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This 'American Honey' Clip Features Shia LaBeouf's Rattail Dancing To Rihanna

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If you read The Huffington Post regularly, you may know we are big fans of Shia LaBeouf’s rattail. The rascally actor first sported it back in March 2015, two months before he began shooting “American Honey.” With the movie expanding to wide release this week, the world can now behold LaBeouf’s rattail on the big screen. 


You can also behold it right here, because we have an exclusive clip featuring a pivotal scene. “American Honey” is actually the story of Star (Sasha Lane), a teenager who flees her troubled home life and joins a traveling magazine sales crew. Her introduction to the group of rowdy young nomads comes from Jake (LaBeouf), a grubby charmer whose Rihanna-inspired dance moves first lure Star’s attention at a Kmart ― rattail and all. The rest, as they say, is lawless fate. 


Watch the clip below, and catch the fantastic “American Honey” in theaters now.




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Disney Reveals New Images From The Tower Of Terror Ride Makeover

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Tower of Terror no longer: Disney has unveiled new images of the makeover that will transform its iconic California elevator drop into a Marvel Comics-themed attraction scheduled to open next year.


The result is, um, Marvel-ous.


The Tower of Terror at Disney’s California Adventure park will close in January for refurbishments, re-opening as a new ride based on the Guardians of the Galaxy comic books.


Some fans have voiced strong disapproval about the change. So this week Disney released footage of a model for the new ride in what could be an effort to build positive hype, the Los Angeles Times notes. Check it out for yourself:







Of course, not everyone is devastated about the Tower of Terror’s disappearance: Comments on Disney’s video about the overhaul reveal a mix of sentiments, and Disney Imagineer John Mauro promised in the video “it’s gonna look like a brand-new attraction.” 


The Tower of Terror ride at Disney World in Orlando will remain untouched, and travelers still have time to ride the California version before it closes on Jan. 2, 2017. It’ll reopen in summer 2017 as Mission: Breakout

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The 'Jackie' Trailer Is Only A Glimpse Of How Fantastic This Movie Is

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Jackie Kennedy is such a complicated figure that anyone who dares to bring her story to the big screen is a brave soul. Thankfully, “Jackie,” which I fell in love with at the Toronto Film Festival, is far more nuanced than a typical cradle-to-grave biopic. It’s a sizzing snapshot of the week after John F. Kennedy’s 1963 assassination, from the perspective of a widow who weathered her idealized marriage in the public eye. 


The film’s first trailer has arrived, showing Natalie Portman in all of Kennedy’s rage and grief and confusion. The notion of Camelot ― the mythical castle associated with the persona of the Kennedys’ White House ― plays a chief role in “Jackie,” and in this trailer, it makes for a remarkable music cue. Watch below, and keep the Pablo Larraín-directed movie on your radar. It is astonishing.





”Jackie” opens in theaters on Dec. 2.

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This Tiny Guesthouse Filled With Books Is The Perfect Woodsy Escape

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For book worms, heaven might actually be a place on Earth. 


“Hemmelig Rom,” which translates to the “Secret Room” in Norwegian, is a guest house for photographer Jason Koxvold’s vacation home in upstate New York. The single-room cabin, completed in 2015, is lined with more than 1,000 books, inviting visitors to immerse themselves in a cozy reading experience. 



While the cabin is secluded, it’s really not so “secret” now, as it’s recently attracted the attention of several media outlets.


And we can see why ― alone in the woods just chillin’ with books? We don’t think there’s anything better.



Koxvold commissioned Studio Padron, an architecture firm, to help create the Hemmelig Rom. The guest house is filled with books across a variety of genres ― from design and photography, to military and economic policy ― Koxvold told The Huffington Post in an email. There’s also a reading chair so guests can comfortably bury themselves in a title. 



In addition to the reading materials, the Hemmelig Rom is complete with a bed and a wood-burning stove. 



Since it’s part of a private residence, the spot isn’t available to rent. But maybe it will serve as inspiration for your own personal reading nook!


 

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Mike Pence Loves Saying 'Feckless,' Americans Don’t Know What He Means

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During the vice presidential debate held on Tuesday night, Indiana governor Mike Pence repeatedly critiqued his opponent, Virginia senator Tim Kaine, for tossing out “pre-done lines.” But Pence, Donald Trump’s running mate, had his own pet phrases he returned to again and again to attack his opponent’s running mate, Hillary Clinton.


For one thing, he couldn’t seem to stop calling her and President Obama’s leadership “weak and feckless” ― three times, in total, a significant number of times to use such a distinct phrase.


The quiet buzz that arose from inhabited areas across the country was debate watchers rushing, en masse, to tap “feckless” into Google. Merriam-Webster posted a blog Tuesday night noting that lookups of the word “spiked dramatically” on their site after Pence used it on the debate stage. 


A day later, “feckless” remains No. 2 on the site’s “trending now” feature ― which is, by the way, always a great snapshot of what’s going on in the campaign; other trending terms now include “stamina” and “bigly/big league.” Meghan Lunghi, the company’s director of marketing, told HuffPost via email that lookups for the term were up 962 percent at the time of writing.


So what does “feckless” mean?


Most of us don’t use the word in our day-to-day lives, though we might run across it in a moralistic 18th-century novel or, as Merriam-Webster points out, in recent political speech: “Both Senator John McCain and Governor Chris Christie, among others, have used the word in highly publicized speeches or debates.” 


Primarily, Merriam-Webster defines it as “having or resulting from a weak character or nature,” but, the blog points out, it’s also been used to mean plenty of other disparaging things ― lazy, irresponsible, worthless. “If someone calls you feckless, there is very little chance that you are being complimented,” the dictionary concludes. 


Basically, we all know that to be “feckless” is bad, but beyond that, we couldn’t tell you exactly what it means. Chances are that effect worked just fine for Pence.

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Trump, Clinton Haunt Man's Political Halloween Display

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A Styrofoam model of a hot air-blowing Donald Trump and another of a toothy Hillary Clinton riding the Democratic Party’s donkey mascot are among the skeletons and zombies in a Halloween display that has become an attraction and is stopping traffic in a Connecticut town.



Last year, a model of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, thatched huts and a replica of a downed helicopter marked the 50th anniversary of the Vietnam War. Earlier exhibits included one with a cardboard coliseum and Roman soldiers and another with a Civil War theme.


“I hope people take it in the spirit of Halloween, that I am having a little fun and making a political statement,” Warshauer said of this year’s offering.


(Addtional reporting and writing by Patricia Reaney; Editing by Scott Malone and Jonathan Oatis)

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The Way We Talk About Drug 'Abuse' Is Harmful -- And It Needs To Change

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Substance use disorder is a medical circumstance ― a brain disease that can be targeted and treated. But when we use words like “junkie” and “crackhead,” we frame the issue in moral terms, suggesting that people with substance use disorders simply lack the willpower to get better.


And that’s not helpful for anyone.


That’s the contention of Michael Botticelli, the director of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy, which is working to change the way Americans talk about addiction.


The problem with much of the existing language in this area is that it carries judgmental connotations. That can increase the stigma associated with substance use disorders, and end up driving people away from the treatment they need. You don’t want to seek help from someone you feel is looking down on you.


“Commonly used terms can imply, or even explicitly convey, that individuals with [substance use disorders] are morally at fault for their disease,” Botticelli wrote in an essay published Tuesday in The Journal of the American Medical Association.


Pejorative terms like “junkie,” Botticelli wrote, describe people “solely through the lens of their addiction or their implied personal failings. These word choices matter.” 


ONDCP’s guidance draft, called “Changing the Language of Addiction,” encourages the adoption of various new phrases to replace older terminology that may perpetuate stigma.


Instead of using words like “abuse,” “dependence” or “drug habit,” the guidance recommends the term “substance use disorder.” Alternatively, one could talk about the “misuse” or “unhealthy/harmful use” of a substance. 


“Science shows that a substance use disorder is a chronic brain disease,” the draft guidance reads. “’Substance use disorder’ is the clinically accurate term.”


The guidance also recommends using person-first language to describe people with addiction, as is standard for describing other individuals with chronic conditions or disabilities (e.g., “person with autism” rather than “autistic person”). For example, the term “person with a substance use disorder” would be preferred over terms like “abuser,” “addict” or “alcoholic,” all of which can lead to negative perceptions about the very people they describe.


Much of the vocabulary ONDCP endorses is studiously neutral. The terms “clean” and “dirty,” the office says, should be abandoned when describing a “person in recovery” who may or may not be currently using substances. ONDCP recommends instead using terms like “negative” and “positive,” a reference to one’s toxicology results, or else describing a person in recovery as either “currently using substances” or “not currently using substances.”


For people with substance use disorders who use medication as part of their treatment, ONDCP recommends saying “medication assisted treatment” instead of “drug replacement” or “drug substitution” ― terms that can imply that medication merely “substitutes” for one drug, or addiction, for another.


“The basic message is that words matter,” said Dr. Howard Koh, professor at Harvard’s T. H. Chan School of Public Health and the Harvard Kennedy School and co-author of the JAMA essay. “The stigma associated with addiction can discourage people from coming forward to seek treatment... [and] millions of people who need treatment are not receiving it. Reasons for not seeking treatment include the fear of negative reactions from neighbors, community members and employers.”


Although questions of word choice might seem beside the point when dealing with life-and-death matters like drugs and disease, Botticelli and Koh’s call for more accurate and humane language is rooted in science. 


One recent study found that even a group of mental health professionals with significant experience working with people with substance use disorders were more likely to view a patient as personally culpable for their drug use ― and more likely to conclude that the patient should somehow be punished ― when the person was merely described as a “substance abuser” rather than a “person with substance use disorder.” In another study comparing the use of the same two terms, mental health professionals were found to view quote-unquote “substance abusers” as engaging in “willful misconduct,” representing a “greater social threat” and deserving of punishment.


Writing at JAMA, Botticelli and Koh say that it’s common for the language around health issues to evolve as our understanding of those issues becomes more sophisticated. They note that people with mental illness used to be labeled “lunatics,” and patients in the early days of AIDS were described as having “gay-related immune deficiency” ― language that obscures the reality that AIDS has nothing to do with sexuality, and that mental illness can affect anyone.


In all of these examples, Botticelli and Koh argue, “stigma and discrimination can arise when patients are labeled, linked to undesirable characteristics, or placed in categories to separate ‘us’ from ‘them.’”


“Changing the language can reduce stigma that isolates people and remove barriers that hold too many people back from receiving the treatment they need and deserve,” Koh told The Huffington Post. “Such changes, when combined with education and policy improvements, could foster a healthier future for our society.” 


ONDCP’s guidance is a working draft, and the agency is currently seeking public comment on the document.

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Why Tearing Women Down Gives Us A Thrill

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A couple years ago, we hated Anne Hathaway.


Remember that? Maybe you (specifically) still do. Maybe you (specifically) never did. But it’s true. We hated her big, effortful smile. We hated how she tremulously murmured “it came true” when accepting an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress. We hated her molars and uvula, visible thanks to some close camera work as she belted “I Dreamed a Dream” in “Les Misérables,” the film for which she won that Oscar. We hated how she let us see her trying. We hated how she reminded us of our own need to be liked and our own carefully disguised efforts to impress.


Jennifer Lawrence, the starlet who tripped over her gown at the Academy Awards and professed her love for junk food ― she was genuine, America’s effortlessly perfect dream bestie. Until she wasn’t.


This cycle might feel painfully familiar: We anoint an It Girl, a beloved female icon, then rapidly begin to find things to despise about her. Soon she’s left torn and trampled in the dirt as we rush past her to the next victim.


In Sady Doyle’s sharp new book Trainwreck: The Women We Love to Hate, Mock, and Fear… and Why, she examines the particular pleasure our society has taken, for centuries, in tearing down publicly visible women. Early feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, French revolutionary Anne-Josèphe Théroigne de Méricourt, and Harriet Jacobs, author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, all suffered the same calculated public humiliations and dismissals that were later faced in different forms by Sylvia Plath, Billie Holiday, Britney Spears and Whitney Houston.


“It’s easy to look at these women and see what they did wrong, tally up their sins and errors,” writes Doyle in the preface of Trainwreck: “Insensitive, provocative, promiscuous, off-the-wagon, crazy.” Many of them were deeply, seriously flawed people; all of them were flawed, of course, because humans are. By highlighting the same destructive pattern, though, Doyle reveals how quick our society is to discard flawed women ― baby, bathwater and all ― then blame them for forcing us to get rid of the baby because they tainted the bathwater.


She details the arc of classic ‘90s trainwreck Monica Lewinsky, a counterpoint to the equally loathed Hillary Clinton (“The icy blonde and the overheated brunette, the prude and the slut, the shrewish wife and the trashy mistress, the sexless middle-aged woman and the trampy young one, the frigid, man-hating intellectual and the needy, man-hungry ditz”) and notes that ultimately, to American society, “neither woman was acceptable. Neither woman was deemed worthy of love, or even of being liked.”


Then came Britney Spears, the perfect Madonna/whore middle ground, whom Doyle casts as a reaction to the Clinton/Lewinsky villainesses. “To save herself from the hatred that defined the public lives of Hillary Clinton and Monica Lewinsky, the ideal woman would have to steer between them, like Scylla and Charybdis,” she argues, “navigating the currents without being swept toward either side: Virgin and pin-up, wide-eyed innocent and worldly temptress, icon of cool and conservative Christian role model, she would always have to be both and neither, everything and nothing.” And yet Britney, too, suffered a much-derided public downfall.


Our trainwrecks, Trainwreck shows us, are constantly generated as reactions to our era’s anxieties and bigotries, or as backlashes to what we thought we wanted before. We ask women to fulfill the roles we require, then despise them for spoon-feeding us, or for not spoon-feeding us well enough ― that’s how we arrived at Kristin Stewart (who didn’t try hard enough or smile hard enough), then Anne Hathaway (who tried too hard and smiled too hard), then Jennifer Lawrence (who did both too ... just right). And, of course, that’s how we arrived at hating them. 



We ask women to fulfill the roles we require, then despise them for spoon-feeding us, or for not spoon-feeding us well enough.



Doyle’s book doesn’t arrive out of thin, misogynistic air; she’s one of many feminist writers and agitators who’ve been calling out this dynamic in essays and on Twitter for years. Though past stars’ falls from grace (Britney, Lindsay Lohan) have been covered with wide-eyed surprise, outlets like Jezebel forecasted a backlash against Jennifer Lawrence during her reign of unrivaled popularity. So did Lawrence herself, who said in an interview, “I feel like I’m becoming way too much [...] They like me now, but I’m going to get really annoying really fast. Just watch.”


In recent years, the growing number of feminist-oriented women’s news sites have picked up on the reality that female celebrities face harsher scrutiny, and more intense hatred, spurred on by these hints from the stars themselves. Hathaway, who makes her living as a Hollywood actress, rather heartbreakingly told HuffPost in 2014, “My impression is that people needed a break from me.” 


As with other feminist issues, the past few years has seen a surge of awareness in the media, and a reckoning of sorts. Doyle notes that celebrities like Spears and Miley Cyrus have tried to harness the power of their notoriety, to varying degrees of success. Others, like Lawrence and Hathaway, have gently critiqued the viciously fickle nature of audiences. Writers have penned think pieces that, though less likely to be mocked, were preceded by Chris Crocker’s viral video “Leave Britney Alone” (to which Doyle gives due attention in Trainwreck). The media and audiences have grown more aware that our tendency to tear public women to shreds is unfair, sexist, damaging to gender equality.  


Still, women in public aren’t yet equal. And if you were suffering under that delusion, Trainwreck is particularly illuminating, a reminder that the moment when a problem, in its most obvious form, has become taboo might actually be the most dangerous moment. In fact, it’s a perfect opportunity for that problem to hide in a more sneaky form. If we’re all being more careful not to hate on women for smiling, for suffering from a mental illness or for being sexually active while in the public eye, chances are we’ll find other reasons to disproportionately target women for over-the-top takedowns: bitchiness, insensitivity, offensiveness, and other crimes that might ruin a woman’s reputation more effectively than assault allegations could ruin a man’s.


Doyle writes that “[t]he trainwreck is the inverse of what a woman ought to be.” In a time when “Are you a feminist?” is a de rigeur interview question for starlets, there’s another set of criteria for what a woman ought to be ― not replacing the old one, certainly, but in addition. Women today are asked to maintain their sexiness, receptiveness, agreeableness and caring natures, as detailed in Trainwreck, but also be strong, independent, and politically aware. When Rihanna got back together with Chris Brown after he’d badly beaten her, Doyle points out, she had neither the support of the Brown stans (who’d always blamed her for their hero’s downfall) nor of the purportedly pro-woman crowd who berated her for setting a bad example. “[I]t was always Rihanna’s responsibility not to be abused,” she writes, “and, no matter what she did, she was always blamed for any abuse that did or could happen.”


We always have female targets who are considered correct to hate out of all proportion; it’s only the rationales that change. If we passionately despise Taylor Swift, it’s not because she strikes us as too girly and too obsessed with her brand and her ex-boyfriends ― it’s because it’s offensive that she lied about whether she approved Kanye West’s line about her on the track “Famous.” If we loathe Lena Dunham, it’s not for her neuroses, size, or penchant for talking about her own experiences and insecurities ― it’s because she allegedly molested her sister (she did not) and is racially insensitive at best (this is not wrong). If we react callously to Kim Kardashian being reportedly bound, gagged, and robbed at gunpoint, it’s just because she totally faked it for attention or an insurance payout (we assume). Never mind the open glee with which many greeted the downfall or suffering of these celebrities, the joy at having an acceptable reason to trash them, often with very gendered language ― the critiques were certainly valid, but the vitriol spoke to something else.



Women in public aren’t yet equal. And if you were suffering under that delusion, 'Trainwreck' is particularly illuminating.



Hillary Clinton and even Florida congresswoman Debbie Wasserman Schultz, imperfect politicians both, have been excellent targets for our collective misogynistic bile. Wasserman Schultz, who resigned in disgrace as head of the DNC after emails were leaked that suggested the organization had favored Clinton over the outsider Bernie Sanders, faced a hysterical backlash rooted in a long-time dislike amongst much of the party. While she’d doubtless drawn ire for certain political actions (see: her medical marijuana position, her support for the payday loan industry) and DNC choices (such as the odd primary debate schedule, believed to have favored the more well-known candidate), the feverish pitch was remarkable. She was booed offstage at the convention; critics have called her “Frizzilla,” “despised,” “an irritant” and slammed her as obsessed with her personal advancement. The last one might be particularly important. It grates on us that a woman might prioritize her own ambition. As Clinton herself has noted, her favorability ratings have dipped to shocking lows when she’s run for president, but when she’s been quietly, unobtrusively serving ― say, as Secretary of State ― we just love her.


We hate these women, often, all the more because they aligned themselves with feminism and then proved flawed. Through the Trainwreck lens, it’s obvious why there’s no mercy for female error. In an early chapter, Doyle traces how groundbreaking feminist Mary Wollstonecraft, who had a highly unconventional and dramatic romantic history, was reduced to a crazy, unstable slut after her death ― a narrative that overshadowed her work so completely that the feminist movement itself screeched, temporarily, to a halt. “As Wollstonecraft went,” Doyle writes, “so went her cause.” And because her shaming had harmed the women’s rights movement, women resented her flaws the most: “[I]t was women, in fact, who increasingly drove the shaming of Wollstonecraft, in an effort to avoid being associated with her disgrace,” she argues. “The only way for a woman to engage in feminism at all, it turned out, was to actively participate in the shaming.”


Women, as Doyle states at the end of her book, have never had so much opportunity to speak out, and yet this doesn’t mean the book on trainwrecks has been closed. Simply being spoken of in public as a woman was once considered deeply shameful, but to this day, women who ask for our attention, our vote, our money ― women who have the gall to exist unabashedly in public ― make us unsettled. “Women who have succeeded too well at becoming visible have always been penalized vigilantly and forcefully, and turned into spectacles,” she writes in the preface ― and that hasn’t changed.



We hate these women, often, all the more because they aligned themselves with feminism and then proved flawed.



Perhaps the closest women can come to living in public without being torn apart by the public is to guard their private lives so carefully that their mistakes can’t slip out ― an approach that, as Doyle shows with Spears, can catastrophically collapse. For now, Beyoncé exists mostly, to her fans, as an unobtainable artistic icon, not a woman who sits for interviews and goes clubbing. We have nothing to critique but her carefully crafted art, which no one can revile for being slutty, needy, try-hard, calculating or pathetic ― it’s her art. Elena Ferrante, the author of the smash-hit Neapolitan novels, hid her identity entirely, writing under a pseudonym to avoid her personal life becoming the public’s focus instead of her writing. We love them for not seeming to want anything from us, our attention or our affection. They’re just giving us their art and staying out of our way.


We’re vigilant, of course, for that illusion to shatter. It inevitably does, and both women have been under siege; Beyoncé has had her moments of mass critique and Elena Ferrante’s identity was recently revealed by a New York Review of Books report. When it does finally shatter, Trainwreck suggests, there’s rarely any warmth left for our once beloved women stars. 

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Rachel Weisz Might As Well Be Talking About Trump In This 'Denial' Clip

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“Freedom of speech means you can say whatever you want. What you can’t do is lie and then expect not to be accountable for it.”


Anyone spring to mind when you hear those words? Perhaps a certain rabble-rouser who’s seized far too much of our national attention throughout the past year? 


In this case, they’re the dramatized words of Deborah Lipstadt, an American historian played by Rachel Weisz in the new movie “Denial.” Lipstadt had to defend her work in an English court when a bloviating Holocaust denier sued her for libel, saying Lipstadt had no proof of Hitler’s mass slaughter.


The Huffington Post has an exclusive “Denial” clip that’s all too Trumpian for our liking. Lipstadt gets a galvanizing moment to remind people that not all opinions are equal, just like we expect Hillary Clinton will in November. Watch below. “Denial,” directed by Mick Jackson (”Temple Grandin”), is now in theaters.




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The Perfect Mother Is A Myth In This Coming-Of-Age Story

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At 17, Nadia Turner and Aubrey Evans worried about the usual teenage concerns: which Kanye West song to put on, which tight-fitting dress to wear out, which guys were worth their time, which childhood secrets were too taboo to reveal. But beneath the veneer of youthful ease, each harbored her own private pain, hoping that time, eventually, would bury it.


That’s the sad beauty of Brit Bennett’s debut novel The Mothers. The characters’ pasts and deeper desires may be obfuscated by time, like sheets of translucent ice, but eventually they resurface, painfully fracturing the lives that’ve been built up around them. 


Nadia and Aubrey ― two motherless girls living in a California town anchored by its Christian faith and close proximity to a military base ― are at the heart of the story, which is narrated by a chorus of women from the local church, Upper Room. The Mothers shower praise on Aubrey, who throws herself fully into the strictures of the community, committing to chastity promises and volunteer hours. But they’re less kind toward Nadia, who, they learn, has been sleeping with the pastor’s son, Luke, a secret relationship that results in a secret pregnancy, which Nadia terminates in order to pursue her college ambitions.


Nadia and Aubrey’s friendship blossomed after they each realized that the other had suffered from intense loss. Nadia’s mother inexplicably shot herself only a year earlier, and Aubrey’s mother was a lingering, ghostly presence in her life, having chosen her abusive boyfriend over the well being of her children, who escaped the violent situation to live on their own.


Aubrey eventually tells Nadia about her emotionally absent mother, but never dares to reveal what her mother’s boyfriend did to her when he snuck into her bedroom night after night.


Years later, she finally confides in Luke, with whom she grows closer with after Nadia moves to Ann Arbor for school. “I could hear him moving throughout the apartment, like a rat clicking through the pipes,” she says, heartbreakingly. “I could hear him before he got to my room. And I always wondered why my mom never heard but I told myself she couldn’t. Because she didn’t have super senses.”


Luke is the only person who knows Nadia’s secret, too ― aside from his family, who funds her abortion, ostensibly to help her, but also so that the news of their son’s escapades doesn’t tarnish their reputation as community leaders.


Eventually, both girls see Luke as a sort of surrogate for what they’ve lost, for the lives they could’ve had. The tension between the three of them cracks, almost imperceptibly at first, and then, irreparably, all at once. The resulting story is both gripping and tender toward each of its characters, if burdened with the occasional overwrought metaphor, which may distract some readers.


“Maybe she had become that type of wife, the ones who couldn’t go anywhere apart from their husband,” Nadia observes of Aubrey, “who kept calling him to check in and spent the whole time feeling guilty and displaced like an organ that had managed to exist outside the body.”


But for every off-kilter description there’s one that’s elegant in its simplicity. Of Luke’s God-fearing mother, Bennett writes, “A daughter grows older and draws nearer to her mother, until she gradually overlaps her like a sewing pattern. But a son becomes some irreparably separate thing. So even though she hated to see her son cry, she was grateful for the chance to mother him again.”


It’s perhaps because of these complex analyses of the emotions that come along with motherhood ― or the prospect of motherhood ― that Bennett has already earned the 5 Under 35 honor from the National Book Foundation, selected by Jacqueline Woodson, whose Another Brooklyn is similarly tender.


Motherhood, Bennett seems to say, may have been treated as a universal experience in the past, but that way of thinking comes at a cost. Our expectation that women will rise to the task with uniform aplomb has its causalities; we should, instead, feel comfortable expressing our individual desires and secret fears. 


The bottom line:


The Mothers brims with psychological insight and thoughtful commentary on the pain of loss and what motivates us to take actions maligned with our beliefs.


Who wrote it:


This is Brit Bennett’s debut novel, and it’s earned her a 5 Under 35 distinction from the National Book Foundation. She’s been previously published in The New Yorker, The New York Times Magazine, Paris Review, and Jezebel.


Who will read it:


The book is so broad and ambitious, it’s hard to narrow down a specific readership. Those interested in stories about girlhood, small towns, the false promise of athletic success, and the choices we must make as women will find something to enjoy.


What other reviewers think:


Vogue: “With echoes of James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On the Mountain, The Mothers is not your typical coming-of-age novel.”


Opening lines:


“We didn’t believe when we first heard because you know how church folk can gossip.”


Notable passage:


“We were girls once. As hard as that is to believe.


“Oh, you can’t see it now – our bodies have stretches and sagged, faces and necks dropping. That’s what happens when you get old. Every part of you drops, as if the body is moving closer to where it’s from and where it’ll return. But we were girls once, which is to say, we have all loved an ain’t-shit man.”


The Mothers
Brit Bennett
Riverhead, $26.00
Publishes Oct. 11


The Bottom Line is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.

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30 Years Later, A Sculpture Of Jesus As A Nude Woman Finally Gets Its Due

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Theologically and historically indefensible” ― that’s how Bishop Walter Dennis described a bronze sculpture of Christ as a nude woman in 1984.


The 4-foot, 250-pound figure hung in New York’s Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine ― although, thanks to the Bishop’s commentary and a barrage of hate mail, only briefly. Due to the aggressive backlash, the sculpture was promptly packed up and shipped out soon after its arrival. 


Over 30 years after the sculpture’s unsanctimonious removal, “Christa” is making her grand return. 


British artist Edwina Sandys ― who happens to be the daughter of Winston Churchill ― first molded the contentious form out of clay in 1974 while in London, as reported by The New York Times. “I thought: ‘What should I be doing today? Oh, I know, I’ll do a female Christ,’” the artist said. “It really just happened, more or less automatically.”


The statue, which only took three days to complete, was then cast in bronze resin, and later, again with a heavier bronze. Sandys, who at the time was friendly with the dean of the Cathedral Church, Very Rev. James Park Morton, asked if he was interested in mounting the sculpture, almost as a dare. He accepted. 


Although Sandys did not intend the work to be specifically in conversation with the women’s liberation or women’s rights movements of the 1970s, she knew the piece spoke directly to women in a way that religion often did not. “I wanted to portray the suffering of women,” she said in an interview with Nettie Reynolds. 


She continued to describe how, although the work is undoubtably feminist, she hopes to appeal to both men and women in her equalizing portrayal of suffering.


“In the past there were matriarchs in many societies and religions, and gender was not always a factor,” Sandys told Reynolds in 2015. “Today women are finding their way to take their place in the Christian church and in society in general. Most women of my generation have been stamped with the idea of Man’s superiority over Woman, which is hard to throw off without seeming aggressive. I hope that ‘Christa’ continues to reveal the journey of suffering that we all have in common.”



It’s not difficult to predict that “Christa” would have caused some extreme backlash, especially given the fact that it was mounted in a devotional space, as opposed to an art gallery. Aside from being, well, a woman, the sculpture is bare-breasted, which to some dissenters translated to “sexualized.” 


Thankfully, a lot has changed in terms of women’s rights since “Christa” was first displayed in 1984. The same cathedral where the contentious piece once hung is now exhibiting the image of feminine divinity once again, along with the work of 21 other contemporary artists, as part of a show called “The Christa Project: Manifesting Divine Bodies.


The exhibition will focus on the image of Christ, and how it is manifested through various symbols, artworks and rituals, expanding upon established and often exclusive traditions to visualize the divine light that lives within people of all genders, races, ethnicities, sexual orientations and abilities.


“In an evolving, growing, learning church,” Andrew M. L. Dietsche, the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of New York, wrote in a booklet accompanying the exhibition, “we may be ready to see ‘Christa’ not only as a work of art but as an object of devotion, over our altar, with all of the challenges that may come with that for many visitors to the cathedral, or indeed, perhaps for all of us.”


The inspired exhibition comes just months after the revival of the 1970s feminist exhibition “The Sister Chapel,” which too featured daring depictions of women as divine entities. Hopefully, “The Christa Project” is interpreted not just as an inventive and engaging novelty, but a necessary step toward democratizing symbolism and representation in religious spaces that serve men and women both. 


“The Christa Project: Manifesting Divine Bodies” will be on view at the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine from Oct. 6, 2016–March 12, 2017.

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Mom's Crocheted 'E.T.' Costume For Son Is Out Of This World

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In just four days, one Ohio mom created a costume her son will probably remember forever.


Stephanie Pokorny of Mentor, Ohio, crocheted an “E.T.” costume for her son, Jack, who will turn 2 in November. The mom told The Huffington Post she didn’t follow a pattern and freehanded the costume, which she started on a Friday and finished on a Monday.



Pokorny learned to crochet when she was a teen. “My grandma taught me when I was 16 sitting on a fabulous ‘70s brown plaid couch,” she told The Huffington Post.


Though Jack is a bit too young to fully appreciate “E.T.” now, his mom said he loves “hamming it up” in the costumes his mom makes and adores dress-up in general. This one in particular is a nod to Pokorny’s love for the 1980s, which she hopes to pass down to her son. 


“Mark my words, when he is old enough I plan to instill a healthy love of all things ‘80s as any good mother should,” she said.


The creative mom has also crocheted an Absolem costume (the caterpillar from “Alice in Wonderland”) for Jack and a Clint Eastwood costume for her son Jake that included the iconic poncho from “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly.”




Other crocheted Halloween costumes on her resume include Harley Quinn, a unicorn and the Cheshire Cat. But none of this comes as a surprise considering Pokorny’s love for the spooky holiday. The mom is a self-proclaimed “Halloween nut.”


See more of Pokorny’s crochet work on Facebook and on her Crochetverse site.


 


type=type=RelatedArticlesblockTitle=More Halloween costume ideas... + articlesList=57e097dee4b08cb14097b182,57e18135e4b08cb14098614e,57e56578e4b0e80b1ba1d013

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Real-Life Merman Is Living The Fab Life We've Always Dreamed Of

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Move over, Ariel. There’s a new mermaid in town ― actually, he’s a merman.


Eric Montel, who lives in Atlanta, Georgia, is a professional merman who performs under the name Rasta Merman Blix. And, yeah, we feel you ― we’re now considering a career as a merperson as well.





The 24-year-old, who even wears a gorgeous silicone tail, was recently featured in a video from YouTube star Davey Wavey.


While Montel’s life is just goals, he’s also spreading an important message. As someone who doesn’t fit the typical profile of a mermaid from a Hollywood film ― that is to say, white and female ― Montel wants people of color to know that they can be whatever the hell they want to be. 



“I want other people [who] look like me to know that our skin shouldn’t be what stops them from following their dreams,” he told BuzzFeed News. 


Montel is available for hire at special events and parties. When there’s water around, he can show off his merman moves. Judging from the video above, he’s a total expert at swimming ~flawlessly~ while wearing his tail. Seriously, when he swims, we just want to shout, “Yaaaas.” 


Ultimately, being a merman is more than a job, according to Montel. When he slips on his tail and dives into the water, he feels completely “at peace,” he says in the video. 


His experiences as a merman have also taught him a lesson that, frankly, we all should follow.  


“Be like the ocean, just be free. Follow your own current, love yourself,” the merman says in the video. “No matter what anybody says, if you want to wear a tail, put on a tail and be a mer.”

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30 Of The Littlest Fans Geeking Out At Comic Cons

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Comic Cons are the best places to celebrate your fandoms, no matter how young you are. 


New York Comic Con starts on Thursday in Manhattan and with kid-friendly activities like gaming lounges and the chance to see their favorite characters in real life, kids can enjoy the convention just as much as their parents. It’s even more fun when families cosplay (costume play) together.


Already professionals at dress-up, kids sometimes take it to the next level by cosplaying at conventions and proudly putting their fandoms on display.


Here are 30 cosplaying kids from various Comic Cons over the years:


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A Dark Comedy Podcast Indulges Your Weird Obsession With Murder

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In the first episode of “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt,” four women held in a bunker for 15 years against their will appear on a segment of the “Today Show” with Matt Lauer.


Asked about her abductor, a woman named Cyndee explains, “One night he invited me out to his car to see some baby rabbits, and I didn’t want to be rude, so, here we are!” Lauer responds, “I’m always amazed at what women will do because they’re afraid of being rude.”


The hosts of “My Favorite Murder,” Georgia Hardstark and Karen Kilgariff, would’ve had no such problem. Together, the pair runs a true-crime podcast about murder cases ― solved and unsolved, new and old ― in which they grant listeners such pearls of wisdom as “go be rude” and “fuck politeness” to avoid extended interactions with potential murderers.


Both hosts have supported these ideas for a long time, Hardstark told The Huffington Post over email. “Now we just find ourselves in the awesome position of sharing that message with a large audience of women who haven’t been told that they don’t have to be polite at the detriment of their safety,” she wrote, “and that being rude to protect yourself doesn’t make you a bitch.”


“My Favorite Murder” has been around for less than a year, but it’s already hit the No. 1 spot on iTunes’ list of top comedy podcasts. Its Facebook group ― the closed one, where members discuss pop culture’s obsession with true-crime, real-life acts of violence, and the show’s many inside jokes ― numbers at over 55,000. Last month the hosts participated at the Los Angeles Podcast Festival, recording their first-ever live episode in front of a studio audience raring to laugh at ... death?


There’s no denying “comedy podcast” and “murder” is an odd coupling, but their popularity suggests the show taps into a niche: people who want to indulge in the gruesome realities of the world. People who are mostly women. 





“We can only speculate, but it seems that women can empathize with victims and their families in a way that makes the crimes feel personal,” Hardstark said.


Crimes like that of John List, the man who killed his wife, mother and three children in the family’s New Jersey mansion before disappearing for 18 years, or Richard Speck, who raped and killed eight student nurses in Chicago.


In each hour-long episode, Hardstark and Kilgariff choose one murder case apiece to research and share with the other. Mini half-hour episodes pull from an increasingly large pool of “hometown murders,” stories solicited from their growing fanbase about the darkest moments in their towns’ histories. While “My Favorite Murder” might not have the journalistic integrity of, say, “Serial” ― the hosts introduced a segment called “Correction Corner” after a few episodes to address mistakes ― the podcast offers speed, allowing listeners to binge on a vast quantity of horrible stories.


But how do you laugh at a woman like Jennifer Morey, who survived an attack from a would-be killer in Texas thanks to her own quick thinking? In short: you don’t.


“When we joke and laugh, it’s aimed at the heaviness of the subject and just how fucked up it all is,” the host said. Instead of poking fun at victims, the hosts rail against the world around them: maximum sentencing laws, statutes of limitations, the backlog of rape kits waiting to be tested, and the idea that media and law enforcement fail to sympathize with sex workers’ deaths. 


Of course, the podcast is for listeners of any and every gender. Many of the self-described “murderinos” who connect with Kilgariff, Hardstark and one another on the podcast’s social media pages start by expressing their surprise at finding so many others interested in pitch-black true-crime. But maybe it provides a greater release for women brought into the world knowing it might sometimes be a little less safe for them. No one loves murder, exactly. (I know from telling others about this article that saying “I’m writing about a murder podcast” is a quick way to raise a lot of eyebrows.) Rather, we like the way these stories make us feel ― whether that’s being a smidge more grateful for ho-hum mundanity, satisfied that we are correct in our worldview (yes, it is scary out there) or in awe of the fact that something unexpected may be always right around the corner.


And that’s exactly why it’s okay to be “rude” sometimes.


As the women of “My Favorite Murder” would say ...




“My Favorite Murder” is available on iTunes. Follow the podcast on Facebook and Twitter

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19 Latino '90s Songs That Were Totally Your Jam

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The ‘90s were about a lot more than tamagotchis, dial-up internet and Y2K mania. For Latinos, it was a decade that culminated in the music scene’s “Latin Explosion.” 


We have the ‘90s to thank for the rise of some the biggest Latino superstars today within the English-language market, like Shakira, Ricky Martin, Marc Anthony, Jennifer Lopez and Christina Aguilera. But it wasn’t just Latino crossover artists that stole our hearts during the final years of the 20th century ― dance hits about girl stealing sharks, puppy dance moves and, of course, a girl named Macarena were also reminders that music and Latino culture can truly be universal. 


Here are just 19 Latinos songs that were totally your jam in ‘90s: 



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The National Poetry Day Hashtag Is Getting A Little Off-Topic

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Happy National Poetry Day! Maybe you’re celebrating by curling up with a steaming latte and a volume of Rainer Maria Rilke, or by wandering over to your local indie bookshop to add Terrance Hayes and Claudia Rankine to your to-read pile.


Or maybe you simply tapped over to the #NationalPoetryDay hashtag on Twitter during a free moment to take a breather from the endless presidential campaign coverage, the drudgery of work, and daily life. On this hashtag, you can enjoy a celebration of the underappreciated literary art form.


Well, about that. 






Yep, things got aggressively political, very fast in the #NationalPoetryDay hashtag. Plus, we definitely noticed a trend in how opinionated poets like to express themselves: “Roses are red, violets are blue.”


We gathered tweets from today’s hashtag that imitated the same poem, familiar to any American preschooler, while turning an appreciation of poetry into yet another opportunity to vent partisan vitriol.


Hey, it wasn’t just Clinton opponents: 






If you were hoping for an artistically focused hashtag about the craft of poetry, too bad; #NationalPoetryDay is mostly a sea of political doggerel (intentionally bad or otherwise) at this point. Here’s a selection:


 



Need a palate cleanser? Here’s something completely different ― well, not completely different:






Seriously, guys, by next National Poetry Day, let’s think of some new ways to write a poem. This guy isn’t even trying:





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Jennifer Lopez And Marc Anthony Are Working On An Album Together

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Jennifer Lopez and Marc Anthony are back together... in the studio, at least. 


The former power couple, who separated in 2011, are currently working on Lopez’s second Spanish-language album, according to Billboard. Anthony will executive produce the project through his entertainment company, Magnus Media.


The first time Lopez and Anthony collaborated musically, it was for the ‘90s mega hit “No Me Ames.” Since then, the two have collaborated on singles like “Escapémonos and on Lopez’s 2007 Spanish album “Como ama una mujer.”


The upcoming album will be her second all-Spanish record, currently set to be released in 2017. The first single from the album is set to drop this November, Billboard reports.


“I am so excited and really looking forward to this new musical journey and to celebrate my Latin roots with Marc Anthony and the Sony/Magnus family,” Lopez said in a statement.


It’s been five years since the dynamic music duo divorced but both Anthony and Lopez have showed each other nothing but love since the split. Most recently, Lopez surprised her ex-husband during his Radio City Hall concert in August to sing “No Me Ames.” 



Always fun sharing the stage w this one... @marcanthony #NoMeAmes #radiocitymusichall #familia

A photo posted by Jennifer Lopez (@jlo) on




More of that music magic to come in 2017. 

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'I Want A Dyke For President' Billboard Sends A Powerful Message In NYC

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“I want a dyke for president,” reads the rendering for a 20-by-30-foot public artwork in downtown Manhattan. “I want a person with AIDS for president and I want a fag for vice president and I want someone with no health insurance and I want someone who grew up in a place where the earth is so saturated with toxic waste that they didn’t have a choice about getting leukemia.”


Zoe Leonard’s iconic 1992 poem, titled “I want a president,” will soon be installed as a giant billboard on the High Line, New York City’s elevated park in the neighborhood Chelsea. The bold words, presented by Friends of the High Line beginning Oct. 11, will appear just weeks before the 2016 presidential election, drawing a stark parallel between Leonard’s lines from the ‘90s and the uneasiness many voters still feel today.


Leonard is a queer feminist activist known for her photography and sculpture, works that responded to the AIDS epidemic that devastated the artistic community in the 1980s and 1990s. She wrote “I want a president” when, as a press release for High Line Art points out, the poet Eileen Myles ran for president as an “openly female” independent candidate against George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton and Ross Perot.


Leonard’s poem was set to be published by a queer magazine at the time, but, when the publication dissolved, the work began to circulate amongst the artist’s social group, its typewriter font passing from friend to friend to friend-of-a-friend. By 2006, the poem was turned into a postcard courtesy of the feminist genderqueer journal LTTR, and later read, translated and reappropriated by fans enduring their own tumultuous political experiences in the U.S. and beyond. Just this week, Dazed recruited musician Mykki Blanco to recite the text in a video online.


This month, Leonard’s words are larger than life, set to be plastered on a pillar tourists throttle by every day. “I am interested in the space this text opens up for us to imagine and voice what we want in our leaders, and even beyond that, what we can envision for the future of our society,” Leonard explained in a statement. “I still think that speaking up is itself a vital and powerful political act.”


Leonard’s poem continues in the “I want” construction, ending on a particularly searing indictment: “I want to know why we started learning somewhere down the line that a president is always a clown: always a john and never a hooker. Always a boss and never a worker, always a liar, always a thief and never caught.”


It’s difficult to read those words without conjuring the faces of Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, comparing and contrasting the depths through which the candidates had to wade to get to where they are. “While Leonard’s text speaks with the mourning, rage, and profound disappointment surrounding the AIDS epidemic and the consequent political inaction that left an indelible mark on our culture,” Melanie Kress, assistant curator for High Line Art, said in a statement, “it also breathes heavy with the timeless experiences of health, wealth, loss, and love.”


In an interview earlier this year with The New York Times, Myles revisited her run for presidency, looking back on the time when Leonard’s poem debuted. As for the Trump v. Hillary showdown, she had the following to say:



Hillary is no Bernie Sanders. But she’s a politician, and she understands Congress. And I think with that kind of twisted beauty, she could lead our country. I want a ‘‘she’’ in the White House now.



Zoe Leonard’s “I want a president” will be on view from Oct. 11 to Nov. 17, 2016, on the High Line under the Standard hotel, overlooking West 13th and Little West 12th Streets.

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There's Going To Be A Concert On The U.S.-Mexico Border

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Music has the ability to transport you. In this case, it could take you across borders.


On Oct. 15, a slew of talented musicians and celebrities will head to the U.S.-Mexico border for a free, bilingual concert called “RiseUp AS ONE.” The show will include performances by Juanes, Carlos Vives, Andra Day, Jesse & Joy, Los Tigres del Norte, Lila Downs and Alejandro Sanz, as well as appearances by special guests Gael García Bernal, Jonás Cuarón, Mía Maestro and Wilmer Valderrama.


The event, staged by Univision and Fusion, will be held in San Diego, Calif. at the Cross Border Xpress (CBX), an airport terminal and enclosed skywalk bridge that provides access to Tijuana Airport. The bridge spans just over 390 feet, and is the first to directly connect a facility in the U.S. to a foreign airport, making it the perfect location for such an event. 


“The U.S.-Mexico border provides the perfect stage for this amazing event and is a way to highlight diversity and inclusion, despite borders,” said Fusion Media Group’s Co-President and Chief Content Officer, Camila Jimenez Villa, in a statement. “This location and our incredible lineup of award-winning artists will celebrate, through the power of music, the connectedness of our world and the positivity that occurs when we show empathy, respect and openness to one another.”


The concert will be broadcast live in Spanish and English on Univision and Fusion, respectively, from 7-10 p.m. EST. 

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