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Troian Bellisario Simply Cannot Stop Instagramming In This Way-Too-Familiar Sketch

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"Pretty Little Liars" actress Troian Bellisario is an Instagram fiend -- and now, her friends are doing something about it.

Or, at least that's what ensues in this pointed Funny or Die sketch.

When Bellisario's friends decide she's 'gramming too much rather than living life in the moment, they take her phone away. But then she proceeds to have the single most Instagrammable day ever, filled with Technicolor sunflowers, dogs getting married, nuns on bikes and Lorenzo Lamas.

First, Bellisario experiences withdrawal, but pushes through to the other side. "Lorenzo Lamas smelled really nice. It was like caramel and Big Sur -- I wouldn't have noticed that!" she says, in awe.

But alas, can she kick her Instagram habit in the end? You'll have to see!

Follow HuffPost Teen on Twitter | Instagram | Tumblr | Pheed |

Profound Examination Of Instagram Will Leave You Inspired By The Power Of A Photo

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If you use Instagram, then filmmaker and TV personality Jason Silva would like to congratulate you on successfully navigating two different, simultaneous realities.

Don't worry. Near as we can tell, this isn't the Matrix, and you aren't Neo. The notion of dual realities is the subject of Silva's latest "Shots of Awe" YouTube video, wherein he examines how, through Instagram, we are "experiencing the present as an anticipated memory" -- an idea popularized by Daniel Kahneman, a Nobel laureate and psychology professor at Princeton, in a 2010 TED Talk.

At the moment a photographer of the so-called "Instagram Generation" takes a picture, says Silva, that person is both experiencing the present reality and actively shaping how that reality will be remembered in the future. While some might argue we're betraying the present by not living in the moment, Silva sees it as a liberating, even empowering force.

"You're given a chance to decide how this moment will be remembered," he says in the video. "We all become artists, we all become architects of our mental narratives, of our historical digital paper-trail. We decide who we are. We're building maps, and those maps are subjective. I don't think it's a bad thing. ... I think it liberates our desire to be artists."

In an email to The Huffington Post, Silva speculated that the desire to continually document and preserve the present is rooted in a deep, anxiety-inducing understanding that we are finite beings. That anxiety isn't unique to the Instagram Generation, says Silva, who references cave paintings and other forms of art as supporting his idea.

"I think ultimately humans 'capture' moments to hold mirrors up to ourselves, to understand ourselves in context, to affirm that we exist," he told HuffPost. "Mortality looms over our ecstasies, transience haunts our dreams ... and so we document, we anchor our lives through vintage photo filtering, we stake our claim: that we are here and we exist."

WATCH the thought-provoking "Shots of Awe" video, above.

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Chinese Boy Discovers 3,000-Year-Old Bronze Sword While Washing Hands In River

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Stumbling upon buried treasure? Talk about a kid's dream come true.

Yang Junxi was washing his hands in the Laozhoulin River, in China's eastern coastal Jiangsu province, when the 11-year-old felt something weird under the water -- a battered bronze sword that turned out to be 3,000 years old.

Story continues below.

sword
3,000 year-old sword discovered in the Laozhoulin River in China's Jiangsu province.

Junxi showed the 10-inch weapon to his father, and the pair decided to send it to the county's relics bureau -- which provided the estimate of the sword's age.

"Some people even offered high prices to buy the sword," Yang told Chinese news agency Xinhua. "But I felt it would be illegal to sell the relic."

Archaeologists at the bureau traced the weapon back to China's Shang and Zhou dynasties, which spanned from 1600 B.C to 256 B.C.

"The short sword seems a status symbol of a civil official," Lyu Zhiwei, head of the bureau's cultural relics office, told Xinhua. "It has both decorative and practical functions, but is not in the shape of sword for military officers."

According to Xinhua, the sword is the second ancient artifact to be discovered recently in the region, and authorities say they plan to conduct an archaeological dig in the areas surrounding the river.

6 Things We Learned From The New Bob Dylan Tell-All

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The following article is provided by Rolling Stone.

By ANDY GREENE

Not many people get close to Bob Dylan, but Victor Maymudes – who was Dylan's road manager in the mid-Sixties and again from 1986 to 1996 – certainly did. Maymudes died in 2001, but he left behind hours of interview tapes, which his son Jacob has turned into a revealing new memoir, "Another Side of Bob Dylan." The book, which hits shelves this week, traces their entire time together, from the coffee house days in Greenwich Village to their legendary cross country road trip in 1964 to the madness of the Never Ending Tour in the 1980s and 1990s. Here are six things we learned from the book.

The night Dylan met the Beatles was kind of awkward.
Maymudes provides one of the most complete accounts of the famous summit, at the Beatles' New York hotel on August 28th, 1964. "Bob tried to roll a joint and it fell to piece in his hands," Maymudes says, "scattering pot over a bowl of fruit sitting on the table." Victor took over and rolled the joints himself. That helped liven up the party, but Dylan, who'd been drinking, passed out on the floor within an hour. "The following morning, Paul came up to me and hugged me for 10 minutes," says Maymudes, 'and said, 'It was so great, and it's all your fault because I love this pot!'"

Bob Dylan Releases Frank Sinatra Cover, Plans New Album

Dylan quit drinking in 1994.
"He just stopped on a dime," Maymudes says. "He didn't talk as much once he stopped and he didn't laugh as loud either. It was a really big deal for him and really showed his commitment to changing his behavior. He was capable of dealing with a broader range of personalities when he was drinking and after stopping, his tolerance for certain types of behavior diminished. Bob lost a bit of self-esteem when he sobered up, became little more introverted and a little less social."

In Pics: The Evolution of Bob Dylan

George Harrison was pissed off about Dylan's 30th-anniversary concert in 1992.
The all-star show at Madison Square Garden was widely believed to be for charity. It was actually for profit. "Harrison was so angry, he made T-shirts with dollar signs on them and sent them to me and Bob," Maymudes says. "George also got in trouble with Olivia, his wife. She tracked the last number he dialed on the hotel phone to a limousine company that I had arranged for him to use to send a limo for a girl he was involved with. When Olivia blew up over that, I found myself in the middle of the confrontation."

In Pics: Bob Dylan Through The Years

Victor was there when the legend cut "Another Side of Bob Dylan" in one amazing night.
"He had never sang the songs in front of anybody before [that night]," Maymudes says. "He just blurted it out, like electricity building up in a capacitor, and then shooting out, he had packed it all inside himself and let it explode. I was in a daze."

Rolling Stone’s 10 Greatest Bob Dylan Songs

Joan Baez was no pushover.
Maymudes was shocked when Dylan married Sara Lownds. "I asked him, 'Why Sara?!'" Maymudes wrote. "'Why not Joan Baez?' He responded with, 'Because Sara will be there when I want her to be home, she'll be there when I want her to be there, she'll do it when I want to do it. Joan won't be there when I want her. She won't do it when I want to do it.'"

In Pics: The 10 Worst Bob Dylan Songs

During downtime on his 1989 tour, Dylan went out to see Tim Burton's "Batman."
There aren't many more details available, but it raises many questions. Was Dylan upset by the film's exclusion of Robin? Did he dig the Prince songs? Was he bummed out when Val Kilmer took over as Batman in 1995? Has he seen the more recent "Dark Knight" trilogy? How about "The Avengers"?

Tony Perkins Condemns Smithsonian Institution's Inclusion Of LGBT Artifacts, 'Will And Grace' Items

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Tony Perkins isn't pleased by the Smithsonian Institution's recent addition of "Will and Grace" memorabilia as well as other historical documents relevant to lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) history to its exhibitions.

In a radio bulletin, the Family Research Council pundit asked listeners, "Is it the Museum of Natural History or Unnatural History?"

"This is just another platform for the left to rewrite history and ignore the destructive side effects of homosexuality," Perkins claimed in the clip, Right Wing Watch first reported. “Students are already bombarded with the LGBT agenda -- do they really need to walk past exhibits treating its extremists as heroes? The Smithsonian may know art, but it should stop trying to frame the culture debate.”

Listen to audio of Perkins' comments, courtesy of Right Wing Watch, then scroll down to keep reading:


Among the other artifacts to be displayed at the National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C. are the diplomatic passport of Ambassador David Huebner, the first openly gay U.S. ambassador confirmed by the Senate, and photography collections from Patsy Lynch and Silvia Ros documenting LGBT rights activism, according to the Associated Press.

Of course, Perkins' comments aren't particularly surprising given his history. In 2010, he claimed that LGBT teens often resorted to suicide because they are battling with the internal understanding that homosexuality is, in fact, "abnormal."

In 2012, he equated LGBT people with adulterers and alcoholics while condemning Pride Month.

"Now, I have not yet seen where they have declared Adultery Pride Month, I have not seen where they have declared the Drunkenness Pride Month," he said at the time, before adding that "we’re not celebrating those other forms as a society, we’re not promoting [them] and teaching [them] as normal in our schools."




Why Bill Cunningham Is Actually The Most Interesting Person At Fashion Week

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New York Fashion Week is pretty much eye-candy for the style set. Between runway shows and celebrity sightings, there is no shortage of interesting things to see. But legendary street style photographer Bill Cunningham is arguably the most interesting of all.

Cunningham is a fixture on the streets of New York; he's been capturing great style for years. Yet it turns out that when the camera is flipped, the photos are equally as exciting. From that blue coat he's been wearing for years to the precise way he's able to get a shot, watching him can be just as -- if not more -- fun than watching what's happening inside the tents.

Here are all the reasons Bill Cunningham is actually the most interesting person at Fashion week:

His bike rides are iconic -- even in hyperlapse.



He knows precisely when to get the perfect shot:



He GLOWS.



Even in the background, he's the main event.



He stands out from the crowd.



He understands that flexibility plays a huge part in capturing the moment.



No one can pose for photos while simultaneously riding a bike like Bill.



Because trends may come and go, but he's been wearing that trusty blue coat for years.



We love you, Bill!



The Book We're Talking About: 'De Potter's Grand Tour' By Joanna Scott

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De Potter’s Grand Tour
by Joanna Scott
Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $26.00
Published Sept. 2, 2014

The Book We're Talking About is a weekly review combining plot description and analysis with fun tidbits about the book.





What we think:
Tour guide extraordinaire Armand de Potter’s sudden disappearance at the outset of Joanna Scott's new novel is a mystery wrapped inside of an enigma. Though his loving wife, Aimée de Potter, chooses to accept that he was lost at sea and forges forward, she can’t prevent doubts about his fate from drifting through her mind -- especially as she grows more doubtful about who he really was, and whether she ever truly knew the man she was married to for decades.

The novel flits back and forth between Armand’s disappearance at the age of 53 and the evolution of his life with Aimée -- their burgeoning tour business, their well-appointed lifestyle, their long-awaited child, and, through it all, their steady and lively affection for each other. Though inconsistencies and cracks in Armand's history reveal themselves nearly from the start, Aimée brushes away any concerns about her husband, recording in her diary instead the quotidian sights, gifts and treats of their pleasure-filled life. Even when he vanishes from a steamer under strange circumstances, Aimée’s investigations serve more to enlighten the reader than the bereaved wife, who seems to choose to remember her husband as he would have wished to be remembered.

Meanwhile, Scott reveals Armand’s personal history in flashbacks, constructing a portrait of a man who, beneath his cultured and savvy facade, was ambitious, deceptive, enthralled by adventure and enraptured by the treasures of foreign lands, perhaps to his detriment. Scott’s review of her hero’s troubled past trips along in light, well-crafted prose that suits the rather surface-level, gilded vantage point she chooses to present of his complex life. The simplicity of the narration, both in style and often in substance, creates an almost fairy-tale-like atmosphere that keeps the reader at a comfortable remove from Armand's crimes and his sufferings alike.

De Potter’s Grand Tour offers a charming and sometimes poignant survey of the pleasures and secret heartaches of a Gilded Age golden couple, but the tale seems to lack a deeper resonance. Though Armand and Aimée are amusingly sketched, they never seem fully realized or knowable to the reader. This may work to emphasize the unknowability of the human heart, a theme throughout the novel, it also necessarily weakens any possible impact of their emotional travails. The mystery itself seems almost Agatha Christie-esque in its lightly witty, genteel tone, but it holds no Christie-like mystery at its heart -- only small, relatively mundane revelations along the way. By the end, readers may be left wishing for more of a payoff for the journey, but they can take comfort in how pleasurable, like one of de Potter’s tours, the journey itself was.

What other reviewers think:
Kirkus: "Scott has crafted an understated, atmospheric historical novel as well as an artful mystery set in an era of steamer ships and steam trains, when tourism was new and world travel was a glamorous and sometimes-perilous adventure."

Who wrote it?
Joanna Scott has written 10 books, most recently 2009's Follow Me. Her novel The Manikin was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, and both Various Antidotes and Arrogance were finalists for the PEN/Faulkner Award.

Who will read it?
Readers who enjoy genteel, literary mysteries, turn-of-the-century settings and crisp, smoothly written prose.

Opening lines:
“He leaves early on the morning of June 10, descending the carpeted stairs to the lobby of the Pera Palace Hotel. He rings the bell at the front desk. He is about to ring again when a clerk appears from the dark interior of a back office, looking freshly scrubbed, smelling of soap. The bill is settled swiftly, and the clerk is most obliging, despite his limited French, when Armand hands him two last letters addressed to Madame de Potter, care of the Hotel Royal in Toblach.”

Notable passage:
"As she watched him looking out through the rain, she told herself that if nothing else, her experiences over the past three months had made her keener, more confident in her ability to see the truth. The inconsistencies she’d discerned in his account of his past added color to the picture, and color added depth. That there was more to him than she had initially perceived would only make the marriage more thrilling."

Rating, out of 10:
6. A delightfully written, intriguing tale despite rather unknowable characters and too-knowable plot twists.

The Happiest Attendee At Burning Man 2014 Was This Drone

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Even if you've never been to Burning Man, you're probably nostalgic for how it used to be. The weeklong festival, we are told with increasing frequency each year, has jumped the shark, catering to tech billionaires (and Grover Norquist) who eat sushi on the playa, emit more greenhouse gases than Texas, and don't even let anyone look at their art cars.

There is still one way, however, to attend without feeling conflicted: as a drone. Floating from on high, no thoughts or even a human brain dragging you down, life is as simple and beautiful as our burner forefathers intended. Humans are all equal because they're all ants -- even Mark Zuckerberg. You can't eat sushi and you'll never get West Nile. Your nonessential ports are taped up against the alkaline dust. Drone life forever.

Drone's view of Burning Man 2014 from Eric Cheng on Vimeo.





U2 Announces Free New Album 'Songs Of Innocence' At Apple Live

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Apple's live event unveiled the Apple Watch, the new iPhone 6, a digital wallet and, unexpectedly, U2's first album in five years, "Songs of Innocence."

The band debuted a new song, "The Miracle (of Joey Ramone)," live and announced that the album would be automatically added to iTunes users' libraries for free starting Sept. 9. (Go check out your library. It's probably already there.) "Songs of Innocence" just had the biggest album release of all time.

"Music runs deep in Apple's DNA. It runs through the core of all of our products," Apple CEO Tim Cook said at the event. "iTunes has been at the center of that experience."

u2

According to Rolling Stone, U2 worked on "Songs of Innocence" with producers Danger Mouse, Flood, Paul Epworth and Ryan Tedder. "We wanted to have the discipline of the Beatles or the Stones in the Sixties, when you had real songs," Bono told Rolling Stone. "There's nowhere to hide in them: clear thoughts, clear melodies."

The album features songs intended to be reminiscent of the Clash and the Ramones, and Bono told Rolling Stone that one song was written for his mother, who died when Bono was a teenager. Lykke Li also appears on one track, "The Troubles."



For now, "Songs of Innocence" is only now available on iTunes, iTunes Radio or Beats Music, but the physical record will be out Oct. 13. A deluxe edition will include acoustic versions of some songs and additional tracks: "Lucifer's Hands," "The Crystal Ballroom, "The Troubles (Alternative Version)" and "Sleep Like A Baby (Alternative Perspective Mix by Tchad Blake)."

Here's the tracklist:
1. "The Miracle (of Joey Ramone)"
2. "Every Breaking Wave"
3. "California (There Is No End To Love)"
4. "Song For Someone"
5. "Iris (Hole Me Close)"
6. "Volcano"
7. "Raised by Wolves"
8. "Cedarwood Road"
9. "Sleep Like A Baby Tonight"
10. "This Is Where You Can Read Me Now"
11. "The Troubles"

Allen West Believes In The Right To Bear Arms & The Right To Bare Arms (To Show Off His Tattoo)

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Former Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.) is so dedicated to his belief in the right to bear arms, he put it on his bare arm. (Sorry.)

West tattooed the phrase "molon labe," meaning "come and take" or "come and get them," on his right forearm. The phrase is popular among tea partiers and open carry activists.

On Sept. 4, Aces High Tattoo Shop posted a photo of West with his new tattoo to Instagram:


Congressman Allen West stopped by to get a little zapper by @alexrockofftattoos! We're open until 10pm tonight so come get one, too! #alexrockoff #allenwest #westpalm #aceshightattoo #wellington #boynton #floridatattooartist #lakeworth #palmbeach #sofla #soflo #tequesta #tattooedmilitary #guyswithtattoos #tattooedveterans

(h/t National Review)

'Harry Potter' Tops Facebook's '10 Books That Stayed With You' Meme And No One Is Surprised

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If you’re a reader and have Facebook friend who are readers, you’ve likely seen or even participated in the “10 books that have stayed with you” meme that’s been circulating recently. A prompt for bookworms to share recommendations for life-changing reads, the challenge encourages readers to pick books that have left a mark on you or stayed with you through the years rather than simply picking favorites. Though I’m normally loath to rank my favorite books -- would you rank your beloved children?? -- I was willing to consider which had influenced me the most, whether as a person or as a reader, and to post them in response to a friend’s challenge. The list is a bit of a mishmash, careening from Pride and Prejudice to Lolita, Invisible Man to The Year of Magical Thinking... oh, and the entire Harry Potter series.

Apparently I’m not alone. Facebook recently crunched the numbers on over 130,000 of these statuses from the end of August, and Harry Potter tops the charts, appearing in a full 21 percent of lists containing one or more of the top 500 books. The next book on the list is To Kill a Mockingbird at 14 percent; most of the top 20 books appear in fewer than 10 percent of these lists. The consensus surrounding Harry Potter stands apart, and though Facebook's Lada Adamic and Pinkesh Patel note that it gains an advantage from being clustered together, so were other series of books listed, such as Lord of the Rings and The Hunger Games.

When Harry Potter holds the unscientific title of “Most Influential Book on Facebook," there are bound to be naysayers making dire predictions about the future of literature in a YA-obsessed nation, suggesting that adults shouldn’t still be influenced by books that they read as children -- or worse, read books meant for children as adults. On Gawker, Michelle Dean suggested, tongue planted in cheek, that “many of you are stuck in a Harry-Potter-and-Tolkien-decorated prison of the mind.”

I’d like to get right out in front of this, however, and state that anyone who is shocked by Harry Potter's domination of this list hasn’t been paying attention to the reading world for the past 20 years. In fact, if the respondents skewed younger (Facebook’s post states that the average age was 37), we might see a far higher rate of inclusion for the series that ushered an entire generation into the world of reading-for-fun.

Unsurprisingly, several children’s books appear in the top 20 on the list; as Adamic and Patel point out, we tend to read these books at a very impressionable age. Favorite books from those early years are likely to lodge themselves deeply in our memories. It’s highly likely that the first book that made you love reading was a children’s book, and for most people my age, that book was likely to start with the name “Harry Potter.” This is not to say, necessarily, that Harry Potter is better than the kids’ classic The Phantom Tollbooth or an acclaimed masterpiece like Anna Karenina. It may not even be one of your ten current favorites. But if it’s the series that made you fall passionately in love with all-night, under-the-covers, flashlight-fueled reading, it’s probably one of your 10 most influential reads.

Books can stay with us for so many reasons, and influence us in so many ways. For me, there was the first book that made me see the written word aesthetically rather than simply as a vehicle for narrative; there was the first book that made me get inside the mind of someone wholly different from me and consider the unique difficulties faced by others; there was the first book that made me realize that poetry wasn’t so bad. No book has stuck with me longer than J.K. Rowling's series, but that was just the first of many life-changing reading experiences. And judging by the varied top 100 list published by Facebook -- and the fact that, aside from the top three, no book appeared on more than 8 percent of lists that included a top 500 book -- readers are finding books that stick with them everywhere from children's libraries to school reading lists and far beyond.

These Photos Of Fiji Capture Life In A Place Ready For Change

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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.


Vatukarasa & Suva, Fiji
Photographer: Andrew Quilty


Fiji is a tropical island chain synonymous with blue skies, palm trees and white sandy beaches. It is also a place of political upheaval. Since taking power in a military coup in 2006, its current prime minister, Josaia Voreqe “Frank” Bainimarama, has, at times, ruled through an emergency decree of his own drafting. Opposition to his leadership has been limited by laws forbidding large groups meeting in public and media censorship. The scheduling of elections for this month, which has already resulted in Australia and New Zealand restoring diplomatic ties, could signal the start of a return to less rancorous times.

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On a rugby oval in the small coastal village of Vatukarasa, young men and boys use coconut husks and an oily tar mixture to paint line markings before a game of rugby. The sport is Fiji’s greatest obsession.

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1



7

Schoolchildren, mainly from Kalekana Village on the outskirts of Suva, the Fijian capital, await their morning school bus. With only one company servicing the route instead of the usual two, the buses on this day are particularly full.

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4



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Young men take a break from work at a fresh food market in Suva. These men carry fruit and vegetables from the markets to buses for shoppers from out of town.

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As dusk falls, a couple sit at the water’s edge of Suva Harbor.


More from The Other Hundred
Inside Gaza
Cairo's Blind, Female Orchestra
The Reality Of Education In Liberia
Inside North Korea
One Of Europe's Poorest Countries

Why Kevin Kline Loves Playing Charming Misanthropes

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Those who scroll aimlessly through Netflix on a nightly basis would be wise to put on 1991's "Soapdish" as soon as possible. Michael Hoffman's satire of soap operas (if you don't remember what those are, ask your parents) is still hilarious, and includes top-shelf performances from Sally Field, Robert Downey Jr., Whoopi Goldberg and, as a washed-up actor, Kevin Kline.

"I haven't seen it since it came out," Kline told HuffPost Entertainment. "At the time I remember just laughing out loud when I read the script. I thought actors and people in the business would really get this, but I didn't know if the rest of the world would. But I thought that about 'A Chorus Line,' too."

Kline's back on screens this month in "My Old Lady," an adaptation of Israel Horovitz's play of the same name. For Horovitz, 75, the comedy-drama about French real estate and family secrets marks his directorial debut.

"I find the best way to do these 'indie' films, which are done as inexpensively as possible, is to take each scene as it comes," Kline said. "I got a taste of it when I worked with Robert Altman on 'Prairie Home Companion.' It's 'make it up as you go along,' and it's a very malleable, living and organic thing. You have to have a plan and then you have to be able to fiddle with the plan. That's the way Israel worked, too, which is pretty amazing since this is his first time out."

In "My Old Lady," which debuted at the this year's Toronto International Film Festival, Kline stars as Mathias Gold, a New Yorker who inherits his father's French apartment after the older man's death. The catch? Mathilde Girard (Maggie Smith), a 92-year-old English woman living in the apartment with her daughter (Kristen Scott Thomas). Mathias' father engaged in a viager, where the home buyer agrees to pay the seller a monthly sum for the property, and can't occupy the residence until after the seller dies. Over the course of the film, Mathias and Mathilde form an uneasy alliance, and each helps the other reveal a side they had previously kept hidden from the world. Kline and Smith are predictably electric together.

"People ascribe chemistry, but we're just doing our jobs," Kline said of working with Smith, who is 79 and aged up to play Mathilde. "I've had four weeks rehearsal on 'The Big Chill' to get a sense of ensemble and a sense of comfort. I've had no rehearsals too, and you get the same ensemble effect. It starts with the script. If the script is good, it'll create that and the chemistry will follow."

Mathias suits Kline in a way similar to his turn as Jaques in "As You Like It": The character possesses a misanthropic charm, and Kline plumbs those depths for some great pathos.

"There are characters who are oppositional. If you say white, he'll say black. Just difficult and ornery. But I love those guys," Kline said. "There's something attractive about someone who dares to be who he is and risk not being the least bit ingratiating to anyone. He's not there to make friends. In fact, he's more comfortable making enemies."

"My Old Lady" is out in limited release on Friday.

'All About That (Upright) Bass' Gives A Jazzy Twist To A Great Message

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If you've ever heard Meghan Trainor's "All About that Bass," then chances are it's been stuck in your head for days and days and days -- the catchy tune and great message about beauty are hard to forget.

But what if the song was jazz-ified?

Leave it to music collective Postmodern Jukebox to answer that question, as they make the song sound classic in their version, called "All About that (Upright) Bass." The video, above, features the voice and musical talents of Kate Davis, and will take you back to a time when all the kids were listening to jazz.

Conclusion? "Every inch of you is perfect from the bottom to the top" sounds great in any genre.

The Most Accurate Watch In The World (And It's Not The Apple Watch)

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now

Thanks to Facebook communication designer and former Google Creative Lab master Ji Lee for reminding us that it's O.K. to take a moment to relish the now. While Apple continues on its constant sprint to technological utopia, we're satisfied knowing there are some devilish artists around to keep us grounded.

For more on Lee's clever works, check out our coverage of his past projects here, here and here.

Watch Two Seconds Of 'The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1' Trailer

Welp, Now We've Seen Ellen Twerk

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It's no secret that Ellen Degeneres loves Nicki Minaj. But now, the two have taken their friendship to a far more collaborative (and hilariously awkward) level.

During a segment on the Sept. 9 episode of "Ellen," the host celebrated Nicki's super-viral hit, "Anaconda," and decided to add her own spice to the single by making a cameo in the booty-shakin' music video.

Even Nicki herself can't help bursting into laughter, watching Ellen try her hand at twerking.

Here's The Astounding Act That Led A D.C. Kid To Get Pulled From School

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Avery Gagliano is a piano prodigy who has played worldwide and managed to maintain straight A's in school. But according to reports from the Washington Post, she's also run afoul of some elements within the Washington, D.C. public school system. Her offense: She missed school to go abroad for piano competitions.

As a result, she is now, as of this writing, a former public school student (though the Post column triggered the head of the schools to say publicly she is welcome back). A DCPS spokesperson referred HuffPost to this statement.

Watch the video above to see Gagliano doing the very thing that landed her in hot water with DCPS.

Dad And Daughter 'Shake It Off' In Adorable Dance Party

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This dad and daughter make quite the dancing duo.

In this video, posted Aug. 23 by YouTube user (and groovy dad) jprinder1, he and his daughter (who has some impressive moves of her own) perform a tag-team rendition of T-Swift's "Shake It Off" music video. Don't worry, this version is absent any twerking.

Now that's some father-daughter bonding that doesn't miss a beat.

h/t "Today"

'99 Red Balloons' Cover Uses Actual Red Balloons. And It's Incredible

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This dude proves that there's no more authentic, appropriate and just plain perfect way to cover Nena's "99 Red Balloons" than with red balloons. (Yes, you read that right. This guy plays the balloon.)

In a video uploaded to YouTube, Andrew Huang covers the '80s smash hit using four red balloons as part of a song challenge. The balloons impressively mimic several different instruments in the song.

We warn you: At the 0:29 mark, your head might explode from trying to process the fact that the song you are listening to isn't being performed on real instruments. It's performed on freakin' balloons.


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