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Britney Spears Announces New 'Piece Of Me' Show Dates

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Haven't had the chance to see Britney Spears' Las Vegas show at Planet Hollywood? Well, don't worry, because Britney was all like, "Gimme, gimme more (dates)," and Vegas was all, "Whatever you want, Britney!"

The pop icon posted the new schedule to her Instagram account May 13:



Spears first kicked off her two-year "Piece Of Me" show at Planet Hollywood in Las Vegas on Dec. 27, 2013. The added performances mark an increase in the number of shows Spears was originally scheduled to perform. Tickets are available to the public on Friday, May 16 at 1 p.m. ET.

Thanks, Britney!

borntomakeyouhappy

15 Musicians Performing A Disney Medley Is Musical Magic

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For the past two years, Mike Votano and Ashley Carruthers have been Disney Cruise Line employees.

That meant listening to a lot of Disney tunes every single day. After some time, Votano decided to create an arrangement that mixed some of those tunes up. Oh, he also incorporated a 14-piece jazz big band.

"I just wanted to create some real music that made people feel happy," Votano told The Huffington Post.

The video above was recorded in January of 2014 in Sydney, Australia, and is a medley of the tunes from Votano's three favorite Disney movies: "The Lion King," "Beauty and the Beast," and "The Jungle Book."

'The Hundred-Foot Journey' Trailer Will Make Your Mouth Water

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Oprah Winfrey and Steven Spielberg reunited to produce "The Hundred-Foot Journey," based on the bestselling novel by Richard C. Morais. Starring Dame Helen Mirren and Manish Dayal, "The Hundred-Foot Journey" follows a displaced Indian family that settles in a small village in the south of France. They plan to open an Indian restaurant and in the process, start a rivalry with Madame Mallory's (Miren) Michelin-starred restaurant down the street.

Winfrey chose the book as a "favorite summer read" in 2010. "It’s about human beings coming to understand other human beings and more importantly, after you get to experience or step into somebody else’s shoes or see them for a real human being, how you understand that you’re really more alike than you are different," she said at the time. It also doesn't hurt that all the food scenes will leave you famished.

The trailer, released on Yahoo Movies, gives a taste of the developing friendship between Mallory and Hassan (Dayal), the young chef at the center of the Indian family. "The Hundred-Foot Journey" is due out on Aug. 8. The last film Winfrey worked on with Spielberg was "The Color Purple" in 1985. The Best Picture nominee scored Winfrey her lone Oscar nomination.

The Beards' New Album Will Make Your Beard Grow A Beard

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Australian rock band The Beards have one mission in life: putting a beard on every man and -- that's right -- woman's face. The fourth installment of their pro-beard agenda, "The Beard Album," is a 12-track facial hair assault, filled with spirited messages like "A man without a beard is like a lion without a dick," "I wanna make love to all the bearded ladies" and "I do have a beard, but I don't have a job."

“Our previous albums were pretty beardy, but we just felt they didn’t quite fully sum up our affinity toward beards,” bassist Nathaniel Beard said in a press release. “Now with this new album, we feel like we’ve finally released what will probably go down as the most pro-beard album in history.”

If you're looking for the courage to continue your beard through the approaching hot months, or just a good laugh, stream The Beards' album below. If it strokes your beard, you can purchase it on iTunes.

What Bollywood Stars Are Saying About The Indian Election

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NEW DELHI — When the hashtag #BollywoodSplit started trending recently on Twitter, people might have assumed it referred to the romantic woes of India’s glamorous movie stars.

But it was a split of a different kind that had electrified the Hindi movie industry — one involving politics.

The Five Stages Of Inebriation, According To One 19th Century Drunkard

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Centuries before photos of sloppy drunkenness were plastered around social media accounts of all kinds, there were these gems:





The "The Five Stages of Inebriation," which we spotted on Juxtapoz, illustrate the five stages of drunkenness, according to one very dapper and very drunk 19th century fellow. We see the bearded gentleman transition from sober to tipsy to drunk, enough to do bad impressions of being passed out on a wheelbarrow. What can we say, we've all been there.

The hilarious sepia snapshots, taken by Charles Percy Pickering in the 1860s, are thought to be staged, educational photos recreating the effects of inebriation for a temperance group. Advocates of temperance encouraged good citizens to be teetotallers, a term describing those who abstained from alcohol completely. Fun fact, according to the State Library of New South Wales, the term emerged because temperance proponent John Turner had a stutter and mispronounced the word "total."

"The Five Stages" are examples of albumen print photographs, in which the albumen in egg whites is employed to bind photographic chemicals to the surface of the paper. This is how most photos were printed until the 1920s. What do you think of these retro drunken antics? Let us know what stages of inebriation Pickering missed in the comments.

Artist Challenges The Pattern Of Food-Shaming Women With Stunning Nude Self Portraits (NSFW)

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For many, a snack is not just a snack. Whether serving as a means of rebellion, a secret indulgence, a compulsory drug or a well-deserved reward, a seven layer cake often has a few extra layers of meaning beneath the surface. As if everyone's relationship with food wasn't complicated enough, the public seems to have endless things to say about women and their dining preferences. Remember how much the internet freaked out when Lena Dunham ate a cupcake in the bathtub?

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Cue Lee Price, an artist who's fascinated by the relationship between women and food. Though she refuses to food-shame, Price doesn't deny there can be an unhealthiness to the alliance between a lady and her snack either. The New York-based artist explores the complexities of her own eating habits, questioning what deeper reasoning lies behind her sweet tooth, using herself as both subject and artist.

"I use food as a metaphor for the ways we distract ourselves from being present," Price writes in her statement. In her realistic depictions, she renders women, often herself, enjoying a treat or four in the privacy of her own home, whether naked in the tub or bundled up in bed. "They are private spaces, spaces of solitude, and unusual places to find someone eating," she explained in an interview with The Other Journal. "The private space emphasizes the secrecy of compulsive behavior and the unusual settings emphasize its absurdity. The solitude and peace of the setting is a good juxtaposition to the frenetic, out-of-control feel of the woman’s actions." Of course, these moments become not so private when shared with an art gallery, or the entire internet.

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Binging on Doritos, Twinkies and jelly donuts, Price uses her body and habits to access a strange food-centric phenomenon that is hard to explain and harder to control. "The aerial view evokes the feeling of an out of body experience: the subject is watching herself engage in compulsive behavior but is unable to stop," she explains. "There is an absurdity to the repetition of this act of compulsion. At the same time it is an attempt to find real nourishment." Rather than label women's eating habits as good or bad, Price playfully explores the serious reasons women occasionally indulge in absurd eating rituals, asking what it is they're really looking for. Lucky for us, she does so in a rather gorgeous manner.

Price's subjects don't ask to be pitied or judged. Their enjoyment of junk food, rather, is equated with a joy of life, and a grand "screw you" to all who attempt to censor their needs and desires. Even if the nourishment they're looking for isn't to be found in a bag of Cheetos, that's their problem, not yours. As Price says: "The women in my paintings are seeking a place of solace. They are looking for a reacquaintance with joy. They are searching for the lusciousness of life."

Not Sure What Feminism Is? Allow These Famous Authors To Explain.

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If the musings of our more reasonable-seeming celebrities are any indication of what we as a culture collectively believe, then it seems that we have forgotten what feminism means.

When asked by TIME whether or not she would describe herself as feminist, Shailene Woodley responded, "No because I love men." She went on to describe herself as a believer in "sisterhood," which she sees as separate from feminism, and to describe feminism using oddly militaristic language. Rather than "raising women to power," Woodley noted that, "we have to have a fine balance." Well, yeah. Women have been striving for a fine balance since before "feminism" was a thing.

Thankfully, this induced a lot of wincing, head-scratching, and open letters to Shailene Woodley, who can mostly be excused as naive. Still, there are loads of celebrities (et tu, Madonna?) chanting the hugely problematic "I'm not a feminist, I'm a humanist" mantra -- as though the two ideologies were opposed.

Not sure whether or not you're a feminist? Here's a quick, one-question test: Do you believe men and women should have equal rights and opportunities? Yes? Great! Glad that's resolved.

In case the meaning's still murky, here are 13 fantastic female authors* who can spell it out for you in simple, eloquent terms:

Jane Austen
"But I hate to hear you talking so like a fine gentleman, and as if women were all fine ladies, instead of rational creatures. We none of us expect to be in smooth water all our days." - Persuasion

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Margaret Atwood
"We still think of a powerful man as a born leader and a powerful woman as an anomaly."

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Ursula Le Guin
"We are volcanoes. When we women offer our experience as our truth, as human truth, all the maps change. There are new mountains." - a commencement address at Bryn Mawr College

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J.K. Rowling
"Very early on in writing the series, I remember a female journalist saying to me that Mrs Weasley, 'Well, you know, she's just a mother.' And I was absolutely incensed by that comment. Now, I consider myself to be a feminist, and I'd always wanted to show that just because a woman has made a choice, a free choice to say, 'Well, I'm going to raise my family and that's going to be my choice. I may go back to a career, I may have a career part time, but that's my choice.' Doesn't mean that that's all she can do. And as we proved there in that little battle, Molly Weasley comes out and proves herself the equal of any warrior on that battlefield." - J.K. Rowling and the Women of Harry Potter

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Virginia Woolf
"As long as she thinks of a man, nobody objects to a woman thinking." - Orlando

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Charlotte Brontë
"If men could see us as we really are, they would be a little amazed; but the cleverest, the acutest men are often under an illusion about women: they do not read them in a true light: they misapprehend them, both for good and evil: their good woman is a queer thing, half doll, half angel; their bad woman almost always a fiend." - Shirley

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Adrienne Rich
"Responsibility to yourself means refusing to let others do your thinking, talking, and naming for you; it means learning to respect and use your own brains and instincts; hence, grappling with hard work." - "Claiming an Education"

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Simone de Beauvoir
"I am too intelligent, too demanding, and too resourceful for anyone to be able to take charge of me entirely. No one knows me or loves me completely. I have only myself."

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Mary Wollstonecraft
"It is vain to expect virtue from women till they are in some degree independent of men." - A Vindication of the Rights of Woman

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Toni Morrison
"I don't think a female running a house is a problem, a broken family. It's perceived as one because of the notion that a head is a man." - Conversations with Toni Morrison

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Zadie Smith
"It was in the air, or so it seemed to Kiki, this hatred of women and their bodies-- it seeped in with every draught in the house; people brought it home on their shoes, they breathed it in off their newspapers. There was no way to control it." - On Beauty

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Leslie Jamison
"We don't want to be wounds ("No, you're the wound!") but we should be allowed to have them, to speak about having them, to be something more than just another girl who has one. We should be able to do these things without failing the feminism of our mothers, and we should be able to represent women who hurt without walking backward into a voyeuristic rehashing of the old cultural models." - "Grand Unified Theory of Female Pain"

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Claire Messud
"We live in a culture that wants to put a redemptive face on everything, so anger doesn't sit well with any of us. But I think women's anger sits less well than anything else. Women's anger is very scary to people, and to no one more than to other women, who think my goodness, if I let the lid off, where would we be?" - an interview with NPR

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*Note: Most of these women have demonstrated a love of men, or at least specific men, at some point either in their lives or their writing. Which is to say: not only are they feminists -- they also respect the rights of men! Imagine that.

Here Are Seth Rogen's Favorite Kanye West Songs

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Seth Rogen and Kanye West have found themselves connected often in the past six months. In November of last year, Rogen and James Franco created a parody of West's video for "Bound 2." The sketch so impressed West that he asked the pair of actors to perform at his forthcoming wedding to Kim Kardashian. (Rogen turned him down.) But this was not the first time Rogen had encountered West; their relationship goes back to 2005, when Rogen says he met the rap star while making "The 40-Year-Old Virgin." (West apparently worked out with a trainer who lived near Rogen.) Which is all prelude to this: Because Rogen and West are a thing that people on the Internet enjoy, we asked the "Neighbors" star to reveal his top three Kanye West tracks. Put on the spot, these are the songs he came up with.

"Runaway"


"Black Skinhead"


"Through the Wire"

This 'Rocky Horror' Fan Waited 5 Years In Antici.. pation To Complete A Tweet

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One extremely dedicated "Rocky Horror Picture Show" fan came up to the (Twitter) lab to see what was on the slab, and shivered with antici..................pation for five years before he could complete a very pressing Tweet.

Hot patootie bless his soul for being so patient.

Check out Twitter user Frank Furter's sweet return.











Yup, this one is for all you Transylvanians out there.

H/t Mashable

Roberto Orci Will Take Over The 'Star Trek' Director's Chair

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After months of erroneous reports about who would take over the director's chair in the new "Star Trek" series' third installment, Variety reports that Roberto Orci will fill J.J. Abrams' shoes.

The threequel will mark Orci's first time behind the camera. He's had a steady career as a producer and writer, though, having previously written episodes of "Alias," the first two "Transformers" movies and "The Amazing Spider-Man 2." Orci is also a frequent Abrams collaborator. In addition to "Alias," he wrote "Mission: Impossible III" and the previous two "Star Trek" movies. In other words, is there anyone more suited to take over this series?

Orci replaces names like Jon M. Chu ("Step Up 2: The Streets," "G.I. Joe: Retaliation") and Joe Cornish ("Attack the Block") following months of campaigning to replace Abrams. The outgoing "Star Trek" director will still be around as a producer and story consultant, but he confirmed in October 2013 that he was trading in the Trekkies for The Force.

Unsurprisingly, we have yet to learn any plot details for the new "Star Trek." What we do know is that Chris Pine and Zachary Quinto will return to their roles of Captain Kirk and Spock, respectively. Another thing that's certain is that "Star Trek 3," which is eyeing a 2016 release, will remain a box office behemoth, no matter who's in the director's chair. Abrams' first "Star Trek" took in $386 million worldwide, while "Star Trek Into Darkness" earned $467 million.

[via Variety]

Spike Lee Regrets 'She's Gotta Have It' Rape Scene

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Spike Lee is making the interview rounds to support both the 25th anniversary of "Do the Right Thing" and the director's new film, "Da Sweet Blood of Jesus," which he funded via Kickstarter. Lee's always one for thoughtful social commentary, but the 57-year-old turned his gaze inward in a wide-ranging chat with Deadline.com editor Mike Fleming Jr. During the discussion, Lee revealed that his one regret as a filmmaker was including a rape scene in his directorial debut, "She's Gotta Have It."

If I was able to have any do-overs, that would be it. It was just totally ... stupid. I was immature. It made light of rape, and that’s the one thing I would take back. I was immature and I hate that I did not view rape as the vile act that it is. I can promise you, there will be nothing like that in 'She's Gotta Have It,' the TV show [that will air on Showtime], that's for sure.


"She's Gotta Have It" focused on Nola Darling (Tracy Camilla Johns), a young black woman in Brooklyn juggling relationships with three men. The 1986 comedy climaxes in a scene where one of the men, Jamie (Tommy Redmond Hicks), whom the New York Times called at the time "sensitive and responsible," rapes Nola.

"This is a shocking, disturbing scene -- and not just because rape is out of place in a comedy," wrote Cora Harris after the film's release in 1987. She continued:

Jamie is supposed to be mature and gentle, and is the only one Nola considers as a possible permanent lover. Prior to the rape, he and Nola have cooled their relationship because she has refused to choose among her lovers. She becomes despondent, invites Jamie to her apartment, and attempts to seduce him. Incensed at being "used" this way, he assaults her.

Jamie's possessiveness is the reason for his anger and the real motivation behind the rape. But this is obscured, and the audience is left with the impression that Jamie is justified. Nola had "asked for it" -- the old excuse for rape.


Back in 1986, Lee praised his film for its portrayal of relationships within the black community, but did not directly comment on the rape sequence.

"The difference between this film and 'The Color Purple' is that even though there are some dog black men in this film, you can tell there is a difference," he said in an interview with the New York Times. "This film was not done with hate, and none of the men here are one-note animals, like Mister was in 'The Color Purple.'"

Further critique of the "She's Gotta Have It" scene can be found in an excerpt from the book "Watching Rape: Film and Television in Post-Feminist Culture" by Sarah Projansky. To read Lee's excellent Q&A with Fleming, head to Deadline.com.

Library Of Congress Will Destroy Embarrassing CDs For You

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The Library of Congress wants to destroy all your CDs for science. You know how your super old version of Celine Dion's "Falling Into You" sometimes won't work when you throw it into your MacBook Pro? Apparently CDs weren't meant to last very long and, according to the Atlantic, the Library of Congress is trying to figure out how to save them. In order to do that, they'll first have to destroy them.

Fenella France, the chief of preservation research and testing at the Library of Congress, is leading a project to understand what causes CDs age and how to preserve them. "We're trying to predict, in terms of collections, which of the types of CDs are the discs most at risk," she told the Atlantic. France and her team are collecting CDs from volunteers and participants all over the country (email for more infomation) so your copy of Backstreet Boys' "Black and Blue" can have a proper burial.

For more on the future of CDs and what makes them deteriorate over time, head over to the Atlantic.

Find Out The (Totally Fake) Stories Behind Your Favorite GIFs

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The great thing about GIFs is that they are short, sweet and straight to the laughs. But have you ever wondered why that man looks so confused, or why that dog is barking at that lettuce? (Of course you have.) Webcomic artist AC Stuart, also known as Noob the Loser, has taken to providing his own take on what's happening behind the scenes.

These comics fall into the genre of Behind The GIFs, which detail the unseen events that occur before some of the funniest GIFs across the Internet. One of Stuart's most popular mini-stories is one of a turtle named Maurice who dared to dream big before ultimately realizing even turtles have limits.




Stuart isn't the only artist who has added backstories to popular GIFs. In fact, he cited this Cheetos comic strip as being the first he encountered, the one that inspired him to create his own. "I can't remember what I saw after that, but I saw another and thought, good God, this is a really good prompt for comic ideas. So I started doing them, just by Googling 'funny GIFs' initially, but now I follow a lot of blogs that post gifs that I use," he told The Huffington Post.

Oh, and there is an entire community on Reddit called /r/BehindtheGIFs dedicated to creating the comical explanations for already amusing GIFs. But here are a few of our Noob the Loser favorites below.










All images shared from Noob the Loser using Embeddlr.

Watch 'Kill Bill' Fight Scene Reenacted By Kids Side-By-Side With The Original

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The Copperhead-Black Mamba fight scene from Quentin Tarantino's "Kill Bill Vol. 1" is easily one of the best from the film. Thanks to filmmaker Bobby Burns, that scene just got an impressive, pint-size remake. Not only did he recruit two excellent young actresses, but every shot is so spot on, nailing all of the angles and action with cardboard weapons and props. Our favorite part might be the improved school bus, though. Burns also recently put together a trailer imagining "Star Wars" as directed by Tarantino.

Malala To Donate Proceeds From Portrait To Nigerian Girls' Education In Move Of Solidarity

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In an inspiring (and meta) move, ardent education activist Malala Yousafzai will donate the proceeds from the sale of a portrait of herself to help girls in Nigeria.

The painting of the 16-year-old -- who was shot in the head by the Taliban in 2012 while on her way home from school in Pakistan -- is expected to fetch between $60,000 and $80,000 at Christie’s auction house in New York City on Wednesday. Yousafzai announced in a statement through her eponymous foundation that 100 percent of the sales will support local Nigerian nonprofits that focus on education and advocacy for women and girls.

malala portrait

Artist Jonathan Yeo said the portrait demonstrates the inherent struggle and beauty in Yousafzai’s mission.

"I hope the painting reflects the slight paradox of someone with enormous power yet vulnerability and youth at the same time," Yeo said in a statement.

Yousafzai’s donation decision comes amid international outcry from activists across the globe to help the nearly 300 Nigerian girls who remain in captivity after being kidnapped by terrorist group Boko Haram last month. The girls’ captors, who abducted the students from schools in the northern region of the country, released a video on Monday believed to be of the girls chanting Quranic verses, and said they will exchange the victims for imprisoned Boko Haram members, the Associated Press reported.

Yousafzai has pledged her support for the kidnapping victims, from the outset, calling the girls her "sisters" in a recent interview with CNN. The Malala Fund has also established a specific fundraising effort to help Nigerian organizations that do on-the-ground work that supports women and girls.

Find out how you can get involved with the Malala Fund's Nigerian effort here.



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This Starbucks Barista Is The Van Gogh Of Coffee Cup Art

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The only thing hotter than Gabriel Nkweti Lafitte's coffee is the cup it comes in.

The 41-year-old barista, who works at a Starbucks in central London, has taken doodling on coffee cups and turned it into an art. In addition to the customer's name, Lafitte adorns cups with sketches of anything varying from a T. rex skeleton to a beautifully drawn owl perched on a tree branch.

"I love seeing people’s reaction to my drawings," Lafitte told Metro, explaining he makes each cup -- some of which require 40 hours of work to finish -- for customers who exhibit kindness. "I enjoy the joy and surprise on their faces."

According to the outlet, he creates his work at home, and then has lucky patrons come back in to pick up their cup.

Lafitte told Buzzfeed he'd love to see his designs, which he currently draws on disposable paper cups, adorn more permanent ceramic mugs one day.

The cups have been a huge hit with customers, who love the one-of-a-kind creations Lafitte makes just for them.

"No one has EVER made me anything. So I'm basking in this," one happy recipient tweeted at Lafitte. "Thank you to the incredibly talented Gabriel.."

Check out photos of Lafitte's cups, below:





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If You've Been Attacked By A Monster, Godzilla Lawyer Can Help YOU Get Justice, I.e. Money

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Have you or your business been attacked by kaiju or any other kind of monster? Then you might be entitled to money. Call Jorge Rivers (Thomas Lennon), Godzilla Attorney. He'll fight for YOU.

Check the Nerdist-created ad above, and take the first step towards justice.

Jon Hamm Is Ready To 'Lock The Door' On 'Mad Men'

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Jon Hamm has been all over the place in 2014. The 43-year-old has appeared on magazine covers, podcasts, the season finale of "Parks and Recreation" and even at a wax museum. Since April, he's been killing it, once again, as Don Draper on the final season of "Mad Men"; this stare alone is better than what some of Hamm's contemporaries have accomplished in the last four months. As if all that weren't enough, Hamm's also set to hit the multiplex: He's the lead in Disney's "Million Dollar Arm," a PG-rated drama about baseball that focuses on a real-life sports agent, J.B. Bernstein, and the title reality show competition he helped create in India.

"It's not a baseball movie so much as it's an incredible story set against the backdrop of baseball," Hamm told HuffPost Entertainment about the film, which lists ESPN kingpin Bill Simmons as one of its executive producers. "The fact that it's true is kind of mind-blowing to me. I can't believe that this actually happened."

jon hamm mad men

Hamm's right about the story. Even die-hard baseball fans, a group who would count Hamm as a member (he roots for the St. Louis Cardinals), are likely unfamiliar with what happened with Bernstein's "Million Dollar Arm" in 2008. The game show, which the agent helped start while at a career crossroads, was a sensation in India, and produced two pitchers, Rinku Singh and Dinesh Patel, neither of whom had ever thrown a baseball prior to meeting Bernstein. (Read more about what happens to Singh and Patel here, or just see "Million Dollar Arm.")

"I was blown away that it had somehow escaped my radar," Hamm said. "To get the opportunity to kind of tell this story is really cool."

When Hamm says that "Million Dollar Arm" is not a baseball movie, he's not necessarily spinning. While there is a lot of baseball in the film, "Million Dollar Arm" is more about Bernstein and his turn from a work-first agent to a family man (Lake Bell plays Hamm's onscreen love interest) and mentor.

"I think I had him pegged pretty good by the time we met," said Hamm, who didn't meet Bernstein until the film's production headed to India, where the real-life agent was working on the newest season of the reality show. "There's a lot of similarities between being an agent and being an actor. There's the false confidence you need to have all the time. The charisma, where you have to fake it until you make it. There's a lot of that in what I do for a living and certainly a lot of that in what J.B. does for a living. I realized that it was a really good fit [for me]."

As was "Million Dollar Arm" itself. Hamm cited director Craig Gillespie ("Lars and the Real Girl") and screenwriter Tom McCarthy ("Win Win") as part of the reason he was so confident in the project. The two indie stalwarts helped, in Hamm's words, keep the Disney film from having "too much Disney."

"Craig did a wonderful job controlling the tone of the movie and not letting it veer into sentimentality land," Hamm said. "I thought I was in good hands, and thought it was a good project for me. I thought it was something I would really look back on with fondness and something that I could be really proud of. That's what happened."

It would be an understatement to say Hamm is also proud of "Mad Men." The acclaimed series put him on the map as a leading man, and invariably led to opportunities like "Million Dollar Arm." Hamm's tenure as Don Draper will come to an end in early July, however, when production on the final season of "Mad Men" wraps. (Those episodes won't air on AMC until 2015.)

"It's been a big, big, big part of my life. I've got a lot of really good friends in the cast and crew. It's going to be tricky [to see it end]," Hamm said of the show's final episodes. "I'm not going to say I wish it wouldn't end, because everything has to end, but it is what it is. We're going to have an emotional journey once we wrap it up. We'll walk away and lock the door."

Nicole Kidman Says Winning The Oscar In 2003 Was Her Loneliest Experience

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CANNES, France (AP) — Nicole Kidman has never had to make the choice that Grace Kelly did, quitting acting to begin another life as Princess of Monaco. But she's rarely found equilibrium in her career and personal life.

"When I won the Oscar, I went home and I didn't have (love) in my life," said Kidman, who won best actress for "The Hours" in 2003, two years after she and Tom Cruise were divorced. "That was the most intensely lonely experience in my life." Kidman stars as Kelly in "Grace of Monaco," which premiered Wednesday as the opener of the Cannes Film Festival. In it, she plays Kelly following her marriage to Prince Rainier of Monaco (Tim Roth) as she adjusts to royal life and severs ties with Hollywood.

"Strangely for me, the greatest highs have coincided with the greatest lows," said Kidman. "So (during) my professional highs a lot of times I've had personal lows and they've collided. That's always aggravated me that it's gone that way. I'm hoping one day I can have a professional high and a personal high."

Kidman said she drew from her own life to empathize with Kelly, although they differ greatly in husbands.

"I am married to a prince," said Kidman, who wed Keith Urban in 2006. "A country prince."

— Jake Coyle, AP Film Writer (Twitter: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle
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