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'Camp Abercorn' Web Series Aims To Depict Boy Scouts' Gay Controversy, Other Issues

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A new web series aims to put a creative spin on the controversy surrounding the Boy Scouts of America's stance on gay participants and other issues.

Created by Jeffrey Simon and starring "Friday Night Lights" veteran Brad Leland, "Camp Abercorn" focuses on a fictional scouting organization called the Compass Guides of America, and focuses on "the real situations young men face while away from home for an entire summer."

Simon, who was an active Eagle Scout before coming out as gay at 19, says his new series aims to "re-direct the conversation away from executives in fancy offices and bring it back to the values of scouts and importance of camp."

Despite the Boy Scouts' views on the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community, Simon tells The Huffington Post that in many ways, the organization taught him "how to be gay."

"I learned to voice my opinion strongly while respecting the positions of others. I learned to be self-reliant," he said. "I was surrounded by friends -- brothers -- who taught me when to speak with my heart and when it was best to keep my mouth shut."

Still, Simon's aims for the show go beyond politics and LGBT matters.

"One of the most rewarding parts of my three summers working on camp staff was being able to give back to the next generation of scouts, and that’s what I hope to do," he says. "I hope to inspire a new generation to take interest in scouting, remind veteran scouts and scouters how special camp is, and prove how the Boy Scouts can remain relevant in a modern America."

Simon and his team have launched an Indiegogo campaign for seven 30-minute episodes. Head here to read more about the campaign.


The Utterly Insane Makeup Creations By A 19-Year-Old Artist

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When Stephanie Fernandez applies makeup, she isn't trying to perfect that smokey-eye look or find the right shade of lipstick. Instead, the 19-year-old turns herself or her model friends into out-of-this-world creatures.

Fernandez was recently featured on the Instagram Blog and explained how her colorful but creepy style is actually influenced by what she hears. “Most of my makeup is heavily influenced by music. I love to be able to create and see what I am hearing and feeling. I simply see it in my mind’s eye, and my hands do the rest,” she said.

You have to see it to believe it:





















Marina Abramovic, For Some Strange Reason, Collaborated On A Film With Adidas

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Marina Abramovic, the almighty grandmother of performance art, has puzzled us in the past.

She's painted James Franco gold, invited Jay Z into a sensual circle of dance, and we're pretty sure she doesn't age, ever. But the Serbian artist's newest gift to the world is perhaps the hardest yet to wrap our heads around.

Adidas, really?

gam
Soccer, Marina style.



In a short film by SHOWstudio, Abramovic collaborates with the sports shoe corporation in honor of the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil. The three-minute short recreates "Work Relation," a 1978 piece between Abramovic and her former lover and collaborator Ulay. The black-and-white remake depicts 11 performers -- referencing the players on a soccer field -- donning MAI lab coats and, of course, Adidas kicks.

Marina's voice booms over the artsy sports arena, narrating the game at hand. "This performance is investigating three different social groups performing the same task: transporting stones from one side of an empty room to the other side," she explains.

"The first group is simple: two individuals each have two buckets to carry by him or herself. The second group is two people working together. They carry three buckets between them, each has one bucket, and they share the third. The third group is a human chain passing the stones down the line by hand."

As explained on YouTube: "Using only buckets and human labor, the three models compare and contrast systems of cooperation and efficiency, with the participants' bodies serving as the medium." Of the three types of social groups, the chain is the last group to surrender, revealing the perseverance and discipline of a devoted team. (Cue Adidas logo.)

Part science experiment, part game, part art piece, part commercial, this is three minutes of sponsored enlightenment only Marina could deliver.

marina
The enigma herself.



"One similarity between performance and sport that I wanted to highlight in this video is the importance of group collaboration," Abramovic explained to designboom. "When Ulay and I originally performed the piece work relation in 1978, the power of collective strength came through in the performance."

The perplexing short, directed by artist Marco Brambilla, illuminates the unusual connection between Marina's performance practice and team sports in general. Wait a minute -- can jocks and art nerds get along after all?

Still, we never took Marina for an Adidas type of woman. Perhaps she's been donning some striped sneakers beneath those full-length gowns all along?

'Golf Alpha Yankee' Director On His Personal Inspiration Behind The Gay Iranian Documentary

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Rick Flynn says his own struggles with sexuality influenced his decision to direct and produce "Golf Alpha Yankee," a controversial new documentary about gay Iranian refugees.

"I remember seeing this article...about some teenage boys in Iran that were being hanged because [of] something to do with their sexuality," he told HuffPost Live in an interview this week. "I remember thinking to myself, 'Okay, I'm worried that my family's going to find out, maybe my friends are gonna hate me or something,' and here are these boys in Iran in a similar situation, being killed."

He went on to note, "Even though I didn't know it at the time, I was always gonna make that film."

Also joining the conversation was Reza, a gay Iranian man now living in Canada who appears in Flynn's film.

"It's not a safe place [for gay people] at all," Reza said of his homeland.

Read more about "Golf Alpha Yankee" here.

Your Favorite Movie Posters Just Got Animated GIF Makeovers

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If only you could hang these bad boys on your wall.

Watch your favorite movie posters come to life via animated GIFs, thanks to one talented Reddit user:

"Kill Bill" (2003)

MPKillbill

"The Birds" (1963)

MPthebirds

"Skyfall" (2012)

MPSkyfall

"Drive" (2011)

MPDrive

"Pulp Fiction" (1994)

MPPulpFiction

"101 Dalmatians" (1996)

Mp101dal

"Back To The Future" (1985)

MPBacktothefuture

"The Hunger Games" (2012)

MPthehungergames

"The Lion King" (1994)

MPthelionkinggif

See more of your favorite movie posters come alive here, here and here.

There's An Entire World Of Psychedelic Wonder Hiding In This Piece Of Wood

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A visual artist has found life and beauty in a very unexpected place: wood grains.

Keith Skretch, an artist who specializes in video design installations, posted his project “Waves of Grain” on Vimeo in November. The clip, which is just too mesmerizing not to share, shows the excitement hidden deep within layers of wood.

“To create this strata-cut animation, I planed down a block of wood one layer at a time, photographing it at each pass,” Skretch wrote in the video’s description. “The painstaking process revealed a hidden life and motion in the seemingly static grain of wood, even as the wood itself was reduced to a mound of sawdust.”

According to his bio on his website, Skretch usually designs video for installations and live performances around the world. "Waves of Grain" became an official selection at several film festivals.

Visit Skretch's website to see more of his work and to find out where you can see his installations live.

This Video About Worry Will Really Make You Think

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"Can you allow your mind to be quiet?"

British philosopher Alan Watts poses the question in his speech on worry, which he describes as "a mind in the grip of vicious circles." Tragedy & Hope wonderfully illustrates the cycle of worry in the video above, layering visual elements with Watts' original speech on the subject.

"Once you've learned to think you can't stop. And an enormous number of people devote their lives to keeping their minds busy and feel extremely uncomfortable with silence."

If that sounds familiar, take a moment to really listen to what Watts has to say. Need some tips for quieting your own mind? Check out our meditation section here.

'Exodus: Gods And Kings' Trailer Gets Christian Bale Ready To Part The Red Sea

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"Exodus: Gods and Kings," or: What happens after Darren Aronofsky's "Noah" is over. The first trailer for Ridley Scott's biblical epic is here, and if it's not a sequel to "Noah," it could be known as a spiritualized "Gladiator." After all, the apocalyptic imagery, sprawling Egyptian landscapes and haunting cover of Simple Minds' "Belfast Child" are fierce.

In Scott's adaptation, Moses (Christian Bale) battles with Pharaoh Ramses (Joel Edgerton) in an effort to free thousands of slaves and flee from Egypt's deadly plagues. Along the way, he, like, parts some sea or something? No biggie. Bale has said to expect "shocking stuff" from the film, so therein lies another similarity to "Noah": Months before their respective releases, the movies' personnel started hinting at content that might drift from religious lore. "Exodus: Gods and Kings" (previously titled just "Exodus") opens Dec. 12. It also stars Aaron Paul, Ben Kingsley, John Turturro and Sigourney Weaver.



Here are the posters that were unveiled alongside the trailer:

exodus

exodus

exodus

This Computer Brings Internet Art Into Your Home, And It Is Stunning

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We live in an age where art and the internet have a strange relationship.

On one hand, the two are inevitably intertwined, as art on the internet -- whether an original or a reproduction -- is abundant. Yet, on the other, the internet -- ridden with likes, comments and a constant stream of external information -- clutters the experience of viewing art.

But "Electric Objects" aims to change this -- that is, by building a computer that will merge the two, enabling us to bring internet art into our homes, seamlessly.

"There's more art on the Internet than in every gallery and museum on Earth," Electric Objects CEO Jake Levine writes. "But many of these beautiful objects are trapped. They’re trapped inside of devices like our phones, our tablets, our TVs, our laptops... So we wanted to make a new way to bring art from the Internet into your home."

The video above introduces us to the device that does just that. Called EO1, it's a framed high-definition screen and integrated computer that can hang on the wall, creating the perfect hybrid display space for digital masterpieces, that is programmable via your phone.

Love what you see? Support Electric Objects on their Kickstarter. Let us know your thoughts on the project in the comments.




Artist Captures Some Of Soccer's Best Goals And Worst Misses

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Soccer matches are chock-full of heart-wrenching missed goals and remarkable saves (here's to you, Tim Howard). And every once in a while, there's a winning shot so incredible you talk about it for years to come.

These dramatic hits and misses are what inspired a British graphic designer -- and devoted Manchester City soccer fan -- to document some of the most significant moments in the sport's history.

Though Rick Hincks has been developing these posters since last November, he says the World Cup gave him a chance to further develop his designs and add to his series.

His simplistic designs don't include people or grass; they're just stripped down replicas of iconic moments represented in two colors: white and the color of the team. Each poster shows players' positions (depicted by their number), the ball's trajectory and the points at which the ball may have bounced off the ground or the goal post.

Among the artist's collection are depictions of USA goalkeeper Tim Howard's 16 saves against Belgium in the 2014 World Cup and, Hincks' personal favorite, Manchester City's Sergio Aguero's last-minute goal against the Queens Park Rangers in May 2012.

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tim howard poster
USA goalie Tim Howard's 16 saves against Belgium at the 2014 World Cup


sergio aguero
Manchester City's Sergio Aguero's winning goal against the Queens Park Rangers in the 94th minute of the May 2012 match.


To create his designs, Hincks spends hours looking at various camera angles of the specific moment. He then screengrabs as many frames as necessary to capture the correct trajectory and position of players in the shot. He says the process of creating the prints, which are available for purchase on his website, can be hard at times.

"The difficulty comes in tracking the movement. I’ve been asked if I use data and co-ordinates, I wish," Hincks told The Huffington Post in an email. "Some are really basic such as penalties or free kicks, others are quite complex, such as long runs, a lot of passing or where the ball bounces a lot. Other factors such as camera operators who like to zoom, low res footage and poor pitch markings cause a few problems at times."

Fans can even request specific moments for Hincks to recreate.

"I’ve had plenty of requests for incidents, own goals and classic misses," he told HuffPost. "John Terry’s miss [in the 2008 Champions League final] being a popular request of my United mates. "

Hincks says the response to his work has been overwhelmingly positive.

"I think the best response is being told by people who aren’t interested in football that they are happy for their partner to hang [the piece] in their house. Even though it’s a football print, it means that the design is being respected and not just the sporting moment," he said.

(h/t Fast Company)

Check out more of Rick Hincks' designs, below:

gerd muller
West Germany's Gerd Müller winning goal against the Netherlands at the 1974 World Cup


geoff hurst

'Drunktown's Finest' To Premiere At Sundance Institute's Native American Program

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Carte Blanche: Sundance Institute’s Native American and Indigenous Program will be taking place at New York City's Museum of Modern Art from July 10 - July 21.

As part of the series, Native American and transgender director Sydney Freeland will premiere her film "Drunktown's Finest." The film invites audiences to follow three young Native Americans, including a "promiscuous transsexual," as they strive to escape the hardships of life on an Indian reservation.

This year is the 20th anniversary of the Sundance Institute's Native American and Indigenous Program. According to a press release sent to The Huffington Post, "the Program has sustained a unique circle of support for indigenous film by scouting for and identifying artists, bringing them through lab and grant programs to get their projects made and shown, and taking the filmmakers and their work back to native lands to inspire new generations of storytellers."

We caught up with Freeland to discuss "Drunktown's Finest," how she found transgender actress Carmen Moore to star in the film and more.

The Huffington Post: What inspired you to make the film?
Sydney Freeland: Growing up I never really felt like I saw the people and places I knew represented on film. Most films about Native Americans didn't have characters I could relate to. On a really basic level I wanted to tell a story that was true to the people and experiences I knew.

What you hope audiences take away from "Drunktown's Finest"?
My biggest hope is that audiences are able to relate to the characters in the film. I feel like Native Americans and transgender people tend to be misrepresented in film but hopefully people come away with a new perspective.

What was the most surprising thing you learned while making it?
We only had 15 days to shoot so we were constantly pressed for time. However, I was constantly impressed by what our actors (some of which had no experience) were able bring to the table despite the circumstances.

How did you go about casting the character of Flexia (the transgender, Native American actress) in your film?
Well, I’m transgender myself so it was very important for me that we had a transgender actress to play the role of Felixia. I came across a YouTube video of Carmen early in the writing process and managed to get in touch with her. She read the script and responded well, and even came out to the Sundance Institute Director’s Lab where we got to workshop some scenes from the film. It was during that time that I realized she was a great fit for this character. I feel like she brought a depth and authenticity to the role that very few people could have.

How has Sundance supported your creative journey?
Sundance Institute has been absolutely crucial in my growth as a filmmaker. The way the labs work (Native American and Indigenous, Screenwriters and Directors) is that they target your comfort zone as an artist and then push you to work outside of that. Before the labs my writing approach was very plot-driven and my directing approach was very shot-oriented. I left the labs with a writing approach that was more character driven and a directing approach that was more performance driven. I feel like the film is so much better because of this.

Carte Blanche: Sundance Institute’s Native American and Indigenous Program takes place July 10 - 21 at The Museum of Modern Art, 11 West 53 Street in New York City. "Drunktown's Finest" premieres on July 10. For more information, head here.

Stunning Photos Of Sharks And People Document A Vulnerable Species

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shark kayak

The following is an excerpt from Sharks and People by Thomas P. Peschak


This place has all the ingredients of shark paradise: Rich ocean currents, a bountiful food supply, and remoteness. Historical accounts of ships sailing these waters tell of an ocean so full of sharks that one could walk on their backs across the sea; of hammerheads the size of whales and schools of reef sharks so vast that, seen from underwater, they blocked out the sun. But my first sight as I descend is not of a shiver of sharks but of a massive gill net draped over a reef like a deflated balloon. A purple triggerfish beats its winglike fins but is going nowhere, the net ensnaring it in a deadly embrace. I take a few photographs to document the scene then cut the fish free with my dive knife. In just one hour I observe a dozen nets drifting in and out of view, as the current relentlessly propels me past steep walls, over coral gardens, and around undersea pinnacles. The underwater landscape is majestic but seemingly absent of sharks and other big fish.


The ghost fishing nets become my constant companions for days on end. An entire week of diving passes before I see the first shark—a juvenile reef shark barely the length of my forearm entangled in a discarded gill net. The net is sea-beaten and worn but still able to inflict damage. The shark is alive, vigorously fighting the net’s clutches as I approach. The scientist I’m diving with skillfully disentangles and releases the shark. But the odds of this little shark reaching adulthood are slim; it will likely be caught in another fishing net, as they are so profuse and pervasive. The old historical accounts of masses of sharks and ones of enormous size are relicts of the past, disappeared not just from this site but also across much of the world. Abundance is now the exception and a dearth of these apex predators the rule.


While archaeological and historical accounts provide anecdotal snapshots of past populations of sharks, science has no way of ascertaining how many sharks roamed the ocean before the advent of commercial fisheries. It’s even very challenging to approximate current shark populations, as all of the scientific means of assessing them are limited to some degree. Scientists, fishermen, and conservationists argue at length about how many sharks are left and how quickly their numbers are declining. However, they rarely dispute the fact that many shark populations around the world are indeed declining at an alarming rate. No species of shark is known to have gone extinct due to human-induced pressure so far, but many species have disappeared from parts of their known range. While pollution, climate change, and habitat destruction challenge the overall health and survival of sharks, the most immediate cause of their decline is clearly overfishing.


Some of the earliest documented evidence of shark overexploitation is from the first half of the 20th century, when fisheries targeted shark liver for industrial purposes and as a source of vitamin A. Accounts of abrupt fishery collapse are associated with porbeagle sharks off Norway, soupfin sharks off the Pacific Northwest of North America, sixgill sharks in the Maldives, and basking sharks off Ireland and Scotland, as well as other species worldwide during that time. Since target fisheries for sharks were so ephemeral, and because sharks were not as economically important as other more abundant fish, very little monitoring or assessing of shark populations was undertaken. By the latter part of the 20th century, fisheries science had evolved but was still focused on the most commercially valuable species, like cod and tuna.


Photos courtesy of Thomas P. Peschak. Excerpt continues below.




In general, the most robust analyses, or stock assessments, to determine the status of shark populations are those that use information on the catch history, the biology of the species, and data on abundance trends. However, often this kind of data is unavailable. So instead, scientists have turned to data on shark “bycatch” to create a general picture of the status of any given species. If certain shark species were caught less frequently than in the past in a specific area, even though the same fishing methods and efforts at fishing were undertaken, then this might indicate a decline in population.


For example, data from fisheries observers on longline and purse-seine fishing vessels targeting tuna in the western and central Pacific Ocean indicate oceanic whitetip shark numbers decreased 90 percent from 1996 to 2009. And stock assessments on porbeagle sharks in the North Atlantic Ocean show marked historical extents of declines to less than 30 percent of their original abundance. Similar trends of reduced shark catches in the wake of strong fishing pressure have been demonstrated for many other fisheries around the world. Declines in the size and weight of sharks caught have also been monitored. In parts of the tropical Pacific Ocean, the mean weight of blue sharks caught declined from 115 pounds (52 kg) in the 1950s to 49 pounds (22 kg) in the 1990s.


The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Shark Specialist Group has assessed the extinction risk of 465 species of sharks, using the IUCN Red List criteria and categories. For half of those, there is not enough information about even the most basic biology and fisheries catches to assess their conservation status. Of the remaining species, 11 (2.4 percent of total species) are classified as critically endangered, 15 (3.2 percent) are categorized as endangered, 48 (10.3 percent) are considered vulnerable and 67 (14.4 percent) are near threatened. The remaining 115 species are classified of least concern and include mainly smaller, faster growing species like catsharks and others not yet targeted by fisheries.


The IUCN Shark Specialist Group has found that highly migratory, open-ocean, or pelagic, sharks make up a particularly threatened group, with many heavily fished species like makos, threshers, oceanic whitetips classified as vulnerable. Great hammerheads and scalloped hammerheads are categorized as globally endangered, making them the most threatened of the wide-ranging shark species.


Why is it that fishing has had such a dramatic impact on shark populations? Much of this has to do with the life strategies of sharks, which served them well for 400 million years but is now proving to be their downfall.


Many species of shark have life-history patterns more similar to that of a marine mammal or a human than to a sardine or flatfish. Sharks are K-selected species, characterized as having low reproductive rates as opposed to r-selected species like sardines, which have a quick turnover in population. This means sharks have certain traits that make them vulnerable to overfishing. For one thing, most sharks grow very slowly, only a few centimeters per year. And they are slow to mature and often don’t begin to reproduce until their teen years or later. Some, like the dusky, reach sexual maturity at 20 years. Sharks also typically have long gestation periods that often last longer than those of humans. Many species also have low fecundity for a fish, giving birth to a dozen or fewer pups at a time. The sand tiger shark has just one or two per pregnancy. Adding to their fragility, a few species give birth only every second or third year. This combination of traits leaves sharks vulnerable to overexploitation and slow to recover once depleted.



Reprinted with permission from Sharks and People: Exploring Our Relationship with the Most Feared Fish in the Sea by Thomas P. Peschak, published by the University of Chicago Press. © 2013 by Thomas P. Peschak. All rights reserved.

This Woman's Makeup Tutorial Is About A Lot More Than Just Eyeliner

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"Now to start off, dabble your eyes with optimism. It's all about your perspective on the world."

Whether you want the perfect, sun-kissed blush or super sharp winged eyeliner, we can guarantee that there's a makeup tutorial on YouTube for you. But a guide to getting truly ready, beneath all those the cosmetics, to take on the world outside? That's a little trickier to find.

Luckily, YouTuber Anna Akana is here with a new way of putting your face on -- your game face, that is.

There is a lot of focus on how women look, and although putting on makeup can be an empowering act, it's important that we don't stop or start there. Getting ready starts from the inside out, and Akana reminds us where in our lives we should have a light touch, and where to apply a little extra.

As Akana writes in the video's description, "The power of makeup is incredible, but the power of you is cray cray."

18 Artists You Need To Know Now That We're Halfway Through 2014

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While we listed 20 artists that would make a name for themselves at the onset of 2014, there are always some who crop up in the first months that just couldn't have been predicted -- and, yes, some we just weren't paying attention to yet. Having just passed the halfway mark of the year, here are 18 artists that you need to know before 2014 gives way to 2015.

Alex Wiley


There’s something about Chicago lately that is producing some of the most unique additions to today’s hip-hop composite. Alex Wiley naturally draws a lot of comparisons to Chance The Rapper, but he has his own flow, and if he keeps putting out projects like his most recent, “Village Party,” he’s going to make his name known because he did it his way.


Author


One listen through Author’s debut EP, “People Are Alike All Over,” and we knew there was something special about this group. A breed of genuine indie rock all too rare, the band is clearly a fan of acts like Copeland and Circa Survive. After a slight lineup change, the band recently finished recording their debut album at Glow in the Dark Studios, and if the one-off release of “To Dream” is any indication of the album’s sound, we are all in for a gorgeous treat.


Bad Suns


Bad Suns got their name out there after the swift rise of their song “Cardiac Arrest.” While it seemed likely that the band’s debut full-length would surround the single with mostly mundane three-minute cavities, “Language & Perspective” is intelligent, inspired and, most importantly, fun. Compare them to whomever you want because it doesn’t matter. It’s good from start to finish, and that can’t be said about many others.


Bleachers


There’s little more we can say to prove how enraptured we are with Bleachers. Jack Antonoff’s resume speaks for itself, and finally getting to see him create in solo just might top the list of anything he’s involved himself in. It’s safe to say that “Strange Desire” will be a part of our daily rotation through the rest of 2014, and then through 2015 and beyond.


Clean Bandit


While there’s no denying that Clean Bandit fits in nicely with the rest of EDM culture, the group manages to escape any labeling of “button pushers” with their classical inputs -- the instruments are played, not programmed. Tag on a melange of spectacular vocalists and a handful of well-crafted videos that take us to places foreign and exotic, and you’re going to be hard-pressed to find a reason not to love them.


Closure in Moscow


We’re just going to put this out there: You aren’t going to hear a rock record better or more distinctive this year than Closure in Moscow’s “Pink Lemonade.” Five years since their debut LP, the band has shed their post-hardcore rind for a far more technicolor cortex. Songs swerve between but are not limited to progressive, psychedelic, classic, funk and blues rock -- often intra-song. Two of the clearest influences are The Mars Volta and Led Zeppelin. “Pink Lemonade” is a shredding mammoth whose glory can only fully be realized by those who are ready to get hella weird on some dirty, dirty groove-action.


Cozz


Cozz is the latest signing to J. Cole’s Dreamville imprint, and it only took one song with a video to spark a label shouting match. Gifted with the intelligence to understand that having the song is only one piece of the puzzle to success, Cozz’s highly anticipated “Cozz & Effect” mixtape and mentor in one of hip-hop’s finest are guarantees of a long and prosperous foothold in the game.


The Districts


The world first caught wind of The Districts after their performance of “Funeral Beds” went viral. After their self-titled debut EP premiered on Rolling Stone, listeners got a further examination into the young quartet’s promising mixture of indie rock, blues and folk. It won’t be long before The Districts become a festival priority for all attending.


NONONO


There was the rise of Chvrches. There was the rise of Haim. Now, it’s time for the rise of NONONO. Don’t misinterpret: NONONO is definitely distinct from the aforementioned. 2013 marked the beginning of women emerging as the leaders of the most obsessed music acts, deserting the narrow highway of pop superstardom. NONONO is simply the next up to the bat, and they are here to kick some ass.


Nothing


If the long-awaited release of My Bloody Valentine’s third album had you all jazzed up, your new favorite band is Nothing. Shoegaze infused with a punk ethos, Nothing’s debut, “Guilty of Everything” is a triumph in playing loud as hell and managing to sound beautiful at the same time.


Pvris


It’s easy to compare a female-fronted pop-rock band to Paramore, but setting up such parameters significantly slights the immense potential of Pvris. Lynn Gunn is a force that cannot be denied, redolently poignant in both her most excitable and serene vocalizations. The first female-led signing of Rise Records, a label that has almost implausibly made metalcore music equally accessible and desirable, the label may have just made its smartest acquisition yet.


Raury


Every once in a while, an artist emerges from the ether, destined to challenge the comfort of prevailing musical standards. Raury’s banner jam, “God’s Whisper,” liberates itself from compartmentalization while forgoing all alienation that usually follows in such efforts. You might think you know what Raury is going to do next, but really, you have no idea.


Raz Simone


We’re just going to quote ourselves on this one: "Raz Simone is a man who is using vowels and consonants to find consonance in latitude. Eschewing the black and white for a more vibrant spectrum, the Seattle native’s debut LP expresses a mind forged from a convoluted past, unwinding toward a more lucid future.” There is a level of honesty and altruism that incandesces from Simone’s character. You can hear it in his music and you can feel it in conversation, and when you combine this with his talent and work ethic, you will want to do everything you can to ease his rise to the top.


This Wild Life


Since the rise of acts of like Dashboard Confessional and JamisonParker, there’s been a chasm in the indie/rock scene of emotionally driven acoustics. This Wild Life isn’t here for nostalgia’s sake. Stripping down even further than most of their predecessors, the duo’s debut LP radiates every emotion you’ve ever felt at the beginning and end of a relationship. Whether you think Warped Tour is still cool or not, This Wild Life is worth every second.


Tove Lo


It was the song “Habits,” and its Hippie Sabotage remix, that brought Tove Lo ("Too-va Loo”) into the media’s iris, paired with an appropriately dark video that winds through a self-operated bar tour. The Stockholm singer is a pop star ready to blow, having spent some time in the studio with Adam Lambert and prepping to open for Katy Perry in Australia later this fall, which is right around the time we should be receiving her debut, and most definitely breakthrough, LP.


Vic Mensa


Seriously, what can’t Vic Mensa do? He first came on the scene as the frontman of Kids These Days, a funky hip-hop collective that comfortably blended guitars with brass. Then he took on more typical hip-hop beats on his “Innanetape.” Now, his two most recent releases, “Down On My Luck” and “Major Payne,” Mensa is experimenting with disco and house as he prepares to release his “Streetlight” EP. Flow. For. Days.


Wrabel


Drawing comparisons to Sam Smith couldn’t be more valuable than it is at this very moment. A fairly recent addition to Island Records, Wrabel’s croons are marked by an intelligent balance of full voice and falsetto. Whether he’s singing atop pulsing electronics or wielding nothing but a set of keys, its impossible to knock the notion that Wrabel is made of the matter that strikes the heart of listeners across the board.


Your Old Droog


When you release an EP and the majority of people entertain the possibility that you might be a project conducted by Nas under an alias, there isn’t much else to be said. So we won’t.

George R. R. Martin To His Fans: 'F--k You'

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In case you were wondering if George R.R. Martin has heard plaintive fans’ concerns that he will run out of time to finish his popular A Song Of Ice And Fire series, wonder no longer: He hears you, and he is not pleased.

Speaking to the Swiss newspaper Tages-Anzeiger this week, Martin had two words for those fans who fear he won’t finish the series before his death: “Fuck you.” Martin commented that he finds it “pretty offensive, frankly, when people start speculating about my death and my health.”

Three years after the publication of A Dance With Dragons, the fifth book in the series, readers have grown impatient for the next installment. Though several chapters of the sixth book, The Winds of Winter, have been released, there is no firm publication date for the completed book. In the interview, Martin acknowledges that his writing speed has slowed in recent years, as the demands of promoting his books and the HBO series based on them, "Game of Thrones," have swallowed up more and more of his time.

The travel and promotional demands take a particularly large chunk out of Martin’s writing time, given that he has a very specific artistic process: He only writes at home, on an aged computer that uses the vintage word processor WordStar 4.0.

While fans may be frustrated that this slow, deliberate process won't lead to a conclusion any time soon, Martin suggests he's concerned with something more valuable than speed: quality. "Science fiction," he told Tages-Anzeiger, "is as serious as any other form of literature ... it's the characters that matter. It's the prose that matters. It's still the human heart in conflict with itself. The rest is just furniture."

Bruised And Bloodied Disney Princesses Remind Us Domestic Violence Can Happen To Anyone

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"When did he stop treating you like a princess?"

That's the tag line of artist Saint Hoax's awareness campaign for domestic violence titled "Happy Never After." Similar to his first poster series "Princest Diaries," which promotes awareness of issues of sexual abuse by family members, the objective of "Happy Never After" is to encourage victims of domestic violence to report their attackers.

"Disney princess are perceived as ideal females," Hoax told HuffPost in an email. "They belong to a fairytale land where happy ever afters are bound to happen. But what happens after the happy ever after?"

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The disturbing posters are meant to be exactly that. They show our favorite Disney princesses bruised and bloodied, images that are particularly jarring because they tie the somber topic of domestic violence to characters who played a large part in many women's childhoods.

As Hoax explained to HuffPost, "By portraying Disney princesses as victims of domestic violence, I'm proposing the idea that no girl/woman is safe from being emotionally/physically/sexually abused." Disney princesses are seen as the epitome of feminine perfection, yet domestic abuse can affect any woman (or man) at any time -- even Ariel, Jasmine, Cinderella and Aurora.

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"As a Middle Eastern artist, I always have the urge to voice out the injustice and inequality that takes place in my region," Saint Hoax told HuffPost, describing his inspiration for the project.

While both "Princest Diaries" and "Happy Never After" are uncomfortable to look at, it is this exact effect Hoax hopes to have on his audience. Hoax describes the purpose of his projects simply: "Victims of abuse are not alone and it's never too late for them to take a stand."

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Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-799-SAFE (7233) for the National Domestic Violence Hotline.

Head over to Saint Hoax's website to see more of his work.

This Woman's Mirror Art Makes For The Most Creative Selfies We've Ever Seen

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Anyone can take a mirror selfie, but Helene Meldahl takes things to the next level.

The 26-year-old has been inserting herself into some fantastic mirror artwork for about a year and posting the results to her Instagram account, Mirrorsme.

“I guess I’ve always been doodling on things like schoolbooks or napkins,” she told The Huffington Post over the phone. “For me it kind of comes natural to draw.”

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Meldahl said that in the mornings she used to leave small drawings on the bathroom mirror for her roommate. One day she turned a drawing into a selfie and posted it online. She enjoyed doing it, and people enjoyed looking at it, so creating more seemed like a no-brainer.

These days, she enjoys a following of thousands (and growing!) and can bang out one of her inventive drawings in about 20-30 minutes.

"I'm not really one for details. I usually just get a picture in my head and go from there," she said. "One of my favorites is the one of me climbing a ladder, only because it made me laugh while I was doing it."



Meldahl says she typically uses chalk marker, acrylic marker or anything else that's easy to wash off a mirror.

After almost a year of regular posts, she says she’s not yet sick of it.

“Some people write in a diary, and some people play tennis,” she said. “I draw on mirrors.”















You can check out the rest of Meldahl's artwork at the Mirrorsme Instagram account.

This Is The Tour Of Barcelona You've Been Waiting For

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It is no secret that Barcelona is a vibrant international destination, but the city has never looked livelier -- or lovelier -- than it does in these two minutes.

In the above video, photographer Robert Whitworth captures the true magic of the Spanish city in flow-motion, a variation of the time-lapse style. In an email to The Huffington Post, Whitworth discussed filming in Barcelona -- his first film shot in Europe, after a handful shot in Asia.

"In few other cities is it possible to walk from spectacular location to spectacular location," he said. "I had a fantastic time adventuring around Barcelona's winding streets."

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And adventure he did. In a number of minutes, Whitworth's footage beckons us into iconic buildings, winds us through side streets, and flies us above the iconic cityscape -- all as day and night come and go within seconds.

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It's no secret that Whitworth's flow-motion style is unique. It is also time-consuming: he spent upwards of 350 hours filming this project. However, he believes the process is worth it.

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"The most rewarding part of shooting time lapse is when you're alone watching something astoundingly beautiful," he said. "Can't beat those moments. One nightfall shoot was on the top of the beautiful Santa Maria del Pi, with all of Barcelona illuminated in glorious orange light as the sun went down -- and only me to appreciate it."

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Thanks to this film, we can all appreciate it as well.

Plus, his stills from Barcelona (continued below) are equally stunning.

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Murderfist's 'The Dollmaker' Will Make You Hate Dolls Forever (If You Didn't Already)

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Next time you see a baby with a doll, do the right thing: take it away and burn it immediately. That doll is definitely haunting the baby's dreams because that is what ALL dolls do.

Watch the latest sketch from Murderfist above for proof that dolls -- and their makers -- are pure evil.

Carleton Watkins' Photos Show American West In 3-D

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Before Ansel Adams stunned the country with his photographs of the American West, Carleton E. Watkins was creating impressive 3-D images of California and the Pacific Northwest. According to Smithsonian Magazine, Watkins' photography of Yosemite inspired Congress and President Lincoln to preserve the valley, saving it for the future national park system.

Watkins traveled to the west as a young man and was introduced to photography by chance in San Francisco when he filled in at a photography studio. A practical photographer, Watkins worked for land and mining interests and then the California State Geological Survey before opening his own gallery.

Using a method called stereoscopy, Watkins' prints are of two nearly identical images that, when viewed through a binocular device, trick the eye in to seeing a three dimensional image. Or, you know, you can make them into a GIF.

All photos courtesy of Carleton Watkins/Library of Congress.





























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