: How has storytelling changed for you?

Loggins: At the beginning of my career, Loggins and (Jimmy) Messina, Jimmy was my mentor. I had not done anything professionally, so it was all a period of learning and just kind of sitting back and watching, seeing how things were done. Then when I went solo I started to take what I'd learned and put it into action. No matter what phase of life you're in, it's always a learning procedure. Then when I hit this third act, as some people are calling it, I discovered that I had a pretty clear picture of the kind of thing I wanted to do for this next part of my life. ... In 'Dream,' 'Too old to dream' became this pivotal phrase that Georgia developed into the chorus of the song, that sometimes logic doesn't win out, that the heart and the passion has got to win out.

AP: Are there similarities between your blend with Messina and your blend with Gary?

Loggins: The blend with Messina is more akin to the Everly Brothers. There's a certain nasal, edgy thing that Jimmy and I had in common. We wrote two songs together in the six years that we were together, but Loggins and Messina was Jimmy doing his thing and Kenny doing his thing and then we'd bring it together to blend it. Blue Sky Riders is very much a writing machine. We write together as a trio. Ninety-eight percent of what we have on the new record we wrote together. And we do the vocal arrangements as we're writing the songs, so it's much more of a partnership, a family. And we love and respect each other, and it's been a great ride. I hope that it holds.

AP: Part of how Blue Sky Riders has financed the group is through house parties. Are you all still doing those?

Loggins: We are doing house parties. We also play gigs now that the price of the gig has gone up enough that we can use that money. We've taken none of the money we've made, either through gigs or house parties, personally. And we were just debating today if we could take a couple of thousand individually 'cause, you know, Christmas is coming and they need the dough.

AP: You've written all these songs. You've collaborated on numerous others. Are you hurting for money?

Loggins: Sometimes, yeah. The second divorce was a problem. But it's not that I'm hurting for money as much as I need to stay creative. ... When Columbia Records dropped me from the label and I flirted with the idea of retiring, I found that I was getting very depressed. And that I needed to write. I needed to record in order to stay alive, to stay in touch with my own juice, and that made me happier and therefore I became a better dad, an easier person to live with.

AP: How has the music industry changed for you? Do you find yourself being cynical about the industry as a whole?

Loggins: I think that the music industry has changed dramatically, as we know, from the mama, papa stores, you know, and getting a record played on the radio one city at a time. You know, the monolithic ownership of radio stations has homogenized the playlists now so getting on the radio is a completely different game, I'm not sure one that I will even bother playing. Radio is still powerful, but the point being that things have changed and there are new rules and new ways to play the game and so part of the fun of jumping back in the pool is to learn the new rules.

AP: What would you be doing today, what would you have done with yourself, if not music?

Loggins: I really don't know. I've thought about that a lot, as to what I would have fallen back on, you know. I actually thought about it a lot when I was 50 and considered retiring, and I just saw that it wasn't going to work, that I had been in music and songwriting since I graduated high school and so I've really learned nothing else, that I am an expert at what I do and an idiot at everything else, for better or for worse.

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Online:


http://www.kennyloggins.com


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Follow Leanne Italie on Twitter at www.http/twitter.com/litalie

'Inside Llewyn Davis' Clip Features Riotous 'Please Mr. Kennedy' Performance

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We're counting down the days until the world can set its eyes on the Coen Brothers' "Inside Llewyn Davis." (It's six if your city's lucky enough to score next weekend's limited release, 20 if not.)

In the meantime, tide yourself over with this newly released clip in which Llewyn (Oscar Isaac) lands a paying gig performing just the sort of standard tunes he's trying to avoid. Isaac joins Justin Timberlake and Adam Driver in the clip, which finds the trio playing the boorish "Please Mr. Kennedy." The scene has already generated some buzz as one of the film's most humorous moments, so you can either relish the sneak peak or save yourself for the full movie, which recently nabbed two major Independent Spirit Award nominations.

'The Legend Of Hercules' -- Formerly Titled 'Hercules: The Legend Begins' -- Gets New Trailer

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In a continued effort to help distinguish it from its Herculean counterpart, Lionsgate has retitled "Hercules: The Legend Begins." The Roman-hero epic will now go by "The Legend of Hercules."

We're referring to the movie starring Kellan Lutz in the title role, which was recently moved up to a Jan. 10 release. That gives it further distinction from "Hercules: The Thracian Wars," the Dwayne Johnson flick that arrives on July 25.

Both movies are unsurprisingly ab-tastic, but the distinctions do continue. "The Legend of Hercules" is directed by Renny Harlin ("Die Hard 2," Deep Blue Sea") and comes with a smaller budget than the $110 million "Thracian Wars," which is helmed by Brett Ratner ("Rush Hour," "X-Men: The Last Stand"). The former is a standard origin story, whereas Ratner's version -- based on the graphic novel of the same name -- strips Hercules of his supernatural abilities and leaves him with only his adeptness at battle.

Now, is that all cleared up? If you're looking for a more visual representation, watch the newest trailer for Lutz's edition above.

[via Variety]

J. Cole Responds To Kendrick Lamar's 'Control' Verse On Justin Timberlake's 'TKO' Remix

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Justin Timberlake has rounded up a few of his hip-hop compatriots to assist on a remix of "TKO," the "20/20 Experience - 2 of 2" track that's currently trekking its way up the Billboard Hot 100 chart.

The "Black Friday Remix" shirks much action from Timberlake himself in favor of A$AP Rocky, Pusha T and J. Cole, the latter of whom uses it as an opportunity to respond to Kendrick Lamar's contentious shout-out on Big Sean's "Control."

Here's a closer look at J. Cole's retaliation (beware foul language):

Cole to the rescue, never save a ho

Hoes like to hide their behavior though

Thought you was a down ass bitch

‘Til I found that shit a couple days ago

I was home alone, next thing I know

That long as verse from a song called “Control” was on

The room got nearer, the tomb got clearer

That’s when I seen the shit playin’ on your phone

Girl, what is that? A ringtone?

Shit, not you too

Man, that hype done got you too

Everybody and their momma gassed,

Even my momma asked what I’mma do

Decisions, decisions

In case this is war, then I load up on all ammunition

If a nigga want problems, my trigger’s on auto

I’ll make sure that nobody miss him

Now pack up your shit, you don’t believe in me

I don’t need you, I got me, bitch

Same nigga moved to NYC, bitch

Got a record deal and a college degree, bitch

Two gold plaques, I produced all the tracks

And I never ever ever leave no Jay Z, bitch

And after all that achievement

Real nigga never even went and got his teeth fixed

Now you try to play me, bitch?

I’ll knock your ass out


Listen to the full "Black Friday Remix" above.

Angela Lansbury Returns To West End For 'Blithe Spirit' Revival, Proves She's 88 Years Young

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Angela Lansbury is an acting legend, freshly minted with an honorary Oscar for her decades of work. Now the "Murder, She Wrote" star is heading back to the stage in a West End revival of Noel Coward's "Blithe Spirit" as the clairvoyant Madame Arcanti.

In 2009, she won a Tony for the same role. The 88-year-old icon hasn't been back on the London Stage in 40 years. She told the Daily Mail, "You could say it’s my last chance. It isn’t! But you could say that. After all, I am 88 — in my 89th year now. But I’ve got many more years left. I do believe that.”

Recently, Lansbury came into the spotlight when she spoke out against the highly publicized "Murder, She Wrote" reboot, calling it "a mistake." She said, "I suddenly became a worldwide-known character as Jessica Fletcher and really built an enormous audience, which I have to this day." Fortunately, the reboot starring Octavia Spencer may go by a different name, and Spencer will not be playing a revamped Fletcher.

"Blithe Spirit" starring Angela Lansbury is scheduled to debut in March 2014.

Bob Dylan Sued By Croatian Group For Comments Made About America's Slavery Past

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Bob Dylan has stirred up a deep-set racial conflict with comments he made earlier this year in the French edition of Rolling Stone.

The 72-year-old folk-rock icon, who was awarded the French Legion of Honor earlier this month, was discussing America's history with slavery when he made a comment that has reportedly riled up a Croatian community group.

When asked about parallels he sees between Civil War-era America and today, Dylan told the magazine:

"Mmm, I don't know how to put it. It's like . . . the United States burned and destroyed itself for the sake of slavery. The USA wouldn't give it up. It had to be grinded out. The whole system had to be ripped out with force. A lot of killing. What, like, 500,000 people? A lot of destruction to end slavery. And that's what it really was all about.

This country is just too f--ked-up about color. It's a distraction. People at each other's throats just because they are of a different color. It's the height of insanity, and it will hold any nation back -- or any neighborhood back. Or any anything back. Blacks know that some whites didn't want to give up slavery -- that if they had their way, they would still be under the yoke, and they can't pretend they don't know that. If you got a slave master or Klan in your blood, blacks can sense that. That stuff lingers to this day. Just like Jews can sense Nazi blood and the Serbs can sense Croatian blood."


It's those last few words that caused the stir. Harking back to centuries-old religious conflict between the majority Roman Catholic Croats and the Christian Orthodox Serbs as well as further rivalry that sprang up during World War II, Dylan referenced the bad relations that exist between the two groups. Amid lingering memories of the Croatian War of Independence that lasted from 1991 to 1995, the France-based Croatian community group in question has brought a lawsuit after finding Dylan's comments unsettling.

Europe's free-speech laws are stricter than those in the U.S., and the suit will move on to the next stages. Slate reports that it could take up to 18 months to settle, and if Dylan is found guilty, he may face a fine and formal sanction.

With America's First Amendment rights, it can be hard to see how a comment like this would generate litigation, especially for a musician who instantly became known as a champion of the civil rights movement. Anthems like "Blowin' in the Wind" and "The Times They Are a-Changin'" were synonymous with anti-war sentiments and the free-love iconoclasm that arose during the 1960s.

[via Business Insider]

Reverse-Engineering A Genius (Has A Vermeer Mystery Been Solved?)

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David Hockney and others have speculated—controversially—that a camera obscura could have helped the Dutch painter Vermeer achieve his photo-realistic effects in the 1600s. But no one understood exactly how such a device might actually have been used to paint masterpieces. An inventor in Texas—the subject of a new documentary by the magicians Penn & Teller—may have solved the riddle.

Surreal Black-And-White Photos Of A Housewife's Worst Nightmare (NSFW)

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"Sometimes it feels like the thread linking us to the world is so frail that at any time it could break leaving us at the mercy of our repressed confusion, loss and fear," writes photographer Charlotte Colbert. Her spine-tingling series, "A Day At Home," turns the trope of the haunted house into a surreal meditation on domesticity and self-destruction.

home

The images, following in the footsteps of female artists like Louise Bourgeois and Francesca Woodman, capture the moment where the familiarity of the house morphs into something strange and potentially dangerous. Delicate housewives resemble possessed spirits or broken dolls, turning the traditional comfort of the home into something altogether strange.

Like her artistic predecessors, Colbert questions the ramifications of a woman's life trapped inside the confines of her home, when order and propriety give way to something far darker. Dollhouses become geometric masks, limbs contort and collapse, and undetermined forms cast ghostly shadows. Aligning docility and insanity, the artworks reveal what happens when a woman begins keeping house and ends up with the house keeping her.

"When I see the pictures I feel like the woman is probably in her clean and comfortable living room. The decay around her existing solely in her head," Mila Askarova, founder and Director of Gazelli Art House, wrote of the project. Whether or not the twisted images exist solely in the woman's mind or not, the nightmarish visions sure look enchanting in print. See the series below and let us know if you think you're witnessing a demented fantasy or a warped reality.

housr

house

house

eye

girl

house

hosue

type

See Francesca Woodman's photographs below to better understand the origin of the artistic haunted house.

At Art Basel Miami Beach, Squeezing Art Out of the Picture

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Let’s play a game: Are the following parties taking place during New York Fashion Week or Art Basel Miami Beach?

Stars of 'The Sound of Music Live' Recall Seeing The Original For The First Time

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NEW YORK (AP) — The 1965 film version of "The Sound of Music," with Julie Andrews in the starring role, won five Oscars, including best picture.

Even more important, it won moviegoers' hearts. Nearly everybody saw it then, and again, certifying for all time the hit status it enjoyed on Broadway with its opening six years before. It is the Broadway version of the Rodgers and Hammerstein classic that is being brought to TV on Dec. 5 as "The Sound of Music Live!"

While they labored to climb ev'ry mountain to prepare for it, the stars of the NBC telecast recently recalled how "The Sound of Music" first became one of their favorite things.

— Carrie Underwood (Maria): "My mom and dad went to see the movie on one of their first dates. I didn't know that until I became involved in this project and Mom told me. But it's always been real special to our family, and every time it was on TV, it was a thing: Me and Mom would watch it."

— Audra McDonald (Mother Abbess): "My first exposure to 'The Sound of Music' was a music box that played 'Edelweiss' given to me around my birth by my uncle. I still have it."

— Laura Benanti (Elsa): "When I was 18, I was the understudy for Maria (in a 1998 Broadway revival), and for two weeks I went on. Then, when I was 19, I took over the role and played Maria opposite Richard Chamberlain."

— Stephen Moyer (Capt. von Trapp): "I remember seeing the movie when I was 8 or 9. Then, when I was about 14, a revival was produced in London, and I auditioned for it — possibly even before I knew I wanted to be an actor. I didn't get anywhere that time."

— Christian Borle (Max): "There are various black holes culturally in my upbringing: I never saw 'The Sound of Music' until a couple of years ago. And I had no experience with the Broadway show at all. So my first exposure was when we did the first read-through and sing-through for this production. The whole experience gave me the chills. It's just beautiful. So this project has been a nice introduction!"

Now This Is A Bridge We'd Like To Cross

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Admittedly, we have a soft spot for bridges. From actual living bridges to proposed trampolines across the Seine, we just think bridges are super nifty.

Enter the "Mobius" bridge that's proposed for the Dragon King Harbor River development in Changsha, China. The Dutch firm NEXT Architects recently won a competition over the design for the pedestrian bridge, which would span over 490 feet long and 78 feet high across Meixi Lake.

Pedestrians will be able to walk across the bridge at different heights, which is based on the appearance of a Mobius ring as well as a knot found in ancient Chinese folk art.

Construction is scheduled to begin next year.

Check it out.

bridge

bridge

And in case you're wondering how it will all work:
bridge

Pacman And Peso's New Music Video Recorded In North Korea, Rappers Say

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BEIJING (AP) — Two aspiring American rappers said Saturday that they had filmed part of a music video in North Korea, hoping the novel locale will make a hit.

The rappers known as Pacman and Peso did not say where and how they filmed the footage, which their fundraising proposal suggested would be done on a karaoke party bus in Pyongyang. Their custom trip was arranged through a travel agency specializing in taking Westerners to North Korea, according to the proposal.

Americans are able to travel to North Korea on arranged tours and are constantly accompanied by North Korea minders.

After an elderly American was detained in the country, the U.S. State Department issued a travel warning on Nov. 19, advising against all travel by U.S. citizens to North Korea.

The two rappers said their trip shied away from politics.

"I mean we did not go there to be political. We just go down there to shoot our video and that about the reason why we went, not political," said Pacman — whose real name is Anthony Bobb.

The duo from the Washington area spoke to reporters at an airport in Beijing upon their return from a five-day trip to North Korea.

"Nobody shot a video in North Korea, let alone thought of it. Nobody even thought of making a video in North Korea. You know what I'm saying?" said Peso, whose real name is Dontray Ennis.

They raised more than $10,000 on the crowdsourcing site Kickstarter to fund their trip.

The rappers said the unusual move could jumpstart their music careers. They hope to release the video next month.

North Korea has detained at least six Americans since 2009, including journalists accused of trespassing and others accused of trying to spread Christianity. North Korea state media claimed Saturday that 85-year-old Korean War veteran Merrill Newman had apologized for committing "hostile acts" against the state during a trip in October, but the report could not be independently verified.

The rappers said they encountered no problem while in North Korea. "They treated us well, like I was sick out there for good two days and they took care of me until I got over the sickness," Peso said.

Element Magazine Releases Sexy Photo Campaign For World AIDS Day

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As we recognize, celebrate and remember during this year's World AIDS Day, Dec. 1, Element Magazine is attempting to enhance visibility surrounding HIV/AIDS awareness through this highly-visual photo campaign.

Involving nine asian male models that identify as both gay and straight, including popular fitness model Jason Chee, the photo campaign consists of portraits of hot, naked men with tapes bearing important messages minimally covering their bodies.

“This had been one of the most ambitious shoots we have done so far in Element Magazine," said Hiro Mizuhara, the creative mind behind the awareness campaign, in a statement emailed to The Huffington Post. "We hope our readers can enjoy the images and assimilate the messages we wanted to bring across."

The photos will be printed on postcards for sale to raise funds for AFA (Action For AIDS) in Singapore and will also be published in the fifth issue of the magazine.

Check out a sampling of the photos in the slideshow below. For more information on Element Magazine, check out the publication's website.

Meet Cher Noble, Brooklyn Drag Artist And Performer (NSFW)

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This is the fifth installment in an ongoing series that explores drag culture and the nightlife scene in Brooklyn, N.Y. Over the past several years, following the large-scale exodus of artists across the East River and into northern Brooklyn, those engaged in drag culture in this outer borough have rethought what "drag queen" means. Accompanied by a larger movement to understand drag culture outside of the pageant circuit, many individuals engaged in the drag community throughout Brooklyn approach drag culture through a nontraditional lens of "alternative" drag or performance art. Visit HuffPost Gay Voices regularly to learn not only about the individuals involved in Brooklyn's drag community, but more about the culture of the community itself.

The Huffington Post: How did you get your start in the drag world?
Cher Noble: I started doing drag for parties in Ames, Iowa, and looked at drag as a way to enhance partying. In Ames, there really wasn't any drag scene so when someone would see a drag queen at a party it would take them out of their comfort zone, but also make them feel more comfortable to be themselves -- they didn't have to worry about being the weirdest person at the party.

What role do you see drag queens playing within the larger spectrum of the LGBT community?
I'd put them somewhere between class clown and billboard. On the one hand, drag queens are a sort of comic relief. They (generally) don't take themselves too seriously, which is important compared to serious issues affecting the LGBT community and LGBT rights. On the other hand, when you see a drag queen, you automatically think about the LGBT community. We keep it topical.

Describe the drag scene and community in Brooklyn -- what makes the drag culture here unique?
The Brooklyn drag scene is one big family, like from one of those home-for-the-holidays movies. We love and support each and every one of each other -- we treasure our differences, we greet each other with a kiss on both cheeks. Then we read each other, throw some shade and have a good laugh. In the end, it's all about love, no matter what.

How does Brooklyn as a community shape and construct drag culture?
We ignore all the rules. We say yes when someone else says no. This provides everyone in Brooklyn with a stage they can call their own; they don't have to worry about their performance being good or bad, they just have to worry about their performance being their own. We are shaping and constructing drag by thinking outside of the typical, sequined box.

(The interview with Cher Noble continues after the slideshow. Some images may not be safe for work.)


In what way would you say that the drag scene in Brooklyn points to the direction that drag is going?
I believe we are showing all drag queens (and maybe the rest of the world?) that it is a lot more fun to love and support one another. It takes all kinds of people to make a true scene and until you can put your differences behind you, you will go nowhere.

Do you find empowerment in drag?
Absolutely! Doing drag has taken me out of the crowd and onto the stage, given me new friends, introduced me to people I've looked up to, and gotten me into parties and events. I've been featured in photography projects, news articles, magazines, and interviews. I also like to think that by being a drag queen with body hair that I'm standing up for an array of gender identities and issues as well as speaking out about societal views on beauty. I find enjoyment in blurring those lines.

Why do you go by Cher Noble?
I have always been obsessed with the Chernobyl disaster and one day I realized what a great drag name it would make. It combines the legendary gay icon, Cher, and the aristocratic 'Noble,' with a dose of nuclear radiation.

Drag culture is becoming increasingly more mainstream, particularly with the popularity of "RuPaul's Drag Race." How would you say this has affected drag culture and the nightlife community?
Obviously it has created a drag baby boom. There are new drag queens born every day and I couldn't be happier! There's no such thing as too many drag queens. I also think it has raised the bar of drag. You can no longer just put on a dress and lip-sync a song. Now you have to be able to make a costume, style your wig, and pose for a picture while hanging upside down by your stilettos -- or something like that. Not to mention all the new vocabulary that comes from "Drag Race."

Where can you be found throughout the week?
Every Thursday you can find me, Lady Simon and Cherri Baum performing at Wreck Room for Trey LaTrash's Bless This Mess along with some amazing special guest performers and DJs every week. The last Tuesday of every month, Hamm Samwich and I have a show at Tandem called MARRY/FUCK/KILL where we invite three queens to each give a performance based on marriage, fucking or killing. On a random Saturday every month, I am also at Trey LaTrash's Dizzyland -- if you haven't been there yet, check it out. It was the first and only party where I've actually had to stop partying to drink some water. Need I say more? Other than that, there's always a chance that if you are at a drag show or party in Brooklyn, I will probably make an appearance.

Any parting words?
I prefer French exits.

For more information about Cher Noble, visit the artist's Facebook, Instagram, Twitter or contact him through e-mail. Missed the previous installments in this series? Check out the slideshow below.

'Kinky Boots' Performers Have Amazing Response To Macy's Day Parade Outrage

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Homophobia reared its ugly head in response to the supposedly cheerful Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade on Thursday, as some Americans took to social media to criticize the performance of "Kinky Boots," an award-winning Broadway musical about a shoe factory owner and a drag queen who work together to turn the family business around. The way the performers responded to the controversy, however, was priceless.

Despite the show's wholesome themes of cooperation, tolerance and friendship, Twitter and Facebook quickly lit up with Americans decrying the performance of the musical's flashy finale "Raise You Up/Just Be" as unwholesome and unfit for the holiday parade broadcast.

Rather than be cowed by the controversy, however, the show's Tony-winning star Billy Porter and some of his cast mates marched over to Macy's the day after their performance in the parade and proceeded to do some Black Friday shopping. The kicker? Almost all of the male actors were outfitted in their sky-high stiletto boots and Porter was in full drag.

“You have to start a dialogue,” the musical’s co-creator Harvey Fierstein told Page Six while shopping with the show's actors. “And you can’t have a dialogue unless someone says something first. It takes actual work to open up [people’s] minds.”

In a statement sent to Playbill.com, meanwhile, Fierstein reiterated his support for the fabulously flamboyant musical.

"I'm so proud that the cast of Kinky Boots brought their message of tolerance and acceptance to America's parade," Fierstein said in the statement. "Ten years ago I was humbled to ride a float dressed as Mrs. Claus, and it was the thrill of a lifetime. Congratulations to Macy's, on leading the world, not only with your salesmanship, but also your humanity."

Macy's also offered its own statement to Page Six, which managed to hit on both the parade's commitment to Broadway -- and commercialism. 'Tis the season.

“Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade has always spotlighted the best of Broadway since the ’60′s, and this year is no exception," the rep said. "As 2013′s Tony award-winning best musical, ‘Kinky Boots’ is not only a hit with Broadway fans, but Black Friday shoppers… Please have them call us and we’ll set them up with our personal shoppers.”

Desert Tribesmen, Jellyfish and Rafael Nadal: The Week In Photos, Nov. 24 - 30

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Nothing quite compares to the power of a photograph to communicate the goings on in the world, captured in the thick of things. Ranging from the serious to the silly, these photos offer peeks into various events around the world this week.

1. In Brazil, youngsters play football at an artificial beach in Ponta Negra's new upperclass neighborhood on November 23, 2013.

manaus football
Yasuyoshi Chiba/AFP/Getty Images

2. In Kuwait, Jellyfish swim in an aquarium at the Scientific Center in Kuwait City on November 24, 2013.

jellyfish
Yasser al-Zayyat/AFP/Getty Images

3. In Italy, shoes are painted red to symbolize victims of violence as part of the International Day to End Violence Against Women in Rome, on November 25, 2013.

rome women
Tiziana Fabi/AFP/Getty Images

4. In Argentina, Spanish tennis player Rafael Nadal sprays champagne after defeating Serbian tennis player Novak Djokovic during an exhibition tennis match in Buenos Aires on November 24, 2013.

nadal
Alejandro Pagni/AFP/Getty Images

5. In the United Arab Emirates, tribesmen lead their camels through the sand dunes of the Liwa desert, 220 kilometers west of Abu Dhabi, on November 23, 2013.

abu dhabi
Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty Images

6. In the Philippines, typhoon survivors queue up for relief goods in Palo, Leyte province on November 26, 2013.

philippines relief
Noel Celis/AFP/Getty Images

7. In Egypt, an activist shouts slogans protesting against the new law regulating street protests and Egypt's ongoing practice of trying civilians in military courts at Talaat Harb Square on November 26, 2013.

cairo
Mosaab Elshamy/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

8. In Pakistan, madrasa students play cricket following the afternoon prayer on November 24, 2013 in Islamabad.

cricket
Metin Aktas/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

9. In Honduras, university student supporter of Honduran presidential candidate for the leftist Libertad y Refundacion (LIBRE), Xiomara Castro, confront the police as they protest in Tegucigalpa on November 26, 2013.

honduras
Orlando Sierra/AFP/Getty Images

10. In England, a family walks on an illuminated path on November 27, 2013 at the first after dark Christmas festival, held at The Royal Botanic Gardens.

england trail
Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images

Paul Walker's Film Roles Celebrated In His Most Famous Movies

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Paul Walker died on Saturday, Nov. 30 in Santa Clarita, Calif. He was 40. The California-born actor is remembered as a "humble" man with a "sweet and grounded" sprit.

Walker counted his first film credit for 1986's "Monsters in the Closet," going on to star in blockbuster action films, make television cameos, and appear in romantic comedies. In remembrance of Walker, we've collected clips of the late actor from some of his most famed film roles.

"The Fast & The Furious" Series (2001-2013)


"Eight Below" (2006)


"She's All That" (1999)


"Takers" (2010)


"Varsity Blues" (1999)


"Pleasantville" (1998)


"The Skulls" (2000)


"Flags of Our Fathers" (2006)


"Joy Ride" (2001)


"Timeline" (2003)


"Into the Blue" (2005)
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