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Revealing The Many Faces Of Vincent Van Gogh On His 161st Birthday

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Today marks the birthday of Vincent van Gogh, the Dutch post-Impressionist who brought the world unforgettable visions of sunflowers and starry nights. Born on this day 161 years ago, the painter ranks among the most recognizable (not to mention expensive) artists to have ever existed, filling the halls of major museums from the Louvre to the Met to the Rijksmuseum.

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Two of Van Gogh's 'Sunflowers' hang side by side on display in a new exhibition at the National Gallery on January 24 2014, in London, England. The iconic works, two of four paintings of sunflowers created by Van Gogh in Arles in 1888, are being reunited in London for the first time in 65 years in the exhibition which runs from January 25 to April 27, 2014. (Photo by Mary Turner/Getty Images)


Most contemporary accounts of the venerable artist present a van Gogh unappreciated in his own time. Painting throughout the late 19th century, he died -- of self-inflicted wounds -- before he ever reached the status of a "successful" painter, leaving behind a trove of unsold paintings that wound their way to the possession of van Gogh's sister-in-law, Johanna van Gogh-Bonger. She's part of the reason his name ever reached the ears and lips of major gallerists and curators, as she spearheaded the efforts behind the influential 1905 exhibition staged at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam.

History speculates with intense curiosity on what van Gogh was like during his life, at times alleging he cut his ear off in a fit of unrequited love (a story heavily contested by some scholars) and other times surmising the great artistic talent suffered from color blindness. With a century and a half to wonder who the man beneath the straw hat is, and pore over his personal letters, we've really only uncovered a caricature of what Vincent was probably like. This much we know -- he was self-taught, enraptured by the innovation of neo-Impressionists, supported and pushed to creative limits by his brother and eventually alienated by his own mental turmoil.

In honor of yet another anniversary of Vincent van Gogh's birth, we let our own curiosity run wild while perusing the many self-portraits the tortured artist produced. From dark color palettes rendered in chaotic brushstrokes to luminescent imaginings captured in his signature saturated hues, the collection of faces reveal -- at the very least -- how the painter viewed himself. Scroll through the selection below and let us know how you're celebrating the art holiday in the comments.

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Women Everywhere Can Now Buy Their Very Own Tiny Penis Sculpture (NSFW)

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Ladies, it's safe to say that at some point in your life someone, somewhere has told you to "grow some cojones," "sack up" or perhaps "be a little ballsy." By this they mean be brave, act courageous, or go forth with your bad self, but they have misguidedly decided to refer to the male anatomy in doing so.

One artist is taking this irritating comparison between the phallus and the power it possesses very literally. The project is called "Bring Your Dick to the Table" (BYDTTT), and we have Oklahoma-based Holly Wilson to thank for it.

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According to Wilson, the idea came to her one day when an art gallery representative (who happened to be a man) was trying to change the terms of her exhibition, amounting to a less-than-favorable deal for the artist. "My heart and my feet went heavy; my lips went dry," she explains in the video below. "I reached for my lip balm and zing! I thought I could let this take me over OR I could hold onto my 'dick' and negotiate as the equal I am, not how he was treating me, like some kid who didn’t know any better."

Wilson isn't being metaphorical. Shortly after the interaction, the artist began a mission to craft one-and-a-half-inch penis sculptures that can be carried on the go. Fashioned in sterling silver, white bronze and 10 karat gold, the little guys can remain safely in one's pocket designed to signify that little extra "oomph" women are assumed to be missing. The metallic genitalia can even lean left or right depending on which hand the user intends to squeeze it with, and they come in a robin's egg blue velveteen pouch... because you can't just have a penis jingling around in your pocket without protection, can you?

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"This is about your inner voice/ Your strength/ Remembering you are more powerful than you know," Wilson writes on the BYDTTT Kickstarter, which already raised over $5,000 at the time of publication.

She explained her positive message further in an email to The Huffington Post: "There are negative voices in our society, our culture, maybe even your own family that can corrupt your inner monologue. If holding a small bronze dick and laughing at those voices, those fears, helps you overcome them, then why not? Lets move the mountain, make changes and laugh wildly!"

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While we certainly appreciate the empowering message of the campaign, we're more than a bit skeptical that any powerful woman need grab onto a phallus, real or bronzed, to find her inner resilience. Why not appreciate our own womanly goods instead of yearning for another form of genitalia? Why buy phallocentric art when you could invest in something more of the yonic persuasion?

That being said, if you think fondling a phallic figurine would give you that boost of confidence you need, or at least a hilarious little secret to reside in your pocket, we're all for the BYDTTT lifestyle. Wilson is currently raising funds on Kickstarter to make her NSFW vision a reality, hoping to reach her $11,250 goal by April 9. See Wilson explain her project in detail in the video below.



What do you think of Wilson's bold endeavor? Do you find it inspirational, hilarious, strange, offensive -- all of the above? Let us know your thoughts!

Amy Winehouse's Hologram Will Not Be Touring Around The World

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On March 28, UK newspaper The Sun reported that billionaire entrepreneur Alki David had purchased a patent for the 3D technology used to construct Tupac's hologram, and was planning a posthumous world tour for Amy Winehouse's image.

A source told the paper: ''The plan is that Amy will finally tour the world after failing to do so when she was alive.
''With an orchestra and her hologram, she can take to the stage and fans can see her perform her legendary hits."

However, Winehouse's father Mitch denied the story on Twitter, calling it "utter rubbish." Mitch Winehouse owns the rights to his daughter's likeness, so unless his mind changes, the world tour is unlikely to come about.


Amazing Underwater Wheelchair Photos Challenge Us To Redefine 'Disability'

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British artist Sue Austin continues to push forward in ways even top experts never thought possible.

Austin, who has been using a wheelchair for nearly two decades due to an extended illness, uses an innovative underwater wheelchair to create stunning visual art and to also challenge us to rethink the way we see people with disabilities.

With photos, videos and performance art pieces involving her unique underwater wheelchair named "Portal," Austin strives to redefine the way we relate to people in wheelchairs. Austin works to fight back against negative stigma, including such terms as "limited," "held back" and "immobilized," she said at a TED conference in 2012. She implores people to instead demonstrate the ways in which we can find the value and joy in being different.

Austin first got the idea of after training to dive in 2005, according to the Guardian. She said the sport granted her freedom and renewed access to the rest of the world.

But she faced some backlash when she proposed the idea of diving in a wheelchair.

“When we started talking to people about it, engineers were saying it wouldn’t work, the wheelchair would go into a spin, it was not designed to go through water -- but I was sure it would,” Austin told the BBC in 2012. With the help of dive experts, engineers, academics, and funding from places like England’s Arts Council, Austin’s vision was realized.

Her work was brought to a larger audience when she was chosen as one of the featured artists at the Unlimited Festival, a part of the 2012 Cultural Olympiad in London -- a program of cultural events across England accompanying the 2012 Summer Olympics and Paralympics.

Since then, Austin and her nonprofit organization Freewheeling, an integrated arts program, have been gaining more attention, which has been one her main goals.

“People’s reaction completely changed towards me. It was as if they couldn’t see me anymore, as if an invisibility cloak had descended, she said during a TEDxWomen talk last year. "As a result, I knew I needed to make my own stories about this experience, new narratives to reclaim my identity."



For more information on Sue Austin's work, check out the Freewheeling Facebook page and Twitter, as well as some of the stunning videos on her Youtube channel.

'Harry Potter' Spinoff 'Fantastic Beasts' Is Getting A Trilogy

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In a New York Times interview with Warner Bros. CEO Kevin Tsujihara, the paper reported that J.K. Rowling's "Harry Potter" spinoff "Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them" is slated for "three megamovies."

That is when Warner announced that Ms. Rowling had agreed to adapt for the big screen her “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them,” a 2001 book billed as one of Harry Potter’s Hogwarts textbooks. Three megamovies are planned. The main character will be a “magizoologist” named Newt Scamander. The stories, neither prequels or sequels, will start in New York about seven decades before the arrival of Mr. Potter and his pals.


It is thanks to Tsujihara that the "Harry Potter" world is making its return to theaters, convincing the author to bring her 54-page exploration of the creatures that inhabit the wizarding world to new life.

“When I say he made ‘Fantastic Beasts’ happen, it isn’t P.R.-speak but the literal truth,” Rowling said of Tsujihara. “We had one dinner, a follow-up telephone call, and then I got out the rough draft that I’d thought was going to be an interesting bit of memorabilia for my kids and started rewriting!”

Haim Isn't A 'Girl Band,' So Don't Call Them That

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Haim might be a band comprised of almost entirely of girls, but they aren't a girl band. In an interview with The Telegraph, Alana Haim cited the term girl band as a "medieval" description.

“Growing up, there were a lot of girl artists like the Spice Girls, Aaliyah and Destiny’s Child,” she said. “But none of them really played instruments and I would always look up to Stevie Nicks and Blondie -- they are dope female musicians. So I just see us as a band. When people call us a girl band, I take it as an insult -- being a girl in a band shouldn’t be a thing. It seems so medieval.”

The band also explained why it is that none of them became drummers, leaving that duty on stage to the "hidden" member of the band, Dash Hutton, even though all three are more than capable behind the kit. According to Danielle Haim, it was their father's wish -- once a drummer in the Israeli army -- that his daughter's stay away from the skins.

“Dad was adamant that he didn’t want us to become drummers because he didn’t want us to lug all our s--t everywhere,” she said.

'Frozen' Is Officially The Highest-Grossing Animated Film Ever

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"Frozen" has officially become the highest-grossing animated film of all time, its total reaching $1.072 billion this weekend -- $398.4 million domestically and $674 million internationally -- following a strong performance after its final opening in Japan. "Frozen" beat out "Toy Story 3," which pulled in a total of $1.063 billion in 2010.

At the beginning of the month, "Frozen" surpassed "The Lion King" as Walt Disney Animation Studios' highest-grossing movie. The film also notably won the award for Best Animated Feature Film as well as Best Original Song for "Let It Go" at the 86th Academy Awards. It has since passed "Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Chest" to enter the top 10 highest-grossing films in the world.

The "Frozen" soundtrack is also seeing great success, preparing to secure its eighth week atop the Billboard chart and its conquest of Taylor Swift's "Red," in its pursuit of the long-standing champion, Adele's "21."

'Noah' Surfs Over The Box Office With $44 Million Debut

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — After weathering a sea of controversy, "Noah" arrived in first place at the weekend box office.

Paramount's biblical epic starring Russell Crowe in the titular role opened with $44 million, according to studio estimates Sunday. The imaginative take on the tale of Noah's Ark by filmmaker Darren Aronofsky led some religious groups to claim the story had been inaccurately portrayed and prompted Paramount to add a disclaimer to marketing materials saying that "artistic license has been taken" in telling the story.

Lionsgate's teen science-fiction thriller "Divergent" starring Shailene Woodley earned $26.5 million in its second weekend.

Disney's globe-trotting Muppet sequel "Muppets Most Wanted" featuring Tina Fey and Ricky Gervais came in third place with $11.4 million in its second weekend.

Hugh Jackman Sings 'Wolverine: The Musical'

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During an appearance on BBC Radio 1 in promotion of his upcoming film "X-Men: Days of Future Past," Hugh Jackman was handed the lyrics to "Wolverine: The Musical." Set to the tune of "Who Am I?," one of his major songs from "Les Miserables," Jackman sang such lines as, "Who am I? Am I a superhero with some claws? Or just an actor searching for applause?" Watch the performance above.

Protesters Rain Down Thousands Of Bills In Guggenheim Rotunda

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At 6:45 pm ET this evening, a handheld bell sounded in the rotunda of the Guggenheim Museum in New York, signaling the second protest action in as many months from the Global Ultra Luxury Faction, or G.U.L.F. The ringing was followed by the release of 9,000 “1%” bills of parodic currency which fluttered downward as patrons rushed to the inner edge of Frank Lloyd Wright’s spiral ramp. But unlike G.U.L.F.’s intervention at the museum late last month, there were no shouted demands or Occupy-style mic checks — the only sound that could be heard after the bills were released was the collective gasp of the hundreds of patrons who packed the museum, where lines for entry wrapped around the block (Saturdays are a free night). Posters and bills were also placed in the museum’s bathrooms and later posted in a number of the city’s subway stations and trains.

Darren Aronofsky's Moving Middle School Poem 'The Dove' Is What Started It All

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Darren Aronofky's film 'Noah' is on its way to box office success with $44 million in box office sales in its first weekend. The road to the movie's opening has been a long one including over ten years in development; but the genesis for the film goes back far further.

When Mr. Aronofsky was 13 and attending Mark Twain Intermediate School 239 in Brooklyn, he penned a poem for his 7th grade teacher Mrs. Vera Fried called 'The Dove.' The poem, based on the Genesis story of Noah, was submitted by his teacher for a contest at the UN where it won a prize for its theme of peace; a message still needed today: "Evil is hard to end and peace is hard to begin but the rainbow and the dove will always live within every mans' heart."

Here is a copy of the original poem:

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J.H.S. 239
January 13, 1982

Aronofsky, Darren

7A-115-S-4

The Dove

Evil was in the world. The laughing crowd left the foolish man and his ark filled with animals when the rain began to fall. It was hopeless. The man could not take the evil crowd with him but he was allowed to bring his good family. The rain continued through the night and the cries of screaming men filled the air. The ark was afloat. Until the dove returned with the leaf, evil still existed. When the rainbows reached throughout the sky the humble man and his family knew what it meant.

The animals ran and flew freely with their new born. The fog rose and the sun shone. Peace was in the air and it soon appeared all of man's heart.

He knew evil could not be kept away for evil and war could not be destroyed but neither was it possible to destroy peace.

Evil is hard to end and peace is hard to begin but the rainbow and the dove will always live within every mans' heart.

'Two Souls' Photo Series Beautifully Captures The End Of A Relationship (NSFW)

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The end of a relationship is always a confusing and emotionally fraught time -- and we've found a set of images that perfectly capture those heartbreaking moments.

On assignment for Upon Paper magazine, 21-year-old student and photographer Jordan Tiberio spent two days last year intimately photographing a couple she knew in what turned out to be the final weeks of their relationship. The resulting images are both stunning and haunting.

(Some images below are NSFW)

The couple, who Tiberio was already friends with, dated for one year and lived together for much of that time. According to the photographer, she shot the couple nude in order to capture them the way they might act alone together.

"Making the model feel I'm unfazed by their nudity is important to me, so that they can be at ease," Tiberio told The Huffington Post in an email. "Though I do not wish to objectify my models in any way, I treat the nude body as a prop; an ever-changing, transformative object, limitless in its potential beauty."

Tiberio was nervous about showing the subjects the final images, given their breakup, but instead found them grateful for the series.

"These pictures are special," the woman in the photographs told Nerve. "They are real, tangible representation of something that changed my life and changed me for the better."

See some of Tiberio's beautiful images below, and check out the rest on her website.

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Pharrell Will Be The Newest Coach On 'The Voice'

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After Cee Lo Green announced that he'd be leaving "The Voice," it was left up to our imaginations to predict who would fill his chair.

Speculate no longer, "Voice" fanatics, the latest coach for Season 7 will be Pharrell! On Monday, March 31, the official twitter handle for the NBC reality series tweeted a photo of the empty "Voice" stage with one coach chair donning the multi-Grammy winning artists' now-iconic hat.




Who's better to coach new young singers than the man taking over the music scene himself? We all love Pharrell and this news just makes us even more happy.

"The Voice" airs on Mondays and Tuesdays at 8 p.m. ET on NBC.

Trippy Sand Art Video Will Leave You In A Trance

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Who's ready to take a break from work and enter a mesmerizing trance? Anyone?




Russian artist and former mathematician Mikhail Sadovnikov takes you on a 15-minute, dizzying journey through the powers of sand art in the video above. With the help of a potter's wheel, some sand and a little Azerbaijan folk music, Sadovnikov crafts a hypnotic journey through shifting shapes and patterns that will make you forget anything exists outside this psychedelic sand land. Shut the door, put on headphones, fullscreen it -- you know what to do.


'Walk' The Paths Of Your Favorite Characters With These Awesome Movie Maps

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Ever wish you could take a trip to the most fantastical places and travel the paths of your beloved characters?

Well, reality may prevent you from actually walking in the footsteps of Frodo Baggins and Samwise Gamgee, but that's what imagination is for. Artist and graphic designer Andrew DeGraff is making it a whole lot easier to accurately map out your daydreams with his collection of cartographic movie illustrations. See entire realms laid out before you and "walk" down the paths of your favorite characters.

Movie-buffs have been so impressed with DeGraff's work that he has opened an online shop for his work and even held a solo art show to display his maps.

Check out a few of DeGraff's masterpieces below and head over to his website to view a whole lot more.


What's New On Netflix In April 2014: 'House,' 'Mean Girls' And More

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It may be warming up out there, but April showers bring May flowers. It looks like Netflix will be your best friend for another month, which is actually great news since the streaming service is adding a huge amount of great content. From "Mean Girls" to "House," here's what to stream on Netflix In April 2014.

TV Shows
1. "House, M.D." The Complete Series, available April 1
2. "Bob's Burgers" Season 3, available April 1
3. "Royal Pains," Seasons 1-4, available April 1
4. "Short Poppies" Season 1, available April 3
5. "Turbo FAST," available April 4
6. "Legit" Season 1, available April 10
7. "The Bible: The Epic Mini Series," available April 13
8. "R.L. Stine’s The Haunting Hour," available April 14
9. "A.N.T. Farm" Season 3, available April 20
10. "Switched At Birth" Season 3, available April 23

Movies
1. "A League Of Their Own," available April 1
2. "Amistad," available April 1
3. "Braveheart," available April 1
4. "Chinatown," available April 1
5. "Coneheads," available April 1
6. "Jumanji," available April 1
7. "Lars And The Real Girl," available April 1
8. "Scary Movie 3," available April 1
9. "The Diving Bell And The Butterfly," available April 1
10. "The English Patient," available April 1
11. "Titanic," available April 1
12. "Mean Girls," available April 1
13. "Rocky," available April 1
14. "Peeples," available April 11
15. "The Dirties," available April 11
16. "G.I. Joe: Retaliation," available April 12
17. "Scoop," available April 16
18. "The Eagle," available April 16
19. "The Family," available April 16
20 "The Benchwarmers," available April 23

O-Town Reunion In The Works After More Than A Decade

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Early 2000s boy band O-Town is staging a big reunion, but for the former group members, it's far from all or nothing at all. The "Making the Band" musicians are reforming without frontman and resident heartthrob Ashley Parker Angel, who struck out on his own in 2006 to pursue a solo career and film a reality television show with MTV. We can only hope the reunited members, Erik-Michael Estrada, Dan Miller, Trevor Penick, and Jacob Underwood, will drop an "All or Nothing" remix to the tune of "Four out of Five or Nothing."

"We've kind of started and stopped along this reunion journey once or twice, and for various reasons it's fallen through," the band said in a new promotional video. "It's kind of now or never."

After more than a decade off from recording music together, the pop stars are getting back together this year to release new music and hit the road for a tour. O-Town's relaunched official website declares simply, "O-Town is back!"

O-Town, which is calling itself "essentially a brand new group," released its last studio album, "O2," in 2002, following the debut album, 2001's "O-Town," which produced the hits "Liquid Dreams" and "All or Nothing." The members of the band officially broke up in 2004 "to escape an unfair record contract and to pursue individual endeavors."

Keep an eye out for more information about the band's reunion in the coming weeks and check out O-Town's video announcement below.

Check Out This Alternative Video For Beyonce's 'Grown Woman'

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Today is a perfect day to make like Beyonce, channel your inner grown woman and walk with a vengeance.

An alternative video for her hit song "Grown Woman" has made an appearance, and it's a perfect combination of fierce, fun and always-fabulous. The song's original video features Queen-Bey at many ages singing (or sort of lip-syncing to) the upbeat, empowering tune, but the alternative version takes a more youthful, cartoonish approach to the concept of adulthood.



Which do you prefer, the home-video style original or the glitzy alternative? Check out the original below to remind yourself how it all started.

'Heathers The Musical' Is Not 'Heathers' The Movie, But It's Still Pretty 'Very'

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As "Heathers The Musical" opens during the film's 25th anniversary year, comparisons between the two versions of Daniel Waters' original script have become as unavoidable as one of the film's own Heathers. Over at The Atlantic, Alan Zilberman mourned the off-Broadway remake, writing that the musical version doesn't recreate "the genius bleakness of the original." Although, it's not so much that the musical doesn't strike the same chord as its predecessor, but that it's a different sort of thing entirely. Co-writer writer Kevin Murphy said he aimed to open up "the themes of hope and optimism" with the "Heathers" story. As such, there are fundamental differences between the film and musical, but each of the works are pretty "very" in their own right.

The musical provides a backstory for Veronica's friendship with the Heathers ...
We meet Veronica as a nobody, dressed out of the scheme of primary colors, she is lost in a sea of comically intense hazing, but then her penchant for forgery brings her into the Heathers' good graces. It's not major difference from the film -- which simply highlights Heather Chandler taking advantage of the skill -- but it emphasizes the fragility of Veronica's precarious position in the group and general willingness to be used.

... and that's fitting for the more innocent version of Veronica we see on stage.
The Veronica of the musical is decidedly more innocent than Winona Ryder's iteration of the character. As the casting call put it, she "burns to be both cool and kind, but doesn’t know yet how to be both at the same time ... Thinks she's an old soul, but she's still innocent enough to be blindsided by love/hormones (or shocked by cruelty)." Over the course of the show, there's an enduring element of desperation not featured in the film version, which shifts the narrative to allow for Veronica's coming of age in face of her pre-existing desperation.

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Martha Dunnstock is a fully developed character, who sings a kick-ass ballad about kindergarten nap time.
In the film, Veronica's interaction with Martha is limited to a fleeting cafeteria prank. But in the musical, Martha (not Betty Fin) is positioned as Veronica's life-long best friend. She becomes a symbol of the ramifications of bullying, providing more flesh (no pun intended) to the toxicity we see in the film. Also, at one point, Martha belts out an entire song about wishing we could go back to kindergarten, and it is no wishy-washy "Glee"-type ballad, but a touching yet tongue-in-cheek representation of what it's like to be left out of the "big fun."

It shifts the film's use of rape as a central theme.
It's arguable that, in the sense this show could be likened to an episode of "Glee," there is perhaps too much humor glossed over the darker elements. The driving force for Heather turning on Veronica is shifted from date rape to bullying. Yet, where the movie highlights a scene of a lesser Heather being sexually assaulted in the background of a touching moment between Veronica and JD, the musical features an entire slut-shaming number about having a (penis) sword fight in Veronica's mouth.

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The musical medium allows Heather Chandler, Ram and Kurt to live on as ghosts.
In the movie, Heather returns in a dream sequence, but she is mostly absent following her untimely "suicide." The musical prominently features her alongside Ram and Kurt long after they've been killed off, and that's excellent, because they're awesome characters. “They’re some of the most hilarious parts of the movie,” said Ryan McCartan, who plays JD, “With the magic of musical theater, just because someone dies doesn’t mean that they disappear from the show. We get to keep [them] 'alive.'"

The show ends with the entire not-blown-up school singing about being beautiful and 17.
There is closure and hope in the show. That's not necessarily a strengthening change, but it's certainly not detrimental to the presentation of an ugly high school environment. There is hope after high school. It's called the entire rest of life. And, hey, what's a musical without a reprise of a major feel-good number.

'How I Met Your Mother' Theme Song Gets An 8-Bit Makeover

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"How I Met Your Mother" has finally come to an end, but we're not ready to let go! Chances are you'll have the theme song stuck in your head for days after the closing credits run, so we've got an alternative tune for you to (sort of) mix it up.

SoundCloud user MattLewisMedia has given the show's theme song an 8-bit makeover and it's making us want to see Mario and Luigi join Ted and the crew for a beer.

Pop culture only gets more infectious when combined with old-school video games, and this theme song is proof. Listen for yourself below.



This is pretty great, and we can think of another "HIMYM" song that would sound awesome in 8-bit ...

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