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Stephen Colbert Gives That ’Hi Stranger’ Claymation Video A Donald Trump Twist

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As if that “Hi Stranger” claymation video wasn’t weird enough.


On Friday, the “Late Show with Stephen Colbert” gave artist Kirsten Lepore’s bizarre clip that swept across the web last week a Donald Trump twist. 


But be warned, you will not be able to unsee the cartoon president whispering sweet nothings to camera. 


Check out the segment above, and see how it compares to Lepore’s original below:





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This 'Boy' Band Is Genderless, And They're Breaking Down Barriers

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This “boy band” isn’t your typical pop sensation.


All members of the group, called FFC-Acrush, are androgynous people assigned female at birth but who identify as genderless ― and they’re quickly rising to fame in China.


The band are affectionately known as Acrush and they’re made up of five members aged in their 20s or younger: Lu Keran, An Junxi, Peng Xichen, Min Junqian and Lin Fan, according to Quartz.


And although Acrush was assembled by the Chinese entertainment company Zhejiang Huati Culture Communication Co. Ltd., they have all been dressing with androgynous swag for years.



【FFC-Acrush】

A post shared by Acrush (@ffc_acrush) on




Acrush has nearly 1 million followers on Weibo, China’s version of Twitter. And the group just launched official accounts on Instagram and Twitter.


Their female fans call them “husbands” ― a term usually used to describe male pop stars like Justin Bieber, according to the BBC.


Agent Zhou Xiaobai told Quartz that the group avoids using terms that identify them as “he” or “she.” Instead, they use the genderless term “meishaonian,” which translates as “handsome youth.” 


The “A” in Acrush represents Adonis, the mythological Greek god of beauty and desire, according to Quartz. Zhou told the news outlet that Acrush is a “group advocating freedom, not bounded by frames.”


The band’s official Twitter account profiles each band member in typical boy band fashion. Peng is the romantic lead singer. Min is a musician at heart. An is the rebellious one. Lu is a natural-born dancer and Lin is the baby of the group at 18 years old.


The group’s parent company recruits musical talent from across China. They’re trained and then placed into various girl groups or boy bands who perform songs and play soccer on stage ― under the umbrella brand name Fantasy Football Confederation. (That’s why the band’s official name is “FFC-Acrush.”)


And while all the band members have chosen to assume an androgynous identity, company policy prohibits any member of Acrush discussing their personal sexual orientation.



Hello!We are Acrush!Glad to see you here! Thank you very much for your attention!

A post shared by Acrush (@ffc_acrush) on




Their debut video is due out at the end of April, when Zhejiang Huati Culture Communication plans to start launching another three girl groups, according to the BBC.


H/T Quartz.




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'Walking Dead' Actor Daniel Newman Comes Out On YouTube

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Walking Dead” actor Daniel Newman opened up about his sexuality publicly for the first time, coming out to fans on his social media platforms. 


The 35-year-old star, who has also appeared in “The Dark Night Rises” and “Sex and the City,” first made the announcement on Twitter Thursday evening. 






Though he stopped short of using the words “gay” or “bisexual” in reference to himself, Newman elaborated further in an emotional, nearly-seven-minute YouTube video. The star said he felt compelled to come out after volunteering at a shelter for homeless LGBTQ youth in the clip, which can be viewed below. 





“I was helping out and volunteering at some homeless youth shelters, and this girl came up to me. She was like, ‘Thank you so much for helping out with [LGBTQ kids], and she said it like she didn’t deserve it,” Newman said. “She said, ‘Because you’re straight.’” When the actor told the girl that he wasn’t, in fact, straight, she informed him that coming out could “help change our lives.”


That encounter, he said, “hit me like a gut punch. I realized how important it is, in this day and age, to be visible, have people know who you are.” After noting that he wanted to to steer clear of politics, he added, “You see at this moment how rights are getting stripped from people so quickly. Who are the easiest people to take rights from? People that are invisible, people that are staying silent.” 


“When you are accomplishing incredible things and you’re hiding who you are, you’re hurting hundreds of millions of people,” he said. “So, by us staying quiet, we’re partially to blame for kids getting beat up and ridiculed, stereotypes and stigmas. If you don’t like them, you need to be visible, to change them.” He went to offer praise for men who have been labeled “sissies” for their effeminate behavior, noting, “They’re the strongest because they didn’t have a choice. Those guys are incredible and so, so amazing.”  


In a Friday interview with People, Newman cited his southern upbringing as the reason why he’d remained silent about his sexuality until this week. “I didn’t really think about it really as hiding. I never thought of myself as being in a closet or hidden,” he said. “It just was that I didn’t really feel like talking about my private life.”


Thrilled to see you living authentically, Daniel! 


For the latest in LGBTQ entertainment, check out the Queer Voices newsletter.

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Pop Art Pioneer James Rosenquist Dead At 83

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Artist James Rosenquist, a leading figure of the 1960s pop art movement known for his room-sized works, has died at the age of 83, his studio said.


Rosenquist helped define the genre of color-bursting displays of common objects that was also championed by the likes Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein.


He died on Friday, the studio said, without providing further details.


Rosenquist had early experience as a billboard painter, which became a springboard for presentations of images that he culled from sources including print advertisements and magazines, it said.


He had shows in some of the world’s most celebrated museums, including New York’s Museum of Modern Art and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao in Spain, it said.


“Painting is probably much more exciting than advertising,” Rosenquist was quoted as saying by the Museum of Modern Art.


“So why shouldn’t it be done with that power and gusto, with that impact.”



One of his more celebrated works is “F-111,’ which is billboard in size and made in 1964 and 1965, during the U.S. war in Vietnam. It combines images including a U.S. military warplane, a bombing and scenes of American prosperity, including a smiling blonde girl sitting under a hair dryer reminiscent of a missile, the museum said.


His celebrated 1962 painting of Marilyn Monroe was created shortly after her death and shows fragmented images of the global star that includes a segment of the Coca-Cola brand name, it said.


Rosenquist was born in Grand Forks, North Dakota where he had a nomadic life that took him and his parents to about a half dozen places including in Minnesota and Ohio. He studied at the University of Minnesota and moved to New York in his twenties.


“Painting has everything to do with memory. Images of the unexpected, the surreal, well up unbidden in your mind - as do things you haven’t resolved,” he said in his autobiography written with David Dalton titled “Painting Below Zero.” 

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Pregnant Syrian-American Woman Debuts Fire Rap Video 'Hijabi'

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Mona Haydar is launching her music career in a big way.


On Monday, Haydar, a Syrian-American poet and artist, debuted “Hijabi,” her first rap music video ― which she filmed when she was eight months pregnant. The video’s style is reminiscent of Beyoncé’s visual album “Lemonade,” and Muslim women in particular may find it just as empowering.


Consider its opening lyrics:



What that hair look like? Bet that hair look nice. Don’t that make you sweat? Don’t that feel too tight?


Yo, what your hair look like? Bet your hair look nice. How long your hair is?


You need to get your life.



Haydar’s song isn’t just an anthem for Muslim women. It’s an ode to diversity and a clapback to the haters who reject it.


“Given our current administration’s insistence on demonizing and maligning the bodies of women and Muslims, among others, I wanted to get this song out as soon as possible,” Haydar, who now lives in New York, told The Huffington Post. “I hoped that a pregnant woman who is obviously Muslim [and] creating art and speaking truth would inspire people and offer some levity, joy and hope.”


After “Hijabi” debuted Monday, many people became instant fans.














For Haydar, hip-hop and Islam are intertwined.


She grew up in Flint, Michigan, listening to the likes of Mos Def, A Tribe Called Quest and Rakim ― hip-hop artists and groups with members who, as she pointed out, have identified as Muslim. (Q-Tip from A Tribe Called Quest practices Islam and often discusses his faith during interviews.)


“The immigrant Muslim community owes so much to the black community, which has been here, practicing Islam, since the time when Africans were kidnapped and enslaved here in America,” Haydar told HuffPost.


“You cannot separate Islam from blackness or blackness from hip-hop or hip-hop from Islam,” she added.


Haydar is grateful for black American Islam and its contributions to hip-hop. “What a blessing it is to me that I can even be a small part of a great legacy in creating culture,” she said.



Last year, Haydar and her husband, who is a white American Muslim, made headlines when they hosted public “Ask A Muslim” booths, compete with free doughnuts, in response to Islamophobia after terrorist attacks in Paris and San Bernardino, California.


Her latest song is a similar attempt to bring about a positive discussion of diversity and acceptance.


“I want to be able to inspire young girls and let them know that they can look and dress any way they want to and still be relevant and current,” she told HuffPost.


Not everyone, however, has welcomed her efforts.


Haydar says that more conservative Muslims have reached out to her and dismissed her music as “haram,” or forbidden. Those people, she says, believe that women shouldn’t sing or perform. However, that’s not what Haydar believes.


Some people on Twitter have even called her music cringe-worthy, while others have accused her of cultural appropriation.










Haydar maintains that hip-hop has always been a part of her life.


“The cultural language I was brought up in, and my first real love, was hip-hop,” she told HuffPost. “I didn’t choose to fuse hip-hop with my faith. It is simply how my heart is expressing itself.”


As for the Muslims who believe her music is forbidden by their faith, Haydar believes they will eventually come around ― and she sends them her love.


“I’ve studied [Islam]. I’m not a kid rushing into my art. I’m a grown woman who believes that art can change the world,” she said. “I’m not worried about the haters.”


“They’ll get on board eventually and I will welcome them with all my love when they do,” she added. “In the meantime, I still love them dearly.”




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2017 ACM Award Winners Include Maren Morris And Thomas Rhett

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Country music’s biggest stars packed the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas on Sunday for the 2017 Academy of Country Music Awards, and what a night it was! 


Hosts Luke Bryan and Dierks Bentley kicked things off before amazing performances and acceptance speeches filled the rest of the evening. 


Here are the night’s big winners: 


*The list will be updated as winners are announced*


Entertainer of the Year


Jason Aldean


Luke Bryan


Florida Georgia Line


Carrie Underwood


Keith Urban


Female Vocalist of the Year


Kelsea Ballerini


Miranda Lambert


Maren Morris


Kacey Musgraves


Carrie Underwood


Male Vocalist of the Year


Jason Aldean


Dierks Bentley


Thomas Rhett


Chris Stapleton


Keith Urban


Vocal Duo of the Year


Big & Rich


Brothers Osborne


Dan + Shay


Florida Georgia Line


Maddie & Tae



Vocal Group of the Year


Eli Young Band


Little Big Town


Old Dominion


Rascal Flatts


Lady Antebellum


New Male Vocalist of the Year


Kane Brown


Chris Janson


Chris Lane


Jon Pardi


Brett Young


New Female Vocalist of the Year


Lauren Alaina


Cam


Brandy Clark


Maren Morris


New Vocal Duo or Group of the Year


A Thousand Horses


Brothers Osborne


Dan + Shay


LoCash


Maddie & Tae



Ashley Gorley


Luke Laird


Hillary Lindsey


Shane McAnally


Lori McKenna


Album of the Year


“Black” – Dierks Bentley


“Dig Your Roots” – Florida Georgia Line


“Hero” – Maren Morris


“Ripcord” – Keith Urban


“The Weight of These Wings” – Miranda Lambert


Single Record of the Year


“Blue Ain’t Your Color” – Keith Urban


“H.O.L.Y.” – Florida Georgia Line


“Humble and Kind” – Tim McGraw


“My Church” – Maren Morris


“Vice” – Miranda Lambert




“Blue Ain’t Your Color” – Keith Urban


“Die a Happy Man” – Thomas Rhett


“Humble and Kind” – Tim McGraw


“Kill a Word” – Eric Church featuring Rhiannon Giddens


“Tennessee Whiskey” – Chris Stapleton


“Vice” – Miranda Lambert



Video of the Year


“Fire Away” – Chris Stapleton


“Forever Country” – Artists of Then, Now & Forever


“Humble and Kind” – Tim McGraw


“Peter Pan” – Kelsea Ballerini


“Vice” – Miranda Lambert


Vocal Event of the Year


“Different for Girls” – Dierks Bentley featuring Elle King


“Forever Country” – Artists of Then, Now & Forever


“May We All” – Florida Georgia Line featuring Tim McGraw


“Setting the World on Fire” – Kenny Chesney featuring Pink


“Think of You” – Chris Young featuring Cassadee Pope

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The ACM Awards Trolled The Oscars So Hard With 'La La Land' Diss

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What’s a little bit of trolling between award shows? 


We’re now living in a post-Oscar gaffe world, so it only make sense that one of the first award shows since the 2017 Academy Awards would poke fun at the “La La Land” and “Moonlight” mix-up.  


At the 52nd Academy of Country Music Awards on Sunday night, presenters Nancy O’Dell and David Copperfield did their best Faye Dunaway and Warren Beatty (grade: B-) by announcing the wrong winner for the “Song of the Year” category. 





“Uh, this is odd, David?” O’Dell joked, handing the envelope off to the magician. 


Then, Copperfield announced that Emma Stone of “La La Land” was the winner, with the camera zooming in to confirm that her name was actually written on the envelope.





But, of course, you don’t bring a magician to an award ceremony and expect him to just say the winner, right? Cue Copperfield setting the envelope on fire, while O’Dell played along. 


(Fun fact: Faye Dunaway also wanted to set her envelope on fire, but did not possess the magical capabilities.)





In the end, the duo cut the jokes and awarded Thomas Rhett’s “Die a Happy Man” as Song of the Year, but if we learned anything from the Oscars, the fake mistake is what people will actually remember. 


Watch the peak award show moment below.





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College Student Creates A Mobile Directory Of 600 Books That Prioritize Diversity

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As a kid, Kaya Thomas enjoyed reading. “No matter how old I was, what I was going through, how I felt in any moment, a book was always a means of escape” she wrote in a blog post in 2015. “A way to dive into a new world and become a new character.”


As a self-professed “nerdy black girl in high school,” Thomas’ love of books, and the escapism they afforded, only grew. She’d read three or four a week, seeking solace in their pages when she “felt very different than most of my peers.”


Something changed in those high school years, though. As a mature reader, she began to pay more attention to how the characters in her favorite books were described ― namely, how they were meant to look. “When I was a teenager I began to realize that a lot of the books I read didn’t have characters that looked like me,” she’s since admitted. “Realizing that made me feel invisible.”


So as a student at Dartmouth College, Thomas decided to do something about her sense of invisibility. Not only did she search the internet, compiling her own list of books written by authors of color that put characters of color in primary storylines, she learned to code so that she could share her database with other young readers. After taking part in a Black Girls Code hackathon, and learning the ins and outs of iOs during an internship, Thomas devised an iPhone app that functioned as a directory of 300 books showcasing characters of color.







“Young people should be able to see themselves represented in literature, so they know that their stories are important and that there are authors who [...] celebrate their background and show the real lives of people like them,” Thomas wrote in an email to The Huffington Post. She cited books like Nalo Hopkinson’s The Chaos and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie’s Purple Hibiscus as influential titles in her own life.


“When young people don’t see themselves represented positively in books, TV, movies and other forms of media, that erasure really harms self-image and how you perceive yourself as you grow up,” she added.


Thomas’ app ― We Read Too ― launched in 2014 and has since grown to include over 600 relevant books. It’s also amassed over 15,000 iPhone users, who’ve downloaded the free app and suggested 1,600 other titles be added to the database. And Thomas wants to meet their demands.


Her skills as an iOS developer have grown throughout the course of her various internships and engagement with online development communities. She recently launched an Indiegogo campaign with the hopes of updating her app, quickly surpassing her goal of raising $10,000. Now with a stretch goal of $25,000, she has a few more objectives in mind: hire someone to review the books users suggest and grow the database to include 1,000 titles, create an Android version of We Read Too and initiate a UI redesign, and create a website version of her directory.






“My goal for We Read Too is for it to be the primary directory that contains thousands of works by authors of color of various genres,” Thomas explained. “I want to celebrate these authors and for them to always have a place where their work is celebrated and showcased. “



Thomas describes the response to her app as overwhelmingly positive. She’s seen downloads from all over the world, with parents, educators and students praising the database in reviews.


“I was overwhelmed with joy,” Thomas wrote online. “I knew that if my app had even helped one person feel represented and show them that their stories are being told too, I had done the right thing. This is why technology needs a diverse set of developers making software. We all have stories to tell and we all have communities we love, let’s make technology for us and for those communities.”


As a rising developer, Thomas recognizes the essential role art and culture play in tech communities. Books and music, she says, were just as important to her experience as science and math. Because of that, she seems to favor the STEAM acronym over its shortened cousin.


“I think a lot of folks don’t realize that STEM needs the creativity and mindset that comes from the artistic community,” she concluded. “The two fields are linked and one should not get more support over the other.”






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Another Reason Not To Give Up On Your Novel: J.K. Rowling Will Be Really Disappointed

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There’s a great novel inside of you, just waiting for the moment to burst out. Not sure about that? Take J.K. Rowling’s word for it.


In a series of tweets ― inspired by one from Beauty Jackson, a podcast host and blogger with a sizable Twitter following ― Rowling encouraged creatives to never give up on their passion projects, even if the odds of success seem insurmountable.


Here’s the original tweet, which Rowling quoted:










In a long thread, she extols the value of finishing work even if it never finds an audience, the lessons learned by persevering in creating art, and the importance of remembering that success is not a true measure of quality.


















Easy for her to say, right? If every struggling author eventually had a smash-hit debut novel that left them multi-millionaires, if not billionaires, then, well, money would probably cease to have much meaning.


It’s been well-documented how winding, and often difficult, a path Rowling took to superstardom ― a single mother who’d worked for Amnesty International and taught English in Portugal, she found herself scraping by to support her daughter in Edinburgh on state benefits while she toiled on her Harry Potter manuscript and trained to teach. After all that hard work, the book was rejected somewhere between “loads” and “12” times by publishers before Bloomsbury took a chance on the magic of Hogwarts.


And, to be clear, Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone wasn’t her first novel. She wrote her first book at 6 years old; it was about a rabbit.


The point is, creating stuff ― whole-cloth, out of your brain ― is difficult, and it can be exhausting. It’s especially exhausting when your work isn’t appreciated, after all the thankless hours you invested in it. But if you’re really determined and you believe in yourself, maybe you just need a solid pep talk to carry you through the tough times ― and J.K. Rowling always serves the good stuff.

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10 Spring Flower Names Beyond The Classic Lily And Rose

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Spring has officially arrived! The season is traditionally associated with rebirth, when gardens begin to burst into bloom after a long gray winter. Many of these flowers have wonderful evocative names especially apropos for a springtime babe. This year we focus on the more unusual spring flower names, moving beyond Lily and Lilac.


Anemone



Another ancient Greek mythological name, that of a flower sacred to Aphrodite, it is also known as the windflower. The anemone blooms early in the spring.


Azalea



A lovely spring-blooming blossom, prized for its beauty and richness of color, the Azalea is sometimes called the “take care of yourself” flower. As a baby name, it didn’t pop onto the top lists until 2012, but has now moved up to number 581 and 294 on Nameberry ― perhaps helped by connections to musical artists Azealia Banks and Iggy Azalea.


Bluebell



There were some raised eyebrows when Spice Girl Geri Halliwell called her daughter Bluebell Madonna in 2006, but in the decade since then, exotic flower names have become much more accepted ― and this one can also be seen as a combination of two trendy names ― Blue and Belle.


Camellia



This is a lovely flower name, in use since the 1930s, which in the language of flowers, denotes admiration and perfection. Camellia can be seen as a more distinctive variation on Amelia or Camilla.


Freesia



This lovely perennial fragrant flower named for a German botanist named Freese is often found in wedding bouquets. Parents might be attracted to a floral name that embraces the concept of freedom.


Marigold



Marigold, sometimes associated with the Virgin Mary, has moved from the pages of old British novels and children’s books onto an increasing number of birth certificates. One possible influence: Lady Edith’s daughter on “Downton Abbey.”


Orchid



The orchid projects an image of swank, sophistication and significant events.  In the language of flowers it symbolizes love, beauty, refinement and thoughtfulness. With ‘O’ the current vowel du jour, this would make a striking possibility.


Primrose



Rose and her extensions are very much on trend these days ― Rosemary, Rosalind, Rosamund ― but this name, meaning first rose, puts it in second place. Featured in The Hunger Games, Primrose is now number 259 in England and 348 on Nameberry.


Tulip



One of the most popular flowers in the garden, Tulip is still a rarity in the nursery. It reached the spotlight when Rebecca Romijn and Jerry O’Connell used it as a middle name for one of their twin daughters in 2009.


Zinnia



The brightly colored Zinnia, loved by butterflies, hummingbirds and people, is a surprise late bloomer in the baby name garden ― perfect for the parent looking for a flower name with some zip. Never on the national popularity list, it’s now 549 on Nameberry.

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Christopher Nolan Explains Why He Cast Harry Styles In 'Dunkirk'

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We’re looking forward to seeing “Dunkirk” for many reasons, most importantly because it’s Harry Styles’ feature film debut. Director Christopher Nolan spoke with the Los Angeles Times about his new movie and ended up disclosing why he cast Styles in the first place.


“When we put the cast together, we had some established names: Kenneth Branagh, Mark Rylance, Tom Hardy, Cillian Murphy,” Nolan told the LA Times. “But for the guys on the beach, we really wanted young unknowns. [Styles is] not that unknown, but he’d never done anything as an actor before. So he auditioned. I auditioned literally thousands of young men with different combinations of young men. And he had it.”


The “Dunkirk” cast is packed with movie stars, and yet Styles has emerged as one of the most talked-about actors in the film. A moment in the trailer in which Styles is trapped underwater sent Twitter into a frenzy last year. 






Styles also chopped off his famously long locks before filming “Dunkirk.” When asked how Styles felt about cutting his hair for the role, Nolan shut the reporter down. 


“I don’t want to get into it,” Nolan said. 


The world may never know what Styles thought about his close-cropped cut, but at least his sacrifice was for a good cause. The singer donated his hair to the Little Princess Trust, a charity that makes wigs out of real hair for children experiencing hair loss due to cancer treatment. 



Whoops. #Littleprincesstrust

A post shared by @harrystyles on




Despite any lingering drama around his ‘do, we’re glad to hear Styles earned his part fair and square. 


“Dunkirk” hits movie theaters on July 21.

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How This State Is Targeting Asian-Americans With Its Abortion Laws

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Critics fear a new Arkansas abortion ban will have particularly harmful consequences for the Asian-American community.


Asian-American groups are speaking out against a new Arkansas law that prohibits doctors and other providers from performing an abortion that is sought out based on the predicted sex of the fetus. 


The legislation, which was signed by Governor Asa Hutchinson on Wednesday, was spurred by increased immigration by couples from cultures where sex selective abortion is “prevalent,” lead sponsor Rep. Charlie Collins (R-Fayetteville) previously explained to Arkansas News. Speaking to the New York Times, he even brought up China as an example.


And that’s not sitting right with the Asian-American community. 


“This ban is based on the false premise that AAPI families prefer sons over daughters and will seek abortions because of that preference,” Aliya Khan, Policy Associate at the National Asian Pacific American Women’s Forum (NAPAWF), told the Huffington Post in an email. “Despite the fact that this myth has been debunked, ... politicians continue to use these awful stereotypes to advance their anti-abortion agenda.”


The text of the act states that prior to performing an abortion, the doctor must ask the patient whether she knows the sex of the unborn child. If she does, the doctor will then inform her that sex selection abortion is prohibited. The physician will also need to get a hold of the woman’s medical records as they’re unable to go forth with the procedure “until reasonable time and effort is spent to obtain the medical records of the pregnant woman.”


Ultimately, the woman’s pregnancy history would be investigated. 


Doctors who fail to follow the law will face misdemeanor charges, and will be punishable by up to a year in jail and a fine of up to $2,500. They’ll also risk losing their medical license or having it suspended. 


“I think it protects everyone concerned. It especially protects unborn girls,” Jeff Cox, who’s the head of the Arkansas Family Council and has been pushing for the ban, said according to the Associated Press.


Asian American groups, however, don’t buy this logic. They note that research tells a very different story and the basis of the law is drawn from harmful stereotypes. 


A 2014 University of Chicago Law School study actually showed that foreign-born Chinese, Indians, and Korean Americans, on average, have more female children than white Americans. And as research and policy organization the Guttmacher Institute mentioned, data shows that sex selective abortions don’t regularly occur in the U.S. Moreover, almost 90% of all abortions take place in the first trimester ―before the woman can know the sex of her baby. And implementing such policies haven’t yielded success in ending sex-selective abortions abroad, the Guttmacher Institute noted. 


Both Collins and Cox themselves have mentioned that they haven’t actually heard of any documented sex selective abortion cases in Arkansas.


Still, it’s stories about infanticide and gender-based abortions in China and South Asia that lawmakers have used as evidence for the need for these sex-selective abortion bans, The Washington Post pointed out. 


The spread of misinformation puts women’s reproductive health in the Asian American community at stake, critics say. Just before the bill was signed, Sung Yeon Choimorrow, NAPAWF’s interim executive director, mentioned that the penalties could deter doctors from providing care patients need due to the threat of punishment.  


She explained in a piece for Rewire that the ban “will turn Asian-American people seeking reproductive health services into suspects and reproductive health-care providers into investigators... It will further stigmatize their patients while creating additional barriers to care.”


Other organizations like the American Civil Liberties Union of Arkansas also explained that the investigation portion of the ban violates women’s right to privacy. The group plans to challenge the legislation. 


“The law of the land is that abortion is legal up to the point of viability,” the group’s executive director, Rita Sklar, said according to The Associated Press. “Nobody should pry into the mind of the woman who wants the procedure.”


Asian Americans Advancing Justice-LA’s Karin Wang echoed the sentiment, calling the ban an “illegitimate attack on a woman’s Constitutional right to privacy in making reproductive choices” in an email to HuffPost. 


Collins, however, seemed to think that looking into a woman’s medical history would pay off, describing concerns over privacy a “trade-off,” the New York Times reported. 


“You could potentially see a history of recent abortions, and that might be a data point for a doctor,” he said. 


Arkansas follows several other states in introducing sex-selective abortion legislation, including Oklahoma and Arizona. But rather than base these laws off of stereotypes, Khan stressed that these legislators need to be looking to the groups who are actually effected by these bans for answers. 


“These lawmakers are not asking what AAPI women need in order to combat gender inequity here and globally,” she told HuffPost. “AAPI communities know what we need best in order to support and grow our families — we want equal pay for equal work, health care access, comprehensive immigration reform, and policies that support our gender identities.”


Read more at HuffPost Asian Voices and follow our Facebook page, Brazen Asians.

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People Are Totally Buggin' Over This Time Capsule From 1998

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Oh snap!


Randi Bergman, a 31-year-old from Toronto, recently got a fly gift, courtesy of her 13-year-old self.


In January, Bergman’s mother asked her to clean out her childhood closet. Bergman obliged and while she was tossing things away, she stumbled upon a time capsule from 1998 that she had made when she was 13 years old. Bergman told The Huffington Post that the discovery surprised her because she doesn’t remember making it.


“I was dying of laughter,” she said. “I also couldn’t believe I had the presence of mind to detail so meticulously.” 


And meticulous it is. The three-box time capsule which contained mixed tapes, movie and concert stubs, and clippings from YM and Teen People, also included detailed lists of Bergman’s crushes, favorite TV shows and more.


On Jan. 9 the self-described former “teeny-bopper” began to share her hella sweet treasures on Instagram.


So what’s in the boxes?


Here’s the 411:


Movie theater stubs for “Titanic.”



Those plastic lace crafts you’d do at summer camp.



A “match the star with his or her favorite Spice Girl” game from a magazine.



A detailed list of all of her ’90s crushes.



A picture of Bergman in a bucket hat.



A totally 90s mix tape on an actual cassette tape.



Some Spice Girls lollipops.



Bergman’s personal “Top 5” lists of the time.



An extra bag of rubber bands for braces.



Notebooks filled with magazine clippings from the late ‘90s.



A boy band ring.



Some broken shades that are painfully ’90s.



A picture of Bergman showing off her ‘90s style — complete with a Winnie the Pooh backpack.



And Backstreet Boys concert ticket stubs with one epic backstory.



Children of the ‘90s everywhere thank you for this time traveling gift, Randi.

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'Come From Away' Star Explains How The Broadway Hit Can Unify Audiences

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Caesar Samayoa would like to correct every critic and audience member who’s referred to “Come From Away” as “the new 9/11 musical,” even if he can’t blame them for the confusion.


The show, which opened on Broadway at New York’s Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre March 12, references the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks as a starting point. The remarkable, real-life story it depicts, however, takes place a world away from lower Manhattan, following the passengers of 38 planes diverted from American airspace to Gander, Newfoundland, and the residents who welcomed them.


Written by Irene Sankoff and David Hein, “Come From Away” is based on a series of interviews the Canadian composers conducted with both Gander locals and airline passengers on the tenth anniversary of the 9/11 attacks. Samayoa, 42, plays both Kevin, who is one-half of a diverted gay couple, and Ali, an international chef ostracized from his fellow passengers because he is Muslim.



Though “Come From Away” is his highest profile Broadway stint to date, Samayoa told The Huffington Post he felt slightly wary when he first heard about the project. “It took a minute for me, as a New Yorker, to ask, ‘What is this?’ I was in New York when 9/11 happened, so [the tragedy] is my 9/11 story,” he said. “Even trying to fathom a different side of it was really hard for me.” Eventually, he understood that “this isn’t a 9/11 story; this is a 9/12 story,” with a message about “embracing the world with open arms.”


As Kevin, Samayoa gets to step back into the mindset of a gay man living openly before the era of marriage equality. In one scene, the character and his boyfriend (Chad Kimball), who is also named Kevin, hesitate to enter a rowdy bar because of its predominately straight clientele. Though it’s a brief moment in the show, it serves as a reminder of just how much progress the LGBTQ community has made since 2001.


Samayoa, who is gay, has come a long way since that time, too. Identifying as LGBTQ “was still a [difficult] thing” in the early years of his acting career, and he acknowledged having had some concerns. These days, it’s a different story. “I know some people who struggle with it, and who probably never will come out. But I feel like it’s my duty to be very proud of who I am, and to be able to one of the voices,” he said. “You can’t tell me not to be proud of who I am. It’s 2017, and we are too late in the game.”



That’s one of the reasons the “unifying” theme of “Come From Away” resonated with Samayoa, whose Broadway resume includes “Sister Act” and “The Pee-Wee Herman Show.” The musical has drawn viewers from both sides of the political divide, notably on March 15, when Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau joined Ivanka Trump and Nikki Haley, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, for an evening performance. Photographs of the trio appeared in news outlets around the world, making Samayoa and his cast mates proud.


“We are just inundated with so much negativity about people not accepting others for who they are, [so] it’s amazing to be a part of something that can unite people, because I feel like we’re so separated in our media every day, 24 hours a day,” he said. “People are craving this kind of message, and if we open just one person’s eyes, then we’ve done our job.”


One of nine cast members to have been with “Come From Away” since its 2015 premiere in La Jolla, California, Samayoa hopes the experience sets the pace for his career moving forward. As many of his peers clamor for classic Stephen Sondheim leads, the actor said his heart lies in new, experimental works.


“I’ve always gravitated toward developing new pieces of theater, so if I continue on that trajectory, I’ll be a happy camper,” he said. “I feel like the dream roles for me are being written right now by new writers, new directors, new composers.” Whether or not those future roles match “Come From Away,” however, remains to be seen. “This feels like something I’ll never experience again,” he said.


Come From Away” is now playing at New York’s Gerald Schoenfeld Theatre. 


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Jordan Peele: 'Black Voices Will Tell Good Stories Just Like Anybody Else'

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Jordan Peele says that while he is grateful for the recognition he has received for “Get Out,” the film’s success proves a valuable lesson about the ability of black films and filmmakers. 


“When you give black voices a platform and the opportunity to tell our story, we will tell good stories just like anybody else,” Peele said in a recent interview with The Hollywood Reporter. “The power of story and the power of a well-crafted film or television show is really all you need to speak to people.”


Peele became the first black writer-director to land a $100 million feature debut with “Get Out,” a psychological thriller that premiered in February and follows the experiences of a young black man who visits his white girlfriend’s family for the first time. The film, which earned a 100 percent score on Rotten Tomatoes in its first 40 reviews, has been widely praised for exploring the reality of race in a unique and unprecedented way.


“The power of story and the power of a well-crafted film or television show is really all you need to speak to people,” Peele said in the interview. “I think Hollywood is sort of catching up to that. We’re at the beginning of a renaissance where people are realizing black films can not only work at the box office, but they can work because there’s been a void.” 


This is precisely why he thinks “Get Out” was so successful: it flipped the usual narrative around horror films by featuring a black man as the protagonist and victim as opposed to a white woman. The film is now the highest-grossing debut for a writer-director based on an original screenplay, which was a record previously held by “The Blair Witch Project.”


“’Get Out’ is fresh and novel and new because at the base level it has a black, male protagonist in a horror movie,” he said. “We haven’t seen that before. Usually in horror movies — as in ‘Blair Witch’ — it is the white girl’s crying face.” 


Peele said he’s giving up sketch comedy and instead plans to create an entire series of films that explore various “social demons.” For now, he said he is focused on nurturing his own voice and on writing, directing and producing. Fortunately for him, the opportunities now abound ― and he is inclined to take advantage of them and show the world what he’s got. 


“There is a feeling of opportunity that is truly amazing. I’ve been in Hollywood for 14 years — 14 years of closed doors and the grind,” he said. “So to feel the energy coming from inside the industry, let alone from the country, is just one of the best feelings.” 


Read more on Peele’s thoughts about black films, his opinion on slavery movies and how he felt turning down “SNL” at The Hollywood Reporter

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Meet The Women Directors Revolutionizing Horror Films

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In June, Amazonian hero Wonder Woman will make her on-screen debut. It’ll be a big moment in the comic book movie-verse ― but also for gender parity in filmmaking.


The movie is helmed by Patty Jenkins, of “Monster” fame, and it’s the first live-action project with a $100 million budget for the director. In fact, it’s only the fourth-ever film in that price range led by a woman, including Ava DuVernay’s forthcoming adaptation of A Wrinkle in Time, and Niki Caro’s recently announced “Mulan” update.


As a point of reference, four films cost more than $200 million last year, with several more just below that mark, including “Finding Dory,” “Alice Through the Looking Glass,” “The Jungle Book,” “Warcraft” and “Independence Day: Resurgence.”


Despite the range of subjects falling into the big-budget category, it’s a longstanding boys’ club, with few opportunities for women directors ― even those most interested in typically higher-grossing genres. So for directors like Karyn Kusama, who helmed “The Invitation,” “Jennifer’s Body” and the 2000 Sundance Film Festival darling “Girlfight,” smaller projects provide opportunities to explore riskier subjects, to sharpen writing skills, and to tell stories that are potent and contained.


Which is why, when she was invited to participate in “XX,” an anthology of short horror films directed by women and starring women as the stories’ heroes ― as opposed to hapless, slashed-off victims ― Kusama was glad for the opportunity.


“I think that there’s something about short films that just kind of keeps your muscles sharp,” Kusama told The Huffington Post over the phone. “It’s sort of like running a 10k while you prepare for a marathon. I don’t get to run many marathons. I don’t get to make many features. It’s not like that’s something I can just snap my fingers and make happen. So for me, it was a way to stay nimble and keep telling stories, and even create the story, but have it be a slightly more manageable scale for everyone involved.”


Kusama’s contribution to the anthology, which had its world premiere at Sundance on Jan. 22 and enjoyed a limited release soon after, is a riff on “Rosemary’s Baby,” which she calls a “core text” of filmmaking. In her version, Rosemary Woodhouse is a woman with a 17-year-old son who, as his 18th birthday approaches, begins behaving violently, as though possessed.


“The Rosemary Woodhouse character in ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ is quite helpless, a kind of infuriating, domesticated pet. Femininity itself is used against her,” Kusama said. “And I just wanted to imagine a world where the femininity, the vulnerability, becomes the strength. The femaleness becomes the strength, not the weakness.”







Kusama emphasizes that portrayals of mothers ― especially in horror films ― too often take the “Psycho” approach, characterizing any kind of motherly strength as perverse and deforming.


“I am a mother now, and I’m a mother to a son, and I want him to go into the world a feminist. I want him to go into the world with compassion for humanity,” Kusama said. “I just know I have so much to teach my child. And I just feel kind of like, what would our world be without mothers? What would our world be without mother love? I don’t think we’d have a world.”


Among the anthology’s other contributors are stop-motion animator Sofia Carrillo, “Riot Girls” director Jovanka Vuckovic, “Southbound” director Roxanne Benjamin, and first-time director Annie Clark, aka rock musician St. Vincent.


These directors are among a bevy of women filmmakers interested in horror ― in working within the genre’s traditions, or in subverting them to better fit their own views. Since 2014, several woman-led horror features have left their mark, including Jennifer Kent’s “The Babadook,” Lucile Hadžihalilović’s “Evolution,” and Julia Ducournau’s “Raw.” And women directors are proliferating among the short film-making set, too; at last year’s Nitehawk Shorts Festival, for which HuffPost was a media sponsor, bloody crime flicks and mysterious stories of witches were highlights of the slate.


These stories, and those anthologized in “XX,” showcased the sensibilities of their makers, demonstrating the point that their movies needn’t be categorized as “women’s films,” but, rather, great films made by women.


“A lot of the films I think you could argue are particularly female in their vision. And they’re just turning out to be really good,” Kusama said. “That, to me, means there’s a kind of awakening of the general public’s attention toward this concept of the female voice, the female lens. And I think that’s just wonderful, because it means we get so many different visions of the world that we didn’t have before.”


For Clark, who describes herself as a storyteller by nature, that vision means blurring the lines between horror and humor. Her addition to the anthology, “The Birthday Party,” involves a woman dressing up her recently deceased husband in a bear costume, to conceal his death until after her daughter’s birthday party.


“To me, the saddest part of the movie is the one that makes me cackle with laughter,” Clark told HuffPost.



Now that we’ve gotten this first female-led anthology off the ground, I’d love for us to imagine and create a world where more of these films can exist, and women can actually pay their bills.
Karyn Kusama


Elaborating on the fine line between fear and amusement, she said, “you have the same emotional exorcism, which is build up, build up, build up, tension, and very quick, sudden release. It sounds like I’m describing an orgasm. So many things work this way. It’s the same with comedy. Tension, punchline ... where are they going with this? Oh, they land it, there’s the punchline. There’s the release. They’re very linked, I would say.”


Unlike the other directors in “XX,” Clark has never directed a feature-length film ― although she plans to in the future. For her, directing a short was a launching pad for future filmmaking projects ― a common trajectory for those exploring the storytelling medium for the first time.


For Benjamin ― who’s become somewhat of a horror anthology expert, between her work on “Southbound” and “V/H/S” ― the shorter form has merits that she says feature-length films might not. Her contribution to the anthology, “Don’t Fall,” is about four friends who discover a mysterious cave painting while camping in the desert. The visitors are glib about the cultural significance of the painting, and the land in general, and their glibness comes at a cost.


“You’ve got these privileged people coming in who just tromp all over another culture without thinking about it, because they think everything is for them. But what if the land fights back?” Benjamin told HuffPost. “If you get into a feature-length version of that, then you have to start explaining why this is happening. The thing that always feels the weakest in any horror movie is when you get into the explanation of why this is happening, rather than just letting it unfold.”


“A lot of shorts in the genre space tend to be morality tales,” she continued. “If you think of ‘The Twilight Zone’ or ‘Black Mirror,’ they work because of the length that they are. These stories don’t necessarily hold as features, but they work in a short format. If you tried to put that into a feature format, it would start to get pedantic.”


So, while Benjamin’s film differs from Clark’s and Kusama’s, each director voiced merits of the short film genre, and gratitude for the opportunity to work on the project. But, Kusama expressed hope that the anthology would be a springboard, for future, better-paying work, and proof that women-led films are diverse and engaging.


“Now that we’ve gotten this first female-led anthology off the ground, I’d love for us to imagine and create a world where more of these films can exist, and women can actually pay their bills,” she said.


“I do think it’s harder to tell female stories without getting put into some kind of fantasy box. Other people’s fantasies about what women should look like and sound like,” Kusama continued. “But once you see stories that actually portray complicated women ― and I’ll go a step further and say portray complicated people generally ― we’re just excited by that. I actually think audiences are starving for it.”



The “XX” horror anthology will be available in Blu-ray, DVD and Digital HD May 23 from Magnolia Home Entertainment under the Magnet Label.


This year’s Nitehawk Shorts Festival will take place Nov. 7-12 at the cinema’s location in Brooklyn, New York. Huffington Post Arts & Culture is the Media Sponsor for the festival and will provide the Huffington Post Impact Award. For filmmakers looking to submit their own short films, early submission to the festival opens on Monday, April 3. Read more about the requirements for entry here.


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The Stunning Finale Of 'Big Little Lies' Is What Happens When Women Drive Art

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The last 15 minutes of the finale of “Big Little Lies” contains very few words. We find out the answers to three long-unanswered questions through images: Who was murdered? Who killed that person? And who is the man who brutally assaulted Jane Chapman and fathered her son, Ziggy?


That third question ends up being the most salient one. And the scene that gives us its answer epitomizes what is so stunning about the HBO mini-series: At its core, “Big Little Lies” is about the deep, complex and protective connections that can form between women in the face of buried trauma.  


A testament both to the direction by Jean Marc-Vallée and the stellar acting by Reese Witherspoon as Madeline, Nicole Kidman as Celeste, and Shailene Woodley as Jane, in the finale’s climactic scene, words become unnecessary.


As Jane realizes that the man who has been tormenting her thoughts for six years is Celeste’s outwardly charming and inwardly abusive husband Perry, we see this realization be passed along through a grip and two looks ― first to Madeline and then to Celeste. Women who spend time together and form an intimacy often develop the ability to silently communicate warnings ― something I have never before seen expressed so pointedly on television.


As the New Yorker’s Jia Tolentino put it: “The show understands that minor social transactions between women can express the nuances of violence with a unique specificity and a nauseating subtlety.” 





The searing portrayal of these sort of “minor social transactions between women” ― in the context of violence and outside of it ― are what make “Big Little Lies” so affecting. We see them play out in many varying configurations over the course of the seven episodes: between Madeline and her daughter, between Celeste and her therapist (Robin Weigart), between Renata (a fantastic Laura Dern) and Jane, between Renata and Celeste, between Bonnie (Zoe Kravitz) and Madeline, and between Jane, Madeline and Celeste.


“Big Little Lies” artfully digs into the systemic pressures women face ― to be perfect parents, perfect wives and perfect models of femininity ― even when they are white and wealthy with the best beachfront properties California has to offer. The show easily passes the Bechdel test as we watch these women discuss parenting, sexual fulfillment (or a lack thereof), professional fulfillment (or a lack thereof), sexual assault, therapy and the deep well of unhappiness that often lurks underneath a veneer of “perfection.”


Although the show was directed by Marc-Vallée and written by David E. Kelley, the depth of female interaction present in “Big Little Lies” makes it unsurprising that the original novel was written by a woman, and that the project got off the ground thanks to Reese Witherspoon and Nicole Kidman’s respective production companies. (Witherspoon and her producing partner originally optioned Liane Moriarty’s novel, and then brought Kidman on board.) This is especially important given that the directors, showrunners and producers of both TV series and movies remain overwhelmingly white and male. 


“For 25 years, I’ve been the only woman on set,” Witherspoon told The Hollywood Reporter back in January, when talking about what drew her to “Big Little Lies.” “So I had no one to talk to... We have to start seeing women how they actually are on film ― we need to see real women’s experience ― whether that involves domestic violence, sexual assault, romance, infidelity or divorce. We as human beings learn from art.”



This show didn’t necessarily speak to all men, judging from the tepid and misguided reviews written by some male critics.


Mike Hale at the New York Times called the female-driven storylines at the center of “Big Little Lies” unoriginal and “just a compendium of clichés,” even comparing the nuanced portrayal of an abusive relationship between Kidman’s Celeste and Alexander Skarsgard’s Perry to “’Fifty Shades’ territory.” The New York Post’s Robert Rorke, who also flippantly referred to the abusive relationship as “S&M games,” called the show “a terrible whodunnit” about “rich white women and their erotic fantasies and emotional dissatisfactions.”


Both Hale and Rorke appeared frustrated that they were sold a murder mystery, and then ended up having to listen to women talk about their lives, desires and feelings. This frustration, while easy to skewer, also reflects a depressing truth. Because the stories of white men still tend to appear in pop culture most often and with greater nuance, women and people of color learn to find some piece of themselves in cultural products that are not about them. White men are not faced with that same imperative.


Luckily, the buy-in of curmudgeonly white men who don’t see value in unpacking women’s stories is no longer necessary for a series to be a critical or ratings hit.


In the final moments of “Big Little Lies,” we see our five female leads together on the beach, at last standing in solidarity and connected by a shared trauma. Sometimes, on TV as in life, women are enough to carry each other through. 





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The Next 'Big Little Lies' Mystery To Crack: Whether There Will Be A Season 2

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Now that we’re done swapping theories about who murdered whom on “Big Little Lies,” a new mystery has emerged: Will there be a second season?


As of last week, the fate of HBO’s Monterey moms seemed promising. Reese Witherspoon and Laura Dern said they’ve been discussing further storylines with Liane Moriarty, who wrote the novel on which the first season is based. But in a Hollywood Reporter interview published Sunday, director Jean-Marc Vallée said he’s not interested.


“The detective doesn’t want to let go and that’s how we finish that,” Vallée said, referring to the finale’s final shot. “And we think, ‘Did they do the right thing? What will happen?’ Now it’s up to the audience and their imagination to figure out. To do a season two, I’m not for it. Let’s move on and do something else! If there’s an opportunity to reunite with Reese, Nicole and these characters of course, I’ll be a part of it, but ‘Big Little Lies One’ is a one-time deal. ‘Big Little Lies Two’? Nah. The end is for the audience to talk about. Imagine what you want to imagine and that’s it. We won’t give you a season two because it’s so good like this. Why spoil it?”



Vallée makes a good point, which he reiterated in a Vulture interview: “There’s no reason to make a season two. That was meant to be a one-time deal.” The show ended on a high note ― why drag it on, other than to see the remarkable cast reconvene? On the other hand, the follow-up storylines would be fresh, even to those who’ve read the book, and it would be nice to see where these ladies land after “Kumbaya”-ing on the beach. 


“You want to give your audience a sense of closure,” writer David E. Kelley said in HBO’s official “Inside the Episode” video. “And at the same time, life doesn’t serve up closure very often. And in that scene, we were endeavoring to show that the women had come together, that the story is not over. So shifting to the point of view of the detective on the beach indicates just that. There is some closure, but you only get so much of that in life. The story always goes on.”


In an interview with TVLine, Nicole Kidman seemed skeptical that another go-round would come to fruition, though she did call it a “beautiful prospect.”


Across all of HBO’s platforms, “Big Little Lies” averaged 7 million viewers per episode, a significant sum. The Huffington Post reached out to the show’s rep about the possibility of another season, but we did not immediately hear back. 

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Couple Creates SlayTV Network To Better Represent Black LGBTQ Community

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Oversexed. Catty. Stereotypical. 


These are the words director Terry Torrington uses to describe present depictions of black gay men in the media ― which is why he and his husband, Sean, are launching SlayTV, a global TV network for the black LGBTQ community. 


Sean and Terry, who are both in their 30s, came up with the idea for the network when they saw how well some of their YouTube web series were performing. “No Shade,” a dramedy about a queer black artist on a path of self-discovery, was their first online series. Its pilot episode, which premiered in February 2013, has received almost 110,000 views. 


“That’s how we really got noticed by the community,” Sean said. “Because at the time there was no other series like it. It really touched on a lot of issues going on at the time.”


The two were hesitant to create a second season for the show without a proper way to archive it. So they created Slay to catalog series they’d already made, premiere new productions and invite series ideas from the LGBTQ community. 


Love At First Night,” a Slay series created by Terry, serves as an antidote to what Sean says is a lack of representation of queer black love on other platforms. 


“I feel like we are only looked at as sex objects,” Sean said. “There are no real representations in the media when it comes to black queer love and that’s really important to me. That’s why I created ‘Love At First Night.’”


The show, which they describe as being loosely based on their relationship, is a dramedy about a black gay couple and the lives they lead in New York City.



“It really shows the dynamic of two black gay men ― or queer men ― that are in love and the issues they go through,” Sean said. 


For gay black men, the show provides a sense of relatability that they don’t often get to experience while watching television. The show’s season finale premiered last August and the two are now working on the second season. 


While “Love At First Night” and “No Shade” offer the occasional laughing fit, the Torringtons also touch on more sensitive subjects on the network. 


The Slay documentary series “Other Boys” ― created by video producer Abdool Corlette ― explores what it means to be black and queer in New York City. The 50-part series, which premiered in February, discusses family, careers and socioeconomics through the lenses of queer and transgender black men, a perspective they made a conscious decision to include.





“We need to be more intentional about when we talk about LGBTQ,” Terry said. “I think a lot of times, we’re not including the L, G, B, T and Q. ... We felt we needed to be able to bridge the gap between all those acronyms.”


But whether they’re serving up laughs or painfully relatable narratives, Sean said Slay’s overall mission is to “normalize black queer and trans people of color in media.”


“I don’t feel like we are represented in the right way,” he continued. “A lot of times, [media] reappropriates a lot of things that we do. I just want to let people know where all the cool and dope things come from.”


He mentioned the popularity of terms like “slay” and “shade.” While the words are enthusiastically used in mainstream culture, their origins in the black LGBTQ community aren’t often discussed or widely known. 


This lesser-known history is part of the reason they decided to name the network SlayTV. The other influence for the title comes from the sheer excellence of black gay men. 


“We have always been here and have always been killing it,” he said. 


SlayTV is available to view now but will officially launch on May 15. 

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Mysterious Carving Of A Woman's Face Emerges During Church Restoration

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St. Mary’s Church in Rhode Island may be a treasure trove of secrets, and she’s just started letting them slip.


The church, which went up in 1849, is best known as the locale of John Fitzgerald Kennedy and Jacqueline Bouvier’s wedding on September 12, 1953, but now it’s getting renewed attention thanks to a peculiar carving.


A woman’s face was recently uncovered during a restoration of the church’s enormous 1,674-pipe organ. And the face doesn’t appear to be just any woman’s face.





According to Reverend Kris von Maluski, it could be Mary Magdalene’s visage.


Rev. Von Maluski talked told the Associated Press that the carved woman has “got to be significant to be on that level,” referring to the fact that her image is in line with carvings of the 12 apostles.


“The organ was so massive, she was lost for a very long time,” he told the news agency.


Magdalene was known as the “apostle of the Apostles,” because, according to the New Testament, she was who Jesus appeared to first after he rose from the dead. It was Magdalene who informed the Apostles of the miracle.





The church’s mysterious face is split in half to form two profiles within St. Mary’s ― one in the right corner of the choir loft and one in the left. The church believes the carving dates back to when the structure was built. The church was designed by architect Patrick Keely, so Rev. von Maluski is reaching out to other churches he’s worked with in attempt to gather more information regarding the face.


To properly complete the restoration around this incredible discovery, the church has decided to make the new structure smaller and with “a seven-inch gap to see the face” between the organ sides and the walls, according to The Newport Daily News.


The organ will be reinstalled beginning April 18, two days after Easter Sunday.





In addition to the readjusted organ installation, Newport Daily News reports that a mold of the face is being made to be put on “permanent display to the right of the altar, along with two of the original organ pipes.”


“We have to give her a place of honor so she will never be lost to history again,” Rev.von Maluski told the publication.

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