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Here Are The Best Rivalries In Cartoon And Comic History

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Let's dispel reality for a moment, and pretend that your favorite protagonists and superheroes have made peace with the world's most notorious villains and evil doers. So much so that they've all formed friendships worth memorializing.

Enter Dan Matutina, aka Twistedfork, who's brought this nerdy dream to fruition... sort of. His project, "Versus/Hearts" pairs lionhearts like Sonic and Batman with their slightly less principled counterparts -- Voldemort, Metalhead and the like.

hearts

The "silly project," as Matutina describes it on his Tumblr, is all about rivalry. "Rivals hate each other, but deep inside they know they couldn’t exist without the other." We couldn't agree more, and with the amount of graphic detail encapsulated in this adorable series, we'd like to top our hat to the artist who dared to unite war and peace. Kudos, Mr. Matutina.


Here's Everything Wrong With 'Frozen'

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CinemaSins has tallied the wrongdoings of a lot of films. Sticking mostly to the action-adventure genre, the channel's nitpicked at movies that are truly awful, and others that have been fan favorites, but it's all been in good fun. Their latest "Everything Wrong With ..." may not get off so easily. From sneaking in a "size doesn't matter" joke to Anna somehow avoiding certain hypothermia to that discount Sid (from "Ice Age") snowman named Olaf, "Frozen" comes out with 96 sins. However, one does not simply disgrace "Frozen" and not get trolled by the Internet. Watch the surely controversial video and let us know if you think this one went too far:

The Grand Budapest Hotel Got The (Very Impressive) Lego Treatment

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Lego enthusiasts and film obsessives might make for fitting bedfellows, so it's only appropriate that a Wes Anderson-loving Lego builder made a splash online over the weekend.

Days after demonstrating his efforts in a YouTube video, Ryan Ziegelbauer, a 34-year-old Lego aficionado from San Diego, California, unveiled a 7-foot-tall replica of the Grand Budapest Hotel in Los Angeles this past weekend. Leading a team of 10 designers, Ziegelbauer crafted the model across 575 hours with more than 50,000 Lego blocks. It will be on display at the Architect and Design Museum in LA through August. Breakout actor Tony Revolori, whose first starring role was Zero Moustafa in "The Grand Budapest Hotel," was on hand for the unveiling.

"I'm a huge Wes Anderson fan and we decided this was the perfect building to build," Ziegelbauer said, according to USA Today. "It's a Victorian-style building with lots of details and an amazing pink color. As a Lego designer it's cool because it's a color we haven't used before."

All these Legos need is some Futura, a handwritten note and Bill Murray.

grand budapest hotel

grand budapest hotel

grand budapest hotel

How Sara Bareilles Really Helped This Couple Get Engaged

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Sara Bareilles helped Matt and Chelsea get engaged in the music video for "I Choose You." In this new extended version of the video, we see how the whole proposal came together, how the couple started dating and the beauty behind roses made out of Post-It notes. Check it out and try to hold back all those tears (we didn't):



Correction: The headline of this post misspelled Bareilles' last name.

Here's What Joss Whedon Thinks About The State Of The Superhero Genre

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Lately, it seems like superhero movies have become characterized by a sameness best described by Matt Zoller Seitz as "things crashing into other things." In light of the critical mass of such films (including, for example, four movies featuring Iron Man in the span of five years), there has been a discussion as to whether the current state of violent stagnation is the fate of the genre or possibly evidence that it has yet to fully develop. Considering the critical success that was "Marvel's The Avengers" and its upcoming sequel, "Marvel's The Avengers: Age of Ultron," HuffPost Entertainment asked director Joss Whedon how he felt about the matter.

"People have made it very clear that they are fed up with movies where entire cities are destroyed, and then we celebrate," Whedon said, recognizing that of all of those things crashing into other things is an attempt to harness somewhat newly found visual effects.

"Now, I watched 'The Dark Knight' and I thought of that as riffing on the genre," he said. "That was a superhero movie as 'The Godfather.' And I was like, 'But I just still want to see a superhero movie!' We had just gotten the technology to make it awesome, and I wasn't ready to be post-modern about it yet."

There is an inherent clash that characterizes the genre, and Whedon is tapped into that discordance more so than the use of CGI. "You're in a constant state of being pulled both ways at all times," he said, "You're trying to make a populist film with fascist iconography that is just bigger, and better, and longer, and trying to break that down and find a weakness and humanity."

Ultimately, what Whedon finds important in his work (and what we will see in "Avengers: Age of Ultron" which he wrote and is currently filming in the U.K.) is that emphasis on humanity.

"People come in with a certain amount of emotional baggage," he said, "So, whether we're in our larvae stage or our decadent stage, I can't really say, but I try to make my superhero movies as if there's either never been one or there's only ever been them. I work with the idea that it's just a natural way for people to be, so that you still make a movie about people."

Ultra Violet, Warhol Superstar, Dies At 78

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Isabelle Collin Dufresne, the French-born artist, actress and author known as Ultra Violet, the beauty among the superstars of Andy Warhol’s glory days at his studio, the Factory, died early Saturday morning at a Manhattan hospital. She was 78 and lived in Manhattan and in Nice, France.

Foo Fighters Agree To Play Undetermined Crowdsourced Concert

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The folks of Richmond, Virginia -- and most certainly the surrounding DMV area -- have upped the ante on what it means to be a Foo Fighters fan. Led by the efforts of Andrew Goldin, a month-long campaign was launched to crowdsource $70,000 to bring the band back to Richmond for their first show since 1998. While this plan was hatched without any contact with the band, the concert came to the Foo Fighters attention, and they tweeted out a simple response: "See ya soon…let's have a good time."

With 1,400 tickets to sell at $50 apiece, the campaign surpassed its hefty goal on Saturday, June 16. While no date or venue has been set, the concert will definitely take place at some point during 2014. It just goes to show, if you love something, set it free, and then when it doesn't come back to you soon enough, you raise a lot of money until it can no longer ignore you.

Dude Who Edited Himself Into Britney Spears' 'Work Bitch' Is Our New Favorite Person

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Israeli artist Gal Volinez just made the world a little more magical. Clearly, the one thing Britney Spears' "Work Bitch" music video was always missing was Volinez and his particular swagger -- nay -- his particular joie de vivre.

Now the song finally makes sense.

Watch Volinez's recut above, then check out his bleak six-minute tribute to "sad Britney" here.

Via Reddit

This Street Performer Has A Vocal Range Like Nothing You've Ever Heard Before

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A tough-looking street performer has a rather unlikely soft side: his voice.

The very talented musician was captured outside of the Strasbourg Cathedral in France and video was posted by Lucas Fuchs, who writes about the performance:

This street performer playing in front of the Strasbourg cathedral has a very unique voice, or should I say two voices? He can switch from his normal voice to a female voice effortless [sic].


While we recommend watching in full, if you're pressed for time, you can get a sense of the vocal range and seamless change by starting at about 1:45 into the clip.

The Agony And The Ecstasy Of Raising A Toddler

10 Dream Offices That Remind Us A Perfect Work Environment Does Exist (PHOTOS)

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From open-office floor plans to introvert-friendly setups, it seems like everyone is looking to find a perfectly productive place to work. But what if that space isn't somewhere out there in corporate America... what if that place is at home? While it's hard to believe that a place known as a "dream workplace" still exists, our friends at Porch.com are here to remind us of just that. From their creative energy-inducing accents to their soft, quiet-minded touches, these office-like environments don't just put cubicles everywhere to shame, they make us want to work from home every. single. day.





Have something to say? Check out HuffPost Home on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

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Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line "Project submission." (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

These 10 Photos Reveal The Frustrating Reality Of Education In Liberia

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the other hundred
"The Other Hundred" is a unique photo book project aimed as a counterpoint to the Forbes 100 and other media rich lists by telling the stories of people around the world who are not rich but whose lives, struggles and achievements deserve to be celebrated. Its 100 photo stories move beyond the stereotypes and clichés that fill so much of the world's media to explore the lives of people whose aspirations and achievements are at least as noteworthy as any member of the world's richest 1 percent.


Monrovia, Liberia
Photographer: Andrew Esiebo

Like many Liberians, Mercy Womeh, 18, missed several years of education as a result of her country’s civil wars of 1989-96 and 1999-2003. Three years ago, in search of work, her family moved from the countryside to a suburb of Monrovia, the country’s capital. Mercy is now catching up with her schooling.

She could go to a free state school, but with overcrowded classes, staff shortages and teachers who often fail to show up, she has opted for a private school.

“Yes, the education is free at state schools,” she says. “But there are charges like paying for pamphlets and tests, so it is almost as if you are paying. If you don’t have money, you have to drop out.”

To complete her last two years of schooling, Mercy has enrolled at J Chauncey Goodridge school, where she is now in seventh grade. She earns the money for her fees by crushing rocks.

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Before Mercy’s family moved to Monrovia, none of the children attended school.

“My parents didn’t have the money to send my brothers and I to school when we lived in the village. They were farmers and I used to help them by driving the birds away from the rice and then beating the rice when it was harvested. I’m happy that my father was able to relocate us to the city to get a better education.”


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Mercy believes getting an education will transform her life: “When you graduate from high school, you understand things that people who did not go to school cannot understand. The way you speak will be different and you will be able to make decisions that will benefit you and your family. If you are not educated, you are like a tea without sugar.”

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The stones Mercy crushes are used in Liberia’s booming construction industry, but little of the country’s economic growth trickles down to people like her. Although Liberia’s economy has grown strongly in recent years, eight out of 10 Liberians still live on less than U.S. $1.25 a day.

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For each bucket she fills, Mercy earns 35 Liberian dollars –- about U.S. $0.50. On a good day, she can fill seven buckets.

“How many years I have left in school depends on whether I have the money to continue,” she says.


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More from "The Other Hundred"

Inside Gaza

Roma in Rome

To Love In Bangladesh

The Wedding Factory

Ice 'Sculptures' As Big As Skyscrapers Found Under Greenland Ice Sheet

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The Greenland ice sheet may look like a vast expanse of white, but scientists peering beneath the smooth veil have found a fun house of sorts, full of giant jellyroll-like ice sculptures that could rival city skyscrapers in height and the whole of Manhattan in width.

The newfound wonderland not only reveals Mother Nature as artist, but also gives scientists a better picture of how Greenland's ice behaves and how that might change as the planet warms.

"If we could peel away each layer of snow at a time, eventually we would see that the layers were no longer coming off flat, like a layer cake," study researcher Robin Bell, of Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory in New York, told Live Science in an email. "If we could see them, they would look more like an odd, icy jelly roll. The ice is bent, twisted and folded," so that 120,000-year-old ice generally found at some 1.5 miles (2.5 kilometers) down is now found just 0.6 miles (1 km) from the surface. [Images: Greenland's Gorgeous Glaciers in Stunning Photos]

Bell added that the structures would be like "giant ice sculptures made by nature."

Until now, scientists relying on airborne radar thought the structures, which Bell and colleagues estimate cover about a tenth of northern Greenland, were rocky hills. With newer, ice-penetrating radar instruments used during NASA's Operation IceBridge mission — which aimed to map ice loss at the North and South Poles — researchers realized those hilly structures were actually made of ice.

As for how these sculptures are formed, the researchers built their theory partly on past findings from Antarctica, where Bell and others had found that ice sheets can grow from the bottom up, not just from the accumulation of snowing piling up on top of the ice. That growth, the scientists found, occurs as melt water at the bottom of the ice sheet thaws and refreezes.



petermann glacier
Petermann Glacier in Greenland dropped a huge chunk of ice in 2012.

Here's what the researchers think is occurring: Water that comes from melting at the bottom of the ice sheet, or water that streams down from the surface along crevasses and tubular shafts called moulins, refreezes at the bottom of the ice sheet. Over hundreds to thousands of years, the refreezing process warms, softens and warps the ice above the base of the ice sheet, creating the giant jellyroll-like structures discovered using radar. These structures could be up to 3,280 feet (1,000 m) in height, Bell said. They get bigger and are more common as the ice sheet narrows into the ice streams headed out to sea.

These rolled-up ice sculptures may also explain a weird behavior of Petermann Glacier, which made headlines in 2010 when a Manhattan-size chunk of ice broke off and slid into the sea. The researchers found one of these "sculptures" lying at a spot on the glacier that is moving along at about twice the speed of nearby ice. They suggest the refreezing process, by softening the ice, may accelerate the flow of glaciers.

Bell and her colleagues detailed their research in the June 15 issue of the journal Nature Geoscience.

Follow Jeanna Bryner on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.



Copyright 2014 LiveScience, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. ]]>

Chini The Dog Is The Animal Kingdom's Hardest Working Pooch

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This is Chini, the multi-talented and multi-tasking dog with many jobs.

We became acquainted with Chini, and her many different occupations, thanks to Irina Werning, the Agentina-born photographer behind the photo series "Chini Project."

It all started back in 2008 when Werning was asked to dog sit for some friends, according to her website. The photographer took little Chini with her into a friend's studio and snapped some shots of her, and then the project was born.

"For a year, I photographed her inside the little sets I would build for her where she was free to act our little human ways," Werning wrote on her website.

From office worker, to brain surgeon and kitchen chef, Chini has done it all. Check out the whimsical photos below to see what other professions this adorable little workaholic has mastered.



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Here Are 46 Female-Authored Plays That Deserve Your Attention

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Where are all the women in theater? It's a question oft asked and debated, with little consensus and a lot of outrage.

The most recent advocates to pick up the discussion are the Kilroys. In a public document posted online, the "gang of playwrights and producers in LA who are done talking about gender parity" showcased a list of 46 female-authored plays that leave no room for ambiguity. Women are writing for theater, the group points out, and if producers don't want to find them they will.

"The List," as it's called, includes 46 un-produced plays (or plays that have had only one professional production) selected by a group of 127 new play leaders. It is meant as "a tool for producers committed to ending the systemic underrepresentation of female voices* in the American theater," as the methodology section explains.

This systemic underrepresentation, throughout the theater world, has been well-documented.

Women are missing from the Tonys and Broadway, Lynn Nottage asserted in The New York Times earlier this month. She correctly pointed out that not one of this season's Broadway plays was written by a woman (or a person of color, for that matter), and when it came to the bookwriters, composers and lyricists, only six out of 47 were of the female persuasion.

The season before wasn't much better -- only 10.7% of those shows had female playwrights behind them. If you delve further into the archives, a look at the last 50 plus years of Tony award winners casts a rather depressing shadow. In the category of Best Direction of a Play, there are just four women winners (Mary Zimmerman for "Metamorphoses" in 2002, Anna D. Shapiro for "August: Osage County" in 2008, Marianne Elliott for "War Horse" in 2001, and Pam MacKinnon for "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" in 2013).

whos afraid of virginia woolf
(L-R) Actors Mireille Enos, Bill Irwin, Kathleen Turner and David Harbour bow during the curtin call of the opening night of 'Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf' at The Longacre Theater March 20, 2005 in New York City. (Photo by Paul Hawthorne/Getty Images)


Head to the Best Play records and female producers fared better, with an 11-year run (from 1993 to 2003) bringing a woman to the podium each awards ceremony. Alas, in musical theater, the Original Musical Score selection runs amok again. In that category, Betty Comden was the only woman to snag an award -- albeit multiple times -- from 1947 to 1997, after which only Lynn Ahrens, Lisa Lambert and Cyndi Lauper followed in her tracks.

These are, of course, but a few of the statistics available. The image of the typical playwright persists throughout though. As British writer Penelope Skinner pointed out to the NYT, female playwrights are "the exception rather than the rule," up against the stereotypical image of a "man in glasses wearing a suit jacket" writing all of our plays.

Theresa Rebeck, of "The Butterfly Collection" fame, reiterates. Playwriting “is NOT in fact a gene on a Y chromosome, and we are NOT losing women playwrights because they decided to run off and have babies," she said in a 2013 speech. "The reason we lost all those women playwrights is: we buried their work, and we sent them away.”

The Kilroys seem to agree.

“We’ve had a lot of conversations with artistic directors who defend their season lineups by complaining they have no access to quote-unquote good plays written by females or people identifying as female,” writer Sheila Callaghan explained to critic Patrick Healy. “The list lets us deliver 46 great plays to people who can’t seem to find them.

Founded in 2013, the Kilroys take their name from the WWII-era graffiti "Kilroy Was Here" left by American soldiers throughout Europe. Head over to the Kilroys list here and let us know your favorite female playwrights in the comments. For more on the dialogue surrounding women in theater, check out the #parityraid hashtag on Twitter now.

*The Kilroys recognize the complexities of gender identity, and the shortcomings of binary descriptors. They use this language as shorthand for the broad spectrum of female and gender queer identity.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this article incorrectly stated that Vivian Matalon, Tony award-winning director for "Morning's at Seven" in 1980, is a woman. He is, in fact, a man, making the statistic even grimmer.

Civil War Sword Found In Hawaii Jewelry Shop Heads To Virginia Museum

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It’s not every day one finds a beautiful antique sword that dates back to the Civil War and comes with its own fascinating history.

When Honolulu jewelry shop owner Ted Gonzales -- who purchases non-jewelry items as well -- bought the relic in 2012, he had no idea how the 150-year-old saber ended up in Hawaii or if it was even real.

"I bought it on pure enjoyment," Gonzales told KITV. "I thought it was cool."

But after one of Gonzales' customers, Paul Perrone, a military history buff, spotted the sword in Gonzales' shop and researched it, Gonzales knew he had to send it back to the place where its original owner died -- the National Park Service's Petersburg National Battlefield in Virginia, according to the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

It turns out, the sword belonged to 2nd Lt. Edwin I. Coe, evident by the inscription on the scabbard, but what Perrone's digging uncovered was that the 19-year-old soldier was mentioned in government archives, along with his history and a photo of him, the latter of which is very rare.

scabbard

The lieutenant's death at the Battle of Petersburg on June 17, 1864 was noted in the regimental history of the 57th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. It is also known that Coe was laid to rest in the Poplar Grove National Cemetery overseen by the Petersburg National Battlefield, according to what Jimmy Blankenship, a historian for the battlefield in Virginia, told the Honolulu Star-Advertiser.

"The majority of Civil War swords have no documentation," Blankenship said. "Lt. Coe's sword is indeed a very important Civil War artifact, and it definitely belongs here at Petersburg."

The museum, which plans to display the relic in the battlefield's visitor center, is buying the sword for $1,600, twice the amount Gonzales originally paid for it, according to Hawaii News Now.

Despite Gonzales' initial impulse to shop the saber around, he told HuffPost that Perrone was so passionate and enthusiastic about the sword's provenance, "it would be a shame to have it waste away on someone's mantle."

Now, the gleaming piece of history will be on view for all to see.

Hawaii News Now - KGMB and KHNL

This Dedicated Little Owl Has Big Dreams -- And Really Good Balance

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Every year young artists flock to the big city, looking for work and inspiration. The search can prove challenging for some.

But thanks to its impeccable balance, it looks like this little owl from the mountains of Tokyo has a creative career that's about to take flight.

In the video above, the white-faced owl perches carefully on YouTube user o-ji noantica's hand, almost as if the creature is guiding his stylus over the tablet as he illustrates.

The bond between owl and owner is clear throughout their videos and altogether pretty adorable. We look forward to seeing the beautiful art they create together.

15 Signs The Return Of Soulja Boy Was Upon Us This Whole Time

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We tried to ignore it. We tried to pretend like it wasn't happening. But the time has come for us all to accept the truth: Soulja Boy has returned.

He first reappeared on Drake's freestyle of "We Made It," originally produced by Soulja Boy. He teamed up with Busta Rhymes on "Fuck that Flo," and was soon after featured on Nicki Minaj's "Yasss Bish," which was produced by, you guessed it, Soulja Boy. In an interview with The Fader, Soulja Boy said that he has been been working with Diddy on his new album, "Money Making Mitch," and Lil Wayne on "Carter V," as well as on new music with Justin Bieber.

While Soulja Boy's reemergence in American pop culture may seem implausible, even borderline treasonous, the signs have been right in front of us this whole time:

1. The hellfire that was the polar vortex.
polar vortex

2. McDonald's refusal to rollout the McRib nationally.
mcrib

3. Michael Bay forgot his job and embarrassingly walked off stage during a live event.
michael bay las vegas

4. The great migration of the Gathering of the Juggalos.
insane clown posse

5. The world is running out of Velveeta cheese.
velveeta

6. Shia LaBeouf ... everything.
shia labeouf

7. Lady Gaga strapped herself to a rotisserie, let a girl puke on her and then climbed onto a mechanical bull and let the girl puke on her again while simulating sex or something.


8. Martha Stewart revealed she has know idea what a dildo is during her Reddit AMA.
martha stewart ama

9. Courtney Love was basically the person in charge of finding the Malaysian plane.
courtney love plane

10. Every single hotel during the Sochi Olympics.
sochi toilet

11. The near Srirachapocalypse of 2014.
sriracha

12. Nicki Minaj dressed like, well, a regular human.
nicki collage

13. We found out the hard way Beyonce isn't a robot and that sometimes her family has drama.
solangefighting

14. The Mexican Drug Cartel is still holding limes hostage.
limes

15. Drake broke out a lint roller courtside during the NBA playoffs.

'Hunger King' Exhibit Mocks Fast Food To Expose Global Gap Between Rich And Poor

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At a distance, Jani Leinonen's latest art exhibit blends into Budapest's cityscape seamlessly. "Hunger King" -- with its bright, familiar logo and bold, red letters hanging outside a store front -- looks like any standard fast-food restaurant on a busy street corner. But take a closer glance, and you'll see the Finnish artist's project is anything but your typical burger joint.

Highlighting Hungary's controversial treatment of its poor and homeless populations, Leinonen's exhibit uses corporate signage to critique the widening gap between the rich and the poor. Instead of Coca-Cola products, for example, the exhibit offers patrons "sloth," "lust" or "greed" out of its faux soda fountain machine.







In 2012, Hungary passed a measure that essentially banned homelessness, NPR reported. In what some consider the toughest anti-homeless legislation in Europe, the law allows people sleeping on the street to face hefty fines and even the possibility of jail time. Anti-poor policies like that one are what motivated Leinonen to move forward with his project, which is part of an artist event series called Luukku Atelier.

Before experiencing the interior of "Hunger King," onlookers decide which way they'd like to enter: Through the line for the "poor," or the line for the "rich," a video produced by Euro News explains. Nearby signs list exactly how the Hungarian government treats each group: The rich can expect tax decreases, high quality schooling and generous family benefits, while the poor face tax increases, inadequate support for their families and a lack of access to equal opportunities for their children.







Patrons won't find food inside. If they enter through the line for the poor -- which remains open to the first 50 people who arrive -- they receive a "burger box" that contains 11 euros (about $14.90), which is comparable to the country's daily minimum wage.

Although the exhibit focuses on Hungary's unequal treatment of its citizens, Leinonen said the theme of "Hunger King" is relevant around the world.

"I'm not here to point the finger at only Hungary," Leinonen said in the video of his project, which runs until July 6. "I think [the gap between rich and poor is] a global problem. I think Hungary just kind of depicts the global problem right now really well. I mean, I could do this [exhibit] in Helsinki or in Paris at the same time, and it would work exactly the same."

Many would argue that he could bring the exhibit to the U.S.

On Monday, the the International Monetary Fund cut its forecast for economic growth in the US this year. One of the organization's recommendations for changing the outlook was raising America's dismally low federal minimum wage, which currently stands at $7.25 an hour.

When it comes to treatment of its own homeless population, the U.S. doesn't do much better than Hungary. A recent report showed 33 American cities have passed measures restricting feeding the homeless in the last year alone. Some local ordinances penalize those who break the law with hefty fines -- like Houston which may fine an offender $2,000 for feeding more than five people in a public space.

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Colin Firth Leaving 'Paddington' Movie Due To 'Conscious Uncoupling'

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Colin Firth has exited "Paddington," where he voiced the title stuffed bear with the classic red hat. Firth gave the perfect statement to EW.com to announce his split from the film: "After a period of denial, we've chosen 'conscious uncoupling.'"

"Paddington" is well into production and two trailers for the film were already released. Despite Firth's departure, Studiocanal and The Weinstein Company still have plans to release the film in the U.S. in December. No replacement voice has been picked just yet.

The film about the lovable bear also features Nicole Kidman, Sally Hawkins, Peter Capaldi, Hugh Bonneville, Jim Broadbent and Julie Waters' voices. For more on Firth's departure, including what the film's director thought of his exit, head to EW.com.

[via EW]
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