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Postmodern Jukebox's '40s Themed Pop Mashup Will Knock Your Bobby Socks Off (VIDEO)

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The latest Postmodern Jukebox medley turns back time to the 1940s, mixing up modern pop with a healthy dose of doo-wop.

Old-school broadcast microphones and a jazzy band take center stage as the mashup cycles from "Ragtime Blurred Lines" to "Motown Roar."

Incredibly, the entire video -- with its big cast and big sound -- was done in one take. Postmodern Jukebox never fails to wow us with their creatively re-imagined covers, but we think these "sides" were particularly ace.

12-Year-Old Rapper Named Justin Steals The Show From Jay Z

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A 12-year-old fan named Justin upstaged Jay Z at his own concert, joining the 44-year-old rapper onstage toward the end of his show. At the concert in Greensboro, N.C., after reportedly taking the time to acknowledge his fans in the audience, Hov noticed a young man who was holding a sign that read, "Can I rap for you?"

Justin made it a point to tell Jay Z that he didn't need background music to spit bars, launching into a verse of Jay Z's from the "Cruel Summer" track "Clique." Employing his fatherly instincts, Jay interrupted Justin to keep him from referencing drugs before then allowing him to continue with the performance amid cheer from the audience. Before stepping down off the stage, the audacious young rapper got permission to meet Jay Z backstage.

Take a look at the impressive performance below.

Drone Captures Gorgeous Images Of French Castles

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Drones: They're not just for slaughtering people from the air and marketing gimmicks anymore.

Researcher Max Nanao has used the evolving technology to photograph a series of historic castles, buildings and monuments in the South of France. With a transmitter range of over 980 feet, the six-pound DJI Phantom photography drone requires four AA batteries in addition to its rechargeable lithium-polymer battery before taking flight for up to 15 minutes. Available on Amazon for roughly $500, the Phantom photo drone also utilizes an internal GPS system that can automatically direct the drone back to its original position if transmitter connection is lost.

Below are a few of the aerial photos Max Nanao and his Phantom drone captured in France:

Aigues-Mortes, a French commune in the Languedoc-Roussillon region of southern France

Admired for its 13th century military architecture, the small town of Aigues-Mortes, situated on the marshy plains of the Petite Camargue, is a walled, medieval commune with five towers and 10 fortified gates.

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The fortified city of Carcassonne

The town of Carcassonne, originally built by Romans, features two outer walls with towers and barbicans defending the medieval city from attack. The castle itself retains its own drawbridge. Carcassonne also possesses a historic Gothic cathedral with elaborate stained glass windows.

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Abbaye de Reigny, a Catholic abbey in the French department of Yonne in Burgundy

The 35-acre Abbaye de Reigny is a former Cistercian monastery located on the banks of the river in the town of Yonne.

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Le Néron, a summit in the Chartreuse Mountains in southeastern France

Le Néron is a 1,665-foot mountain peak near Saint-Égrève in the Rhône-Alpes region of France.

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Saint-Clément aqueduct in Les Arceaux ("The Arches"), Montpellier

The 17th century aqueduct supplied water eight miles from the St Clemént spring to the water tower beneath the Promenade de Peyrou, allowing the city to feature numerous fountains. The city district beneath the aqueduct has been named Les Arceaux, or "The Arches," due to the two levels of arches supporting the water system over the remaining 2,625 feet.

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Statue of Louis XIV in Montpellier, France

The equestrian statue, located in Peyrou Park, was first erected in honor of French king Louis XIV in 1692. In 1792, the statue was melted to provide bronze for the National Guard's weaponry. Constructed by sculptors Jean-Baptiste Joseph Debay and Auguste Jean-Marie Carbonneaux, the second statue arrived in Montpellier in 1828.

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Ringo Starr's 'Powerpuff Girls' Cameo Is Psychedelic And Flashy

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Being a Beatle might be great, but it doesn't give you super powers.

In Cartoon Network's all-new "Powerpuff Girls" special, premiering Jan. 20, Ringo Starr makes a guest appearance as Fibonacci Sequins, a famous, flamboyant mathematician. In a new music video from the special, Starr's Sequins is joined by Blossom, Bubbles, and Buttercup for the song "Wish I Was a Powerpuff Girl" as he dreams of being a crime-fighting superhero.

While it's a little odd to see a cartoon Starr singing such a silly song, the video is full of flashy, vibrant animation that will make any "Powerpuff" fan nostalgic. There's also a heavy dose of trippy, psychedelic visuals that evoke the "2001: A Space Odyssey" Star Gate sequence -- weird, but kinda cool?

In the end, Ringo has a positive message for the kids: peace and love, y'all.

The "Powerpuff Girls" special, "Dance Pantsed," debuts on Cartoon Network on Jan. 20 at 7:30 p.m. EST, following a 10-episode "Powerpuff Girls" marathon airing the day before.

Macaulay Culkin Band Pizza Underground's First Music Video Is Full Of Pizza Faces

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As we discovered in early December, Macaulay Culkin is in a Velvet Underground cover band called Pizza Underground, whose only musical concern is spreading the good word of pizza. The world in his hands, Culkin and his bandmates have now delivered a music video to accompany their saucy sermon. The medley includes "All the Pizza Parties" ("All Tomorrow's Parties"), "Pizza Gal" ("Femme Fatale") and "Take a Bite of the Wild Slice" ("Walk on the Wild Side" -- a Lou Reed solo song, but pizza, so it's okay).

Watch the video below to see pizza-faced Culkin rock a kazoo, surrounded by a myriad of dangling, cheesy slices.

Gary Shteyngart Discusses His New Book, 'Little Failure'

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Gary Shteyngart, author of the beloved dystopian novel Super Sad True Love Story, has released a memoir about his life as an immigrant from Russia. Much of the book relates the lives of Shteyngart's parents, who are haunted by dark memories during the Siege of Leningrad.

The title of the memoir, Little Failure, refers to an epithet his parents bestowed him with after graduating college (along with "Snotty"); the nickname is meant to be loving, not insulting. That didn't stop the author from making a hilarious trailer for his book, starring himself and James Franco, in which the pair bicker over their competing release dates, and Gary's memoir ends up failing miserably.

Shteyngart's wit, showcased in this and another trailer he released for Super Sad True Love Story, is also on display in his writing, and in the above interview with HuffPost Live.

When asked how he knows James Franco, Shteyngart says, "I met him at Columbia University... he was one of my students. You're not supposed to kiss your students but, I just couldn't help myself."

Paul Brodeur: I Never Said That Microwaves Take Nutrients Out Of Food, Despite 'American Hustle'

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Jennifer Lawrence's "American Hustle" character, Rosalyn Rosenfeld, says and does a lot of outlandish things during the course of David O. Russell's new film, including but not limited to starting a fire with her tanning lamp, nearly getting her husband killed by mobsters, and putting metal in the family's new microwave oven (or "science oven," per the parlance of the film).

After that careless act, which results in another fire, Rosalyn cites an article written by journalist Paul Brodeur as reason for her destructive actions.

"I read that it takes all of the nutrition out of our food," Rosalyn says about the microwave during an argument with her husband (played by Christian Bale), who doesn't believe her claims. "I read it in an article," Rosalyn notes, "by Paul Brodeur."

Except Brodeur is saying he never wrote an article that made any such declaration. After video of that "American Hustle" scene appeared on The Huffington Post's list of 17 Best Movie Moments of 2013, the 82-year-old Brodeur contacted HuffPost to dispute the assertion made by the Lawrence character. (Brodeur also noted that he sent "American Hustle" producers a "strongly worded letter" through his lawyer, "pointing out that by attributing a scientifically unsupportable statement to me they have defamed me and damaged my reputation.") As part of his note, Brodeur also expounded at length on what he views at the "microwave radiation hazard" of cell phones.

Requests for comment to representatives for Sony Pictures, the studio behind "American Hustle," and David O. Russell, who also co-wrote the film in addition to directing, were not immediately returned. This post will be updated if they respond.

"American Hustle," which is loosely based on the ABSCAM scandal of the late 1970s, is in theaters now.

Brodeur's full statement to HuffPost on the matter is below:

In a piece entitled "17 Best Movie Moments of 2013" that appeared in the Huffington Post on January 6, 2014, Christopher Rosen, a senior entertainment editor, includes a trailer from the film "American Hustle,” which states that Paul Brodeur has written in a magazine that a microwave oven "takes all of the nutrition out of food." This is a serious error. I have never written in The New Yorker, where I was a staff writer for nearly forty years, or in any other magazine, or declared in any way that a microwave oven does any such thing. Indeed, I have publicly stated the opposite. (See People magazine, Vol. 9, No. 4, January 30, 1978.) However, I was the first journalist to write at length about the adverse health effects of microwave radiation (see The New Yorker, December 13 and 20, 1976, and books entitled The Zapping of America, W.W. Norton, 1977; Currents of Death, Simon and Schuster, 1989; and Secrets, A Writer in the Cold War, Faber and Faber, 1997.) I have also spoken publicly about the microwave radiation hazard.

In recent years, there has been a great deal of discussion of and study about the microwave radiation emitted by cell phones. It is an established fact that when one is transmitting from a cell phone held to the ear, microwave radiation can penetrate deeply into the brain. Much controversy surrounds the biological effects of such penetration.

In 2011, a committee of scientists and medical doctors from 14 nations, which was established by the International Agency for Research on Cancer, in Lyons, issued a joint statement that long-term use of cell phones may lead to two different types of tumors--glioma, a malignant type of brain cancer, and tumors of the inner ear. Their decision was based upon an evaluation of six major studies showing a possible association between wireless phone use and brain tumors. The chairman of the committee was Jonathan Samet, a professor at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles, who has been appointed to the National Cancer Advisory Board by President Obama.

A neurosurgeon who was a member of the committee said, "What microwave radiation does in most simplistic terms is similar to what happens to food in microwaves, essentially cooking the brain."

In France, the National Agency for Food, Environmental and Occupational Health and Safety has recommended limiting exposure to radiation from mobile phones, particularly for children and intensive users.

Swedish scientists have determined that people who started using mobile phones before the age of 20 are experiencing more than a five-fold risk of developing malignant tumors of the brain, and a similar risk of developing tumors of the inner ear.

It has been estimated that nine out of ten 16-year-olds in developed nations either use or own a mobile phone.
Much more evidence exists to demonstrate the health hazards of microwave radiation, but the above should encourage people to take precautions -- either by texting or by using ear phones or by sharply limiting their use of cell phones—and to mistrust the cell telephone industry’s spurious claims that microwave radiation emitted by the devices cannot cause harm.

The most authoritative source of information about the microwave radiation hazard in recent years has been Louis Slesin, founder, editor, and publisher of Microwave News. He can be reached at microwavenews.com.

'She Who Tells A Story' Exhibit At MFA Boston Showcases Talented Female Photographers From The Middle East

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BOSTON (RNS) An Iraqi woman dons a black hijab but bares her thighs. A Lebanese woman wearing a sheer blouse curls up on a bed, both innocent and seductive. An attractive young Iranian couple shares breakfast at a small table, seemingly oblivious to the tank looming just a few yards away.

There are no harems, belly dancers, or male oppressors in this photography show, nor any of the other Middle Eastern stereotypes that Westerners generally associate with that far away, often misunderstood, region.

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Untitled, from the Women of Gaza series
Tanya Habjouqa (Jordanian, born in 1975) 2009
Pigment print
*© Tanya Habjouqa
*Museum purchase with general funds and the Horace W. Goldsmith Fund for Photography *Courtesy, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston


She Who Tells a Story,” a photo exhibit now showing at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts and headed to other U.S. museums, features the work of 12 women from the Middle East who shatter stereotypes with works that are provocative, beautiful, mysterious, and surprising, all at the same time.

Giacomo Voorhees, who serves in the Navy in San Diego but was recently in Boston where he grew up, saw the exhibit with his grandparents.

“I think we generalize about women there being oppressed and not having a voice, but these photos show that’s not exactly always true,” he said.

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Don’t Forget This Is Not You (for Sahar Lotfi)
Newsha Tavakolian (Iranian, born in 1981) 2010
Pigment print
*Reproduced with permission.
*Courtesy of the artist and East Wing Contemporary Gallery. *Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.


Exhibit curator Kristen Gresh thought the same thing, and drew on her experience of living in Paris, home to many Middle Eastern immigrants, and Cairo.

“My main goal was to showcase the contemporary artistic scene, and breaking down stereotypes turned out to be a byproduct,” she said.

Shirin Neshat, who was born in Iran but lives in New York, shot close-ups of a woman’s face, her mouth closed and covered by her hand. Silenced? No. The hands are adorned with lines written in Farsi and taken from books by contemporary female Iranian authors.

In one of the show’s most haunting images, Lalla Essaydi, a Moroccan native who spent part of her childhood in Saudi Arabia, and now lives in New York City, presents a three-paneled photo of a woman with a flowing black mane decked out in henna and a glittering gold dress lying on a divan. On closer inspection, however, the woman is covered in hospital gauze; the glitter is not gold but bullet shell casings.

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Bullets Revisited #3
Lalla Essaydi (Moroccan, born in 1956) 2012
Triptych, three chromogenic prints on aluminum
*Reproduced with permission.
*Courtesy of Miller Yezerski Gallery Boston; Edwynn Houk Gallery New York *Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.


“Like any woman in the world, Arab women certainly have specific difficulties that they face,” said Essaydi, who explained that her triptych refers to the role that Arab women played during the Arab Spring. “But they are not debilitating. Arab women are not universally oppressed, subjugated, or depressed. Their lives are no more to be defined by stereotypes than anyone else’s.”

Rania Matar, who was born in Lebanon and now lives in Brookline, Mass., said she wanted to show the “humanity and universality of being a woman” through her series “A Girl and Her Room,” which depicts teenage girls in their bedrooms in the U.S., Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.

“All the news is about how different they were,” said Matar. “But at the core, they are the same — the emotions and feelings they deal with, what they react to, how they grow. There are things that are universal about girls.”

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Alia, Beirut, Lebanon
Rania Matar (Lebanese, born in 1964) 2010
Pigment Print
*© Rania Matar.
*Courtesy of the artist and Carroll and Sons, Boston. *Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.


Part of what inspired Matar to become a photographer was the way the media depicted the region as a cultural and religious monolith rife with violence and extremism.

“It’s too simplistic to lump people all into one category,” said Matar, who was born into a Palestinian Christian family. “But it happens so often that I get almost defensive and feel I have to do something to correct these mistakes.”

While not religious, Matar still takes exception to the description of the Middle East as the “Islamic world.” Christians, Jews, and people of other faiths live in that part of the world.

Although many of the photos undermine stereotypes, others offer criticism of society or government.

Gohar Dashti’s series, “Today’s Life and War,” depicts Iranians going about their daily lives as the Iran-Iraq War rages in the background. The absurdist photos depict newlyweds sitting in a bombed-out car, the handsome young couple hanging their laundry on barbed wire and watching television in a room where the walls are made from sandbags.

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Gohar Dashti (Iranian, born in 1980) 2008
Pigment print
*Reproduced with permission.
*Courtesy Galerie WHITE PROJECT Paris. *Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.


“When the horrific nature of war becomes normal, it takes a surreal form,” said Dashti, who grew up during the war in a city close to the Iranian-Iraqi border. As for criticism, she said, “Normally any government does not like this, however I’m not an activist. I’m only an artist.”

The photos are so beautiful and technically masterful, it seems unfortunate that they deal with complicated and often difficult realities. But many of the women wouldn‘t have it any other way.

“Beautiful art with no means, no substance will become merely decorative,” said Essaydi. “If it is not identity issues, we would have researched other issues.”

Matar agreed. “Beauty needs thought. And thought needs beauty,” she said. “The two need each other.”

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The Break
Nermine Hammam (born in 1967) 2011
Pigment print
*© Nermine Hammam
*Courtesy of the artist, Rose Issa Projects, London, and Taymour Grahne. *Courtesy Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.


(“She Who Tells a Story” closes in Boston on Jan. 12. The show will travel to other museums including the Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University in January 2015.)

Meet The Art World's Most Devastatingly Adorable Couple

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If you haven't seen "Cutie and the Boxer" yet, you've made a huge mistake. The inspiring and heartbreakingly adorable documentary chronicles husband-and-wife duo Ushio and Noriko Shinohara, two Japanese-born, Manhattan-based artists, in their struggles and triumphs of art and love.

The pair graced the HuffPost Live stage with their presence today, along with the film's director Zachary Heinzerling, where they chatted about jealousy, passion and imagining a life without each other. Even in this short clip you can imagine how the sincerity and drive of these two individuals created a cinematic gem.

Exhibit A: When Ushio says of his wife, "She is my god."

So darn cute.

It doesn't come as a huge surprise that the married artists would yet again share their story with the public. As Cutie explained in an earlier interview with Huff Post Arts&Culture:

"Art work comes from inside of the artist, so to show how I eat, and how I sleep, it’s insight. If the artist makes work and nobody looks at it, the artist is not happy, even if the artist pretends he likes solitude -- to stay in the mountain or countryside. As an artist... it's exhibitionist. Since I’m not a famous artist, I have no choice. I have to look for the chance."


Read the rest of the interview here. If you're already hooked, you can stream "Cutie and the Boxer" on Netflix.

You Might Be Living In One Of America's Coziest Cities (And Not Even Know It)

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The virtues of city life are largely in the eye of the beholder. Some may have moved to a city because that's where they work. Or perhaps they moved because of watching "Sex And The City" at an impressionable age. Others just like to be in stumbling distance to their favorite dive bar.

But the folks over at Honeywell have identified a new reason to consider one city over another: Coziness.

In their list of the 10 coziest cities, Honeywell partnered with the environmental consulting company Environmental Health & Engineering, who looked at data relating to accessibility to parks, restaurants and coffee shops, stressful lifestyle scores and more aesthetic concerns such as the area's historical ambiance. (It also serves to note that researchers also considered usage rates of fireplaces and portable heaters -- the latter is one of Honeywell's product categories.)

So, are you living in a hub of coziness? Or are you doomed to live a life chilled to the bone, with nary a coffee shop in walking distance? Here's the list:

Bryan Cranston To Make His Broadway Debut In 'All The Way' (VIDEO)

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Bryan Cranston is moving from the small screen to the big stage.

The 57-year-old "Breaking Bad" star is set to make his Broadway debut later this winter in the political play "All The Way," and HuffPost Live has the first look at his performance as President Lyndon B Johnson.

"All The Way" made its debut at the Oregon Shakespeare Festival in July 2012 with actor Jack Willis in the starring role, then jumped to the American Repertory Theater in Cambridge, Mass., this past September, where Cranston joined the cast.

"[Cranston] is unassuming. He is funny. He is charming. He's a wonderful team player. And he's a natural on the stage," the play's producer, Jeffrey Richards, told the Associated Press.

The play, written by Rober Schenkkan and directed by Bill Rauch, follows LBJ in his first year as president. It is set to begin previews Feb. 10 at the Neil Simon Theater.

Check out a preview of Bryan Cranston as LBJ in the video above.

Thug Notes Examines 'Romeo & Juliet' And Concludes, 'Teenagers, Man... DAMN'

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For his first Thug Notes of 2014, Sparky Sweets, PhD has tackled William Shakespeare's immortal tale of star-crossed lovers, "Romeo & Juliet."

Watch the video above for insights like, "And now Romeo moping around like he lost his nuts," and "Maybe it ain't fate so much as it is kids acting like stupid little sh*ts."

We couldn't have said it better ourselves, Professor Sweets.

King Sobekhotep I's Tomb Identified In Egypt (PHOTOS)

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The impressive tomb of an ancient Egyptian pharaoh has been identified at the Abydos archaeological site near Sohag, Egypt.

State Minister of Antiquities Mohamed Ibrahim announced the identification of King Sobekhotep I's tomb on Jan. 6, according to a government press release.

A team of researchers from the University of Pennsylvania worked together with the country's Antiquities Ministry to identify the site.

A positive identification of the sarcophagus, which weighed close to 60 tons, was made after researchers found and interpreted pieces of stone slab inscribed with the pharaoh's name, the Agence France Press reports.

King Sobekhotep I is believed to be the founder of the 13th Pharaonic dynasty, the Agence France-Presse reports. Previous to this discovery, little information about the important leader's rule had been unearthed -- a factor that lends particular significance to the breakthrough in Abydos. Ayman El-Damarani, a ministry official, noted that Sobekhotep's nearly five-year rule was "the longest rule at this time," the outlet notes.

Located in Upper Egypt west of the Nile River, the sacred city of Abydos has been the site of many important archaeological discoveries. Once a royal cemetery for early Egyptian royalty, the location later became a popular pilgrimage site for worship of the god Osiris, according to Britannica.

The University of Pennsylvania has sent teams of researchers to Abydos for three decades, according to the school's website. Successful digs in the region have uncovered everything from temples and royal boat pits to the resting places of kings.

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Workers keep busy at the site of the 3,800-year-old tomb of pharaoh Sobekhotep I in Upper Egypt.

Meryl Streep Honors Emma Thompson, Slams Walt Disney

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Meryl Streep took the stage at the National Board of Review awards on Tuesday night to honor her friend, actress Emma Thompson. Streep introduced Thompson, who was being presented with the Best Actress award at the event for her role in "Saving Mr. Banks," with a speech only she could pull off.

The sermon, which Streep introduced as the "long, bitter more truthful version," praised Thompson for both her personality and her recent work in "Saving Mr. Banks," the film about "Mary Poppins" author P.L. Travers' relationship with Walt Disney, dinged awards season, and called out Disney for being a racist, sexist, and anti-Semitic.

Below, some highlights, via Vulture.

  • "Ezra Pound said, 'I have not met anyone worth a damn who was not irascible.' Well, I have — Emma Thompson. Not only is she not irascible, she's practically a saint. There's something so consoling about that old trope, but Emma makes you want to kill yourself because she's a beautiful artist, she's a writer, she's a thinker, she's a living, acting conscience."


  • "Disney, who brought joy, arguably, to billions of people, was perhaps ... or had some racist proclivities. He formed and supported an anti-Semitic industry lobbying group. And he was certainly, on the evidence of his company's policies, a gender bigot."


  • "...Which brings me to awards season. Which is really ridiculous. We have made so many beautiful movies this year, and to single out one seems unfair."


  • And the kicker, an ode Streep wrote to Thompson: "We think the Brits are brittle, they think that we are mush / They are more sentimental, though we do tend to gush / Volcanoes of emotion concealed beneath that lip / Where we are prone to guzzle, they tip the cup and sip / But when eruption bubbles from nowhere near the brain / It's seismic, granite crumbles, the heart overflows like rain / Like lava, all that feeling melts down like Oscar gold / And Emma leaves us reeling, a knockout, truth be told."


To read the full text of the speech, head over to Vulture.

'Big Brother' Creator John De Mol Debuts 'Utopia'

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John de Mol knows a thing or two about launching hit reality series. He conquered singing competitions with "The Voice," dominated the game show format with "Deal or No Deal" and redefined the social experiment with "Big Brother."

For his latest project, he's tinkering a bit with the format of that last one. Just as he did with all three of those series, de Mol launched his latest project in his native Holland. "Utopia" is a year-long social experiment that debuted with massive ratings on Monday night.

Deadline is reporting that at least one American network has already reached out to producers, with more talks scheduled for next week to discuss bringing the format to the U.S. It's certainly an ambitious undertaking. The series strands 15 contestants for a year in a remote part of the country. They have some livestock, water and electricity connections, one phone and some money. They then must establish their own society.

Like "Big Brother," cameras are watching them 24/7, and viewers can sign up for online feeds. Also like "Big Brother" in many foreign markets, "Utopia" is scheduled to air five nights a week. While there are no rules -- and no producer interference -- there are regular eliminations, as well as opportunities for new blood to join the show.

It certainly would make for a bold experiment in the U.S., but would American viewers have the patience to watch a reality show play out over a year?

'Philomena' Receives Support From Catholic Group New Ways Ministry

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At an awards event hosted by The Peggy Siegal Company on Monday afternoon, "Philomena" co-writer and co-star Steve Coogan told the attendees that he hoped Pope Francis would enjoy the new film.

"I think all the noises the Pope has made so far would suggest that he'd be more nuanced and mature in his reaction to it, than some of his flock," he said about "Philomena," which tells the true-lift story of Philomena Lee (played in the film by Judi Dench), an Irish woman who, after conceiving a child out of wedlock in 1952, was sent to a convent in Roscrea, Ireland run by the Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Mary and Jesus. There, while Lee was forced to work without pay, her son was sold to an American couple at 3 years old.

The "flock" Coogan referred to is embodied by New York Post critic Kyle Smith, who wrote in a negative review of "Philomena" that the film was anti-Catholic and didn't tell the full story. (Those sentiments were echoed by Catholic League president Bill Donahue.) Coogan, for his part, has defended the movie, which he co-wrote with Jeff Pope. Now, another group has come has come out in support of "Philomena": New Ways Ministry, which describes itself as a "Catholic organization of advocacy and justice for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) persons and their families, working for reconciliation with the larger Christian and civil communities."

"I think 'Philomena' is a sensitive portrayal of a woman whose deep love for her son impels her to search for him across the ocean to another continent," Sister Jeannine Gramick, co-founder of New Ways Ministry, said in a statement provided to The Huffington Post. "As a woman religious, I was ashamed of the behavior of the nuns in charge of the Catholic institution in which she was placed. Not only did they snatch her child and put him up for adoption, but they also refused to help her trace him years later. [Lee's] lack of bitterness and pardon toward those who wronged her is an example of the kind of forgiveness Jesus spoke of in the Gospel. I think Pope Francis would like this film because it shows how Christians should, and should not, act."

As "Philomena" depicts, Lee eventually found out what happened to her son, who died from complications brought on by the AIDS virus before they were able to reconnect.

“I found the depiction of Philomena Lee's Catholicism to be very accurate," Francis DeBernardo, executive director of New Ways Ministry, said in a statement. "Philomena reminded me of many of the Catholic parents of LGBT people I have met over the years who have both a deep love for their faith and for their children. And they find no contradiction in these two loves. Their strong faith even allows them to love the institutional church which has often been so negative and harmful towards them and their children."

12-Year-Old Singing And Playing Her First Original Song Will Blow You Away (VIDEO)

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Portland resident Nora Burkhartsmeier may only be 12-years-old, but she's already honed her singing and songwriting skills with the help of voice teacher Moorea Masa. Listen to her extremely impressive -- and very first -- original recorded piece, "Remember," in the video above.

The seventh grader comes from a musical family and has been playing classical piano since the ripe old age of six. In an email, Nora told The Huffington Post that the lyrics for the song were inspired by a changing friendship.

"'Remember' kind of came up when a really close friend of mine announced that she was moving. She was really excited about it, and it kind of stung that she could just get up and walk away that easily," Nora said.

Nora's favorite singer is Sara Bareilles, but her style is influenced by a range of musicians. She listens to anything from Alicia Keys to Joni Mitchell to Duke Ellington, and appreciates artists who are "raw and genuine."

"I would love to sing and play piano as a career, but it is SO hard to make a living doing just that," she said. "Music is the thing that brings me the most joy, and even if it means I'll have to sacrifice a few luxuries, it will be worth it in the end because I'll be doing something that I love to do."








Marcus Luttrell's 'Lone Survivor' Is A Brutal Tribute To Navy SEALs

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NEW YORK (AP) — Marcus Luttrell, the former Navy SEAL whose deadly mission in Afghanistan has been turned into the film "Lone Survivor," strides into a hotel room for an interview, trailed by his service dog, Mr. Rigby.

The tall, hulking, goateed Navy Cross recipient greets a journalist with a rock-hard grip, and nods to director Peter Berg and star Mark Wahlberg, who plays him in the film. This is clearly not what he wants to be doing. Based on Luttrell's best-selling 2007 memoir, "Lone Survivor" is about a 2005 four-man operation in northeastern Afghanistan's Kunar province that fell apart when a trio of goat herders stumbled upon the staked-out SEALs.

After releasing the civilians and aborting the mission, the SEALs were quickly ambushed by the Taliban in a firefight that tumbled down a rocky gulch, killed Luttrell's three fellow SEALs, left Luttrell badly injured and, in an attempted rescue, killed 16 more men.

"Lone Survivor," which opens like a recruitment video with documentary footage of intense SEAL training, is the latest in a series of films that pays tribute to the Navy's special forces: In messy, uncertain wars, they're elite practitioners of precision. In the era of the superhero film, the Navy SEALs have inspired filmmakers as the genuine article.

Luttrell would rather not talk about any of it. He went along with "Lone Survivor" and wrote the book at the urging of his superiors. Compared to the actual events, the movie is no traumatic experience for Luttrell.

"I went through it in real life, so a movie about it isn't going to affect me in any way," says the 38-year-old Texan.

Hollywood and the American military are worlds apart. But "Lone Survivor" is a uniquely close collaboration, one in which Berg and Wahlberg (both producers) worked under significant pressure from the families of those who died and active-duty SEALs to faithfully render the soldiers' lives, in battle and in brotherhood.

"I was at the screening when there were a hundred moms and dads of dead soldiers," says Berg. "And I was at a screening where there were 500 active members of special operations, including Admiral (William) McRaven. And those are different. Because when those lights come up, those people are going to look you in the eye."

Over the years, SEALs have been played by the likes of Bruce Willis, Steven Seagal and Demi Moore, and been a mainstay in video games ("Call of Duty," ''Metal Gear Solid"). But the movies, often in close consultation with the military, have come a long way since 1990's "Navy SEALs," with Charlie Sheen.

2012's "Act of Valor" was acted out by active-duty SEALs and used live-ammo sequences to portray a fictional covert mission. Kathryn Bigelow's "Zero Dark Thirty" dramatized the most famous SEAL mission, the raid in Abbottabad that killed Osama bin Laden. The recent docudrama "Captain Phillips" recreated the rescue of the kidnapped mariner by SEAL snipers, with Tom Hanks' most-moving scene improvised with a real-life Naval officer.

Such productions, though, have given rise to questions of accuracy and charges of propaganda.

U.S. senators, including Dianne Feinstein and John McCain, claimed that too much information was shared with the filmmakers of "Zero Dark Thirty," and many criticized the film for suggesting torture aided the hunt for bin Laden. "Captain Phillips" showed only a handful of the 19 shots that were fired on the three Somali pirates, and didn't mention the $30,000 that went missing in the aftermath. Retired Army lieutenant general James B. Vaught argued that "Act of Valor" revealed too much about tactics: "Get the hell out of the media!" he implored.

But the military sees in the movies a chance to shape its image and insure some degree of authenticity in depictions of its service men and women. "Lone Survivor" has largely drawn praise as a brutal ode to Navy SEALs and a faithful depiction of the moral confusion of combat.

"For films like 'Black Hawk Down' and 'Lone Survivor,' the commonality is the notion that this is an important opportunity to set the record straight or at least to portray things as they believe they happened," says Philip Strub, head of the Defense Department's Film and Television Liaison Office.

It can make for a thorny mix of fictionalization, artist license and classification issues. Berg consulted frequently with military liaisons and the Navy Office of Information while writing the script.

"I read the after-action reports," says Berg. "I looked at the autopsies. I went to Iraq. I met all these guys. We just followed the blue print that Latrell laid out in his book. We never set out to do something non-Hollywood or Hollywood. We just literally told the story."

Says Wahlberg: "Everybody fell in line with what the goals were, what the agenda was and how high the standard was set by not only the SEAL team guys but their families. It was a lot of pressure, but everybody took a lot of pride in the fact that we were taking part in this thing."

When the film, which expands nationally in theaters Friday, premiered at the AFI Festival in November, Wahlberg made emotional comments about actors who brag about military training for a movie.

"I was really talking about myself, because I've been guilty of it many times, talking about how hard I had to work," says Wahlberg. "It's nothing compared to what they do."

But Luttrell emerged from "Lone Survivor" with admiration for Berg and Wahlberg: "It's all relative," he says. "What I do for a living and what he does for a living is exactly the same. We both wake up in the morning, put out as hard as we can and then go to bed at night, hoping to see the next day."

"They took this under their wing and they worked with it and brought it to life from the pages in the book, from the blood on the mountain."

___

Follow AP Film Writer Jake Coyle on Twitter at: http://twitter.com/jake_coyle

We've Found A Portal To The 1970s And It's This Contemporary Home In San Antonio, Texas

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If you watched "American Hustle" and thought, "Hey, those sets look like they would be awesome to live in," we've got the house for you. This 1972 San Antonio contemporary-style home is basically a portal to the decade that gave us glam rock, disco and "The Brady Bunch." It can be all yours for $335,000.

Listing Agent: Diana Gonzalez
Photographer: Matthew Wingate
Photos via Realtor.com

1970s home

1970s house

1970s kitchen

Hats off to one of our favorite blogs, Retro Renovation, for first bringing this gem to every vintage house lover's attention and expounding on the details we might have missed. For instance, the light fixture in the corner of this room that looks a bit like a fountain:

1970s living room

An eagle-eyed commenter noted that the light was actually a Shower Lite, a product that went through a mini-trend in the 1970s (no surprise there). The suspended light fixture, also referred to as a rain lamp, features a sculpture surrounded by nylon threads. Oil then drips down the threads, creating the look of "rain." A newspaper from 1979 advertises the lamps for $88. Today, you can find rain lamps on eBay for under $300, depending on the designer, manufacturer and condition.

Check our the photos below to see more of this amazing bit of 1970s style. And for an even closer look at the home (along with an incredible number of vintage house tours and decor ideas), be sure to visit Retro Renovation.


A Pill For Perfect Pitch? New Research Suggests There May Be One

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Before your next karaoke contest, you might want to visit a pharmacist: Researchers have found that a drug known as valproate, or valproic acid, might help people learn how to produce perfect pitch.

Besides the assistance valproate could give to "American Idol" contestants, the study is intriguing because it suggests the adult brain can learn better and faster through drugs that enhance its "neuroplasticity."

Perfect pitch, which scientists refer to as absolute pitch, is the rare ability to identify or produce the pitch of a musical note without any reference point. Experts believe that the ability to produce absolute pitch may be a genetic trait that must be nurtured through musical training in early childhood — by the age of 5, ideally — or it's unlikely to develop. [11 Facts Every Parent Should Know About Their Baby's Brain]

Young children are known to have an unusual degree of neuroplasticity, which enables them to pick up languages and other skills much more easily than adults, who often struggle to learn a new language, play a new musical instrument or learn other new skills.

But the latest study into the development of absolute pitch, published in the journal Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience, suggests that neuroplasticity isn't necessarily a "closed window" after childhood, and valproate might help nudge the window back open.

Your brain on drugs

Valproate belongs to a class of drugs known as histone deacetylase inhibitors. Marketed under the names Depakote, Depacon and Stavzor, valproate has been used for years to treat migraines, epileptic seizures and mood disorders, including bipolar disorder. (The drug is not recommended for women who might be pregnant, because it can cause decreased IQ and other developmental problems in newborns.)

Earlier research in rats had suggested that histone deacetylase inhibitors might help the animals recover from neural deficits induced by limiting vision in one eye. The drugs seem to work through epigenetics, the external modifications to DNA that switch certain genes "on" or "off."

To build on this earlier research, and to test the hypothesis that psychoactive drugs might enhance neuroplasticity, researchers gathered 23 male volunteers, ages 18 to 27, and gave them either a placebo or valproate for two weeks. The volunteers had little or no previous musical training, but were coached on the basics of pitch and other music concepts.

After two weeks of taking either valproate or a placebo, the volunteers were asked to identify pitch tones: Those who had taken valproate learned how to identify absolute pitch and scored significantly higher than those who had taken the placebo.

"It's quite remarkable since there are no known reports of adults acquiring absolute pitch," Takao K. Hensch, professor of molecular and cellular biology at Harvard and co-author of the study, told NPR.

Better learning through chemistry

"It's a mood-stabilizing drug, but we found that it also restores the plasticity of the brain to a juvenile state," Hensch told NPR. This finding suggests that valproate could have some use in teaching adults skills that they would otherwise have difficulty mastering.

"There are a number of examples of critical-period type development, language being one of the most obvious ones," Hensch said. "So the idea here was, could we come up with a way that would reopen plasticity, [and] paired with the appropriate training, allow adult brains to become young again?"

The use of any drug to enhance learning by inducing greater neuroplasticity also poses some thorny ethical issues: "I should caution that critical periods have evolved for a reason, and it is a process that one probably would not want to tamper with carelessly," Hensch said.

"If we've shaped our identities through development, through a critical period, and have matched our brain to the environment in which we were raised … then if we were to erase that by reopening the critical period, we run quite a risk as well," Hensch said.

Follow Marc Lallanilla on Twitter and Google+. Follow us @livescience, Facebook & Google+. Original article on LiveScience.



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