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These 'Rolling Homes' Are Exactly What They Sound Like

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In the town of Svencelė, Lithuania, a prospective home buyer must not only choose between one bedroom or a studio, laundry onsite and off, but also rolling and non-rolling. Welcome to the future, where architecture borders on sorcery and "Rolling Homes" are a very real possibility.

rolling

The forward-thinking minds of architecture firm DO Architects have created a cluster of 12 single family homes, located by a lagoon next to the Baltic Sea. The cylindrical nature of the homes maximizes both the internal space and the natural light. The tubular dwellings resemble massive, enclosed hamster wheels, with transparent facades fully opened up to the surrounding canals and natural sights. However, the enclosed sides of the buildings offer privacy between the rolling residents and their neighbors. You know what they say, what happens in a rolling home stays in a rolling home.

Take a look at the futuristic abodes below and let us know if you'd trade your current pad for a rolling one in the comments.


2015 Books We Can't Wait To Read

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There's much to look forward to next year in the world of fiction. Here, in order of release dates, are the books we can't wait to read in 2015:



Almost Famous Women by Megan Mayhew Bergman

Jan. 6

Megan Mayhew Bergman's first story collection, Birds of a Lesser Paradise, was a stunning meditation on the ways we interact with nature, and animals in particular. In a particularly moving story, the protagonist likens mother whales pushing their newborn calfs to the water's surface to her own compulsion to nurture. Her next collection, about women whose strange and various pursuits propelled them to near-fame, promises to be just as inspiring.




The Season of Migration by Nellie Hermann

Jan. 6

Art history buffs might think they know all there is to know about van Gogh. But, as recent news has taught us, there are still corners of his life that remain uncovered -- even the most dedicated historians aren't sure whether or not the painter was murdered. One such corner is the period in van Gogh's adolescent years when he was estranged from his brother, Theo. Nellie Hermann explores the time in her latest novel.




Amnesia by Peter Carey

Jan. 14

Peter Carey has written on a breadth of oddball topics -- his previous novel follows a woman grieving her deceased secret lover while putting together a broken automaton -- and has picked up two Booker prizes along the way. His newest book is about cyberterrorism and radical journalism.




The Unfortunate Importance of Beautyby Amanda Filipacchi

Feb. 2

Two friends -- one objectively beautiful, the other not -- go to extraordinary lengths to mask their given appearances, in an attempt to make the people around them see them for who they truly are. The result is a funny, bizarre story that invites the reader to question the meaning of identity.




A History of Loneliness by John Boyne

Feb. 3

The author of The Boy in the Striped Pajamas returns with the story of an Irish priest who has endured recent, founded outcries against the church. He's forced to examine his role in it all, and the beginnings of his career.




Funny Girl by Nick Hornby

Feb. 3

Nick Hornby is pretty much always poignant and hilarious, so expect nothing different from his new novel, which follows the young star of a sitcom in 1960s Britain.




Prudence by David Treuer

Feb. 5

Protagonist Frankie is about to head off to Europe, where he'll join the World War II military efforts. But first he has to say goodbye to his family in Minnesota, and while doing so, witnesses a crime committed by an ex-German soldier. David Treuer's experience writing about Native American history and culture is apparent in this analysis of race and memory.




Get in Trouble: Stories by Kelly Link

Feb. 10

Kelly Link promised to be as darkly funny as ever in this collection of stories -- most of them fantastical, some of them involving life-sized dolls, and all of them deeply affecting.




The Country of Ice Cream Star by Sandra Newman

Feb. 10

This book's title refers to its protagonist's name -- "Ice Cream Star." She's likely called that because for generations kids have ruled America, no thanks to a disease called Posies that has made the mortality rate plummet to no higher than 20. When Ice Cream Star's brother falls ill, she goes on a wild search for the cure.




A Spool of Blue Thread by Anne Tyler

Feb. 10

Anne Tyler's tender storytelling capabilities are on display in A Spool of Blue Thread, which chronicles a close-knit family's history, as told by the aging Abby Whitshank and her husband Red, who will soon need to be cared for by her children and grandchildren.




After Birth by Elisa Albert

Feb. 17

Elisa Albert's novel has been endorsed by Lydia Davis, which seems as good a reason as any to pick it up. It also deals with the months after one woman's first time giving birth, and the lonely identity crisis that comes along with them.




Satin Island: A novel by Tom McCarthy

Feb. 17

Tom McCarthy's ability to embed meaning in his elliptical narratives has earned him a Booker prize nomination, so Satin Island promises to be at least thought-provoking. It follows a "corporate anthropologist" who must assemble a sort of mega-document that explains the zeitgeist in quantifiable terms.




Find Me by Laura van den Berg

Feb. 17

She's a hot-shot short story writer, and her first novel is fascinating: When an Alzheimer's-like pandemic wipes out most of the population, protagonist Joy finds herself immune, and makes her way to a hospital meant to study survivors.




Welcome to Braggsville by T. Geronimo Johnson

Feb. 17

A crew of well-meaning Berkeley students trek to the South to protest a Civil War reenactment by putting on their own parody, but soon learn that their conceptions of the region were more than misplaced.




Lucky Alan by Jonathan Lethem

Feb. 24

Jonathan Lethem's novels are often multi-faceted. For example, his latest, Dissident Gardens, strung together the stories of disparate, loosely related groups of "slacktivists." So, a collection of short stories seems a natural fit for the writer. Lucky Alan: And other stories is a hodgepodge of realistic and surreal tales.




Know Your Beholder by Adam Rapp

March 3

A failed musician holes up in his childhood home in middle America after a series of unrelated tragedies, but finds himself unwillingly involved in the community's affairs.




The Unloved by Deborah Levy

March 3

Deborah Levy is remarkably prolific. She's written radio plays, a Booker-nominated novel, and a page-turning yet poetic short story collection. Her last novel, Swimming Home, shared a family's odd exploits while on summer vacation -- similarly, The Unloved features a cast of tourists celebrating the holidays together in a chateau.




The Buried Giant by Kazuo Ishiguro

March 3

Kazuo Ishiguro's first novel in nearly ten years follows a couple traversing a foreboding landscape in search of their long-lost son. If it's anything like his previous works -- including the beloved Never Let Me Go -- then it'll be a moving look at intimate relationships.




A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara

March 10

Hanya Yanagihara's first novel, The People in the Trees, was one of our Best Books of 2013. Only two years later, she's back with a sprawling epic about four talented but frustrated college friends trying to find their way in New York and how their friendships shift as the years pass.




The Poser by Jacob Rubin

March 17

In this debut novel about the exploits of a talented impressionist, the protagonist's natural gift for mimicry launches him to national fame, only for him to find that his own identity has been obscured by the many he's imitated so successfully.




Hausfrau by Jill Alexander Essbaum

March 24

An American housewife of a Swiss banker assuages her inner misery with a series of affairs, but soon realizes she doesn't know how to extricate herself from her self-destructive spiral. Though this is Jill Alexander Essbaum's debut novel, she's published several volumes of poetry -- which we find often predicts lovely, spare prose.




The Harder They Come by T.C. Boyle

March 30

The latest from a prolific and acclaimed novelist, The Harder They Come is a family saga that maps the relationships between the three people at its heart -- an elderly veteran, his son with schizophrenia, and his son's anarchist radical girlfriend -- as their potent mix of violence and paranoia urges them toward tragedy.




God Help the Child by Toni Morrison

April 30

Who isn't crazed with excitement for Toni Morrison's new novel? We don't know much about the upcoming book, but we do know that, like many of her previous works, it will examine race, family dysfunction, and how past traumas reverberate through to the present. If her past books are any evidence, we can also expect it to be utterly awesome.




Purity by Jonathan Franzen

September (TBD)

Little has been revealed about Jonathan Franzen's newest, not even the release date. We know the novel will center on a young woman named Purity (or Pip) and her search for her father's identity. Intriguingly, Franzen's publisher has hinted that it will be more "fabulist" than his usual realist style.

Hemingway Stories Brought To Life In Hilarious 15-Second Videos

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What better way to make use of Instagram's video platform -- designed with the attention-deficient in mind -- than to very quickly summarize Ernest Hemingway's famous novels? The Ernest Hemingway Foundation of Oak Park has done just that, and has managed to poke fun at the plotlessness of some of the writer's works, including The Old Man and the Sea, without undermining the story's value. In the event that you don't have time to re-read his saga about a lovelorn World War I ambulance driver, plus its 40 alternate endings, the below videos should pretty much suffice.

WARNING: We do not recommend watching these 15-second videos in lieu of reading Ernest Hemingway's classic works of literature. The material, while awesome, should be viewed as strictly supplemental. Also, obviously, spoilers.


For Whom the Bell Tolls





The Old Man and the Sea





A Farewell to Arms

J.K. Rowling's 'The Cuckoo's Calling' Is Getting Adapted For TV

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It's been an eventful month so far for fans of creative sorceress author J.K. Rowling, who recently announced that she'll be releasing 12 new stories on her Harry Potter fan site Pottermore during December. The stories will center on beloved villain Draco Malfoy.

Yesterday, she announced even bigger news on Twitter:



Robert Galbraith is, of course, the nom de plume Rowling used while penning her Cormoran Strike series, which features an Afghanistan war vet-turned-private investigator. The first installment, The Cuckoo's Calling, follows Strike on a mission to discover the mystery behind a suddenly stricken-down supermodel (Lula Landry, aka "the Cuckoo"). The second, The Silkworm, investigates the death of a controversial novelist. BBC One commissioned the rights to adapt both books.

If reception of the series matches the buzz generated from the books' releases, it promises to be a major hit -- or at least a greater success than the forthcoming adaptation of Rowling's other adult book, The Casual Vacancy, which will air as a three-part production on BBC One in February. Both adaptations will be produced by Brontë Film and TV, but we're more excited about the fast-paced Galbraith mysteries than the lamentably dull characters Rowling penned in Vacancy.

The details of the series have yet to be revealed, but we suggest picking up the books in the meantime -- The Silkworm even made its way onto our Best Books of 2013 list.

30 Perfectly Imperfect Holiday Card Outtakes

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Sending out holiday cards is a tradition that dates back to the Stone Age, when the cavemen painted "Ho Ho Ho, Bro" onto their cave walls (probably). Since then, the custom has taken many forms -- now, some families even send their wishes via YouTube parodies -- but there's one thing most people can count on: kids won't completely cooperate as planned. Just ask this dad, whose son kicked him in the balls during their holiday card shoot and then ran "maniacally" away, according to mom:

holiday outtake dad


We asked the HuffPost Parents Facebook community to share photos of their funniest holiday card outtakes, and the submissions act as proof that putting a baby or toddler in front of a "JOY" sign does not prevent tantrums. Oh, the irony.







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'Serial' Announces Finale Date

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"Serial," the podcast the Internet has been obsessing about for months, has set its finale date for next week. Host Sarah Koenig revealed during this week's episode, "Rumors," that the Season 1's final episode would premiere online Thursday, Dec. 18.

Koenig ended "Rumors" by reading a letter from Syed. "'At this point,' he wrote, 'It doesn't matter to me how your story portrays me -- guilty or innocent -- I just want it to be over,'" she said. "It will be. Next time, final episode of 'Serial.'"

"Serial" has followed the case of Adnan Syed, who was convicted of murdering his ex-girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, in Maryland in 1999. They were both high schoolers at the time and Syed has been in jail ever since. Koenig investigated and re-reported the crime for the podcast, highlighting interviews with former friends, audio from the trial and recorded phone calls with Syed. She's said before that this story may not get a "Hollywood ending," but his case is now moving through the appeals process. A hearing is scheduled for January.

In a matter of weeks, "Serial" became a national sensation. The first season broke the iTunes record for fastest podcast to reach 5 million downloads and streams. Koenig and her team announced last month that "Serial" will have a second season with entirely new story unrelated to Syed's case.

Listen To Coldplay's New Song 'Miracles' From The 'Unbroken' Soundtrack

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Coldplay has released their new song, "Miracles," which comes from the soundtrack to the upcoming film "Unbroken" and is a big contender in this year's Oscars race for Best Original Song. Sonically similar to the band's most recent album, "Ghost Stories," "Miracles" is a classic Coldplay mixture of sad, yet inspirational, with a dash more of the latter in keeping with the movie's story. The most surprising part of "Miracles" is the fact that it took this long for Coldplay to write a song called "Miracles."

Frontman Chris Martin recently announced that the band was working on their seventh, and possibly final album, "A Head Full of Dreams." Listen to "Miracles":

The Thing No One Notices About Kenny G's Best-Selling Holiday Albums (VIDEO)

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If there's one thing everyone can agree on about Kenny G., it's that he's a truly talented saxophonist. From solo performances to beautiful collaborations, he mesmerizes audiences with his smooth jazz sounds -- and it's all been played on the same decades-old saxophone.

"I've had the same sax since I was in high school. Same one," Kenny G. tells "Oprah: Where Are They Now?" in the above video, showing off the instrument. "Everything I've ever played and recorded has been on this horn. Everything."

Though he has produced best-selling albums and has performed for packed crowds throughout his career, Kenny G. humbly attributes his talent to sheer hard work. "I practice my saxophone three hours every day," he says. "I'm not saying that I'm anything super special, but I've practiced for 40-plus years. If you do something for 40-plus years every day and you work hard at it, you're going to get good."

Kenny G.'s albums delight fans year-round, but the time of year that many associate with this beloved artist is Christmas. His 1994 holiday album "Miracles" is the second-best-selling Christmas record of all time (behind Elvis Presley's "Christmas Album"), and Kenny G. continues to play holiday classics on his saxophone every time the spirited season rolls around.

"'Deck the Halls' is probably my most favorite Christmas arrangement I've done," Kenny G. says. "It just gets you in the mood. I'm real proud of it, I love the melody and it's a song everybody knows. It's fun."

But what sparked a Jewish, self-taught saxophonist to put out an album of Christmas classics in the first place? Turns out, the better question is, who?

"The reason I started making holiday music was I would play 'White Christmas' at a live show. Dyan Cannon, the actress -- she was a friend of mine -- and she goes, 'You should make a whole album like that,'" Kenny G. says. "Then I go to Clive Davis and I say, 'Clive, I'm thinking about doing a Christmas record, but I'm Jewish.' Clive says, 'Hey me, too! We're all Jewish!'"

For that reason, there's one small fact that many people don't seem to notice about Kenny G.'s albums.

"If you'll notice... any Christmas record that I do is never really called a 'Christmas' record," he says. "It's called a 'holiday' record."

His "Miracles" holiday record still has a clear place among the Christmas greats, even 20 years after its release. "To know 'Miracles' is played in so many homes and it's a big part of people's holiday season is really flattering," Kenny G. says. "That CD was really, really heartfelt."

Related: Watch Kenny G. drop a bombshell during his 1986 appearance on "The Oprah Winfrey Show"

"Oprah: Where Are They Now?" airs Sundays at 9 p.m. ET on OWN. Find OWN on your TV.



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Side-By-Side Photos Of What Rich And Poor Eat Reveal 'Glaring Disparities' Worldwide

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Initially, Henry Hargreaves and Caitlin Levin were interested in investigating how history’s most notorious dictators ate and used food deprivation as a weapon to punish insubordinates.

But soon after starting the project, the photographers realized hunger -- and the vast pain it causes -- is still very much a pervasive issue worldwide.

That’s when the pair switched gears and decided to also juxtapose the decadent meals eaten by the rich across the globe with the stark fare struggling individuals consume. The food on the tablecloth represents the meals of the privileged and the meager grub on the bare table represents a diet of the poor.

"We want people to literally and figuratively sit down and look across a table to see the glaring disparities between the 'haves and have nots,'" Hargreaves told The Huffington Post in an email.

The series, Power Hungry, is currently on display at Air Circulation in Brooklyn, New York. Below is a sampling of their work:






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Scott Rudin & Amy Pascal Apologize After Racially Insensitive Emails About Obama Leak

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Sony co-chairman Amy Pascal and producer Scott Rudin have apologized after racially insensitive emails they sent to each other leaked online as part of a massive hack of Sony Pictures.

"The content of my emails were insensitive and inappropriate but are not an accurate reflection of who I am," Pascal said in a statement provided to The Huffington Post. "Although this was a private communication that was stolen, I accept full responsibility for what I wrote and apologize to everyone who was offended."

In a statement to Deadline.com, Rudin said that while the emails were private correspondences between friends that were "written in haste and without much thought or sensitivity," he understood the notes were out of line. "I made a series of remarks that were meant only to be funny, but in the cold light of day, they are in fact thoughtless and insensitive," he said.

In the emails, published by BuzzFeed on Wednesday night, Pascal and Rudin discussed what movies President Barack Obama would probably count among his favorites. "'Ride-Along,'" Rudin wrote. "I bet he likes Kevin Hart." Other films with black casts that Pascal and Rudin presumed Obama would enjoy included "Django Unchained," "12 Years A Slave," "Lee Daniels' The Butler" and "Think Like A Man Too."

The Obama emails were the second embarrassing chain of emails between Rudin and Pascal to leak this week. On Tuesday, Defamer published emails between the pair that detailed their battles over Aaron Sorkin's Steve Jobs movie. Other information that has leaked out in the wake of the data breach include Sony's discussions about the future of Spider-Man, a potential crossover between "21 Jump Street" and "Men in Black" as well as the budget of "Spectre," the new James Bond film.

Marilyn Manson Explains That Horrifying Lana Del Rey Video

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Last month, a disturbing clip featuring Lana Del Rey leaked online, and at the time, it was uncertain who was behind the video. Eli Roth ("Hostel") had told Larry King that he had worked on a project with Marilyn Manson and Del Rey, calling it "so sick it has been locked in a vault for over a year." Manson's reps denied that the video was connected to his music and Del Rey stayed mum on the subject.

In a new interview with NME, Manson further explains his non-involvement with the clip, which showed Del Rey being violently sexually assaulted.

"It wasn't a Marilyn Manson video. The editor of the company that put it out was somebody who's edited my videos, that video was something that was done with a camera that Eli, who's my friend, and I both wanted to test out, so I let him test it out [...] what they filmed was put in context seemingly as if it were a Marilyn Manson video, and that was in no way the intention."


He also denied that he was present while they filmed Del Rey's violent scene, though he said, at one point he and Roth did want to collaborate with her. "Eli and I wanted to do a music video with her but she was being such a problem," he said. "Although I still respect her, I'm friends with her. I just left, I was tired, I was not willing to make that part of the video. Eli and I originally had intentions of making a video with her, but that is not the intention that is represented in that film clip because that is not what I filmed, not for my video."

Del Rey's rep has yet to respond for comment. Head over to NME for more.

Your Handy Guide To The Best Christmas Episodes On Netflix

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The holidays are around the corner, which means it's almost time to grab that hot drink and cozy up by the fire television. Because it's always fun to keep your viewing on-theme, we've compiled a handy guide to the best Christmas episodes currently streaming on Netflix. Wrap yourself in a fuzzy blanket and enjoy.

1. 30 Rock, "Ludachristmas"
Season 2, Episode 9
30 rock ludachristmas
The Lemons are in town for the holidays! In this classic "30 Rock" episode, Liz's mom, dad, and brother pay her a visit, where they proceed to be the picture of a supportive family. Mama Donaghy, also in town to visit Jack, doesn't take to them as easily as her son, and pokes holes in their cheerful veneer. Elsewhere, Kenneth brings in a reverend to try to teach the "TGS" writers the real meaning of Christmas.

2. Gilmore Girls, "Forgiveness and Stuff"
Season 1, Episode 10
gilmoregirlsxmasgif
A Luke and Lorelai episode for the ages. After Lorelai is disinvited from her parents' annual Christmas party, she heads to Luke's diner for dinner. He whips her up a Santa burger, which she is about to eat when she hears word that Richard is in the hospital. Luke gives her a ride, prompting Emily, upon their arrival, to prod into what's going on between them. Bonus: Jane Lynch makes an appearance as a nurse who cannot deal with Emily.

3. The West Wing, "Noel"
Season 2, Episode 10
yoyomarules
Shortly after he is shot at Rosslyn, Josh meets with trauma specialist Dr. Stanley Keyworth at the request of Leo McGarry. Through a series of flashbacks, the audience learns of Josh's struggles in the workplace leading up to the meeting (and sees a fantastic cello performance by the one and only Yo Yo Ma). Though Josh is resistant to Keyworth's questioning, he eventually opens up. Fans will recall this episode as the one in which Leo gives Josh the legendary "guy in a hole" speech.

4. New Girl, "The 23rd"
Season 1, Episode 9
newgirlgif
Though most are in agreement that "New Girl" really hits its stride in Season 2, the show's first season Christmas episode "The 23rd" showcases the friend group dynamic fans eventually came to love. Jess hunts for the perfect gift for her teacher boyfriend before they all head off to Schmidt's office Christmas party.

6. The Wonder Years, "Christmas"
Season 2, Episode 3
the wonder years christmas
Love and the introduction of color TVs are in the air in this "Wonder Years" Christmas episode. Winnie surprises Kevin by giving him a present, so he scrambles to pick out the perfect one for her with his limited budget. Over the holidays, the Arnolds have trouble having fun family bonding time. The episode -- like most in the series -- will get you right in the heart.

6. The Office, "Christmas Party"
Season 2, Episode 10
theofficegif
A Secret Santa exchange goes predictably awry at the Dunder-Mifflin Christmas Party. Jim gets Pam a teapot filled with heartfelt personal items, and Michael far exceeds the spending limit to give Ryan an iPod. But, after Michael is unhappy with his own present, he declares the game a "Yankee Swap," and gifts swiftly begin to fall into the wrong hands. A note for Jim/Pam fans: this episode aired just before "The Booze Cruise," so tension between the two is running very, very high.

7. Arrested Development, "Afternoon Delight"
Season 2, Episode 6
afternoondelightgif
Though "Afternoon Delight" is a very catchy song, it's not exactly family friendly -- which many of the Bluths discover as they try to perform it with relatives at Christmas parties. At one such party, GOB realizes his employees aren't his biggest fans.

8. Mad Men, "Christmas Comes But Once A Year"
Season 4, Episode 2
madmengif
If you need a break from all the holiday cheer, check out this episode of "Mad Men" for some very well-written gloom. The hour hits all the "Mad Men" essentials: Peggy fights against societal gender norms while navigating her relationship with Mark, Don makes mistakes in his love life that involve his current secretary and Pete and Trudy dance, because Christmas! The cherry on top of this strong episode's cake is, of course, that Roger dresses up as Santa Claus.

Image Credits 1. Getty 2. Tumblr 3. thefinestmuffinsandbagels.tumblr.com 4.Tumblr 5. Getty 6. futuremusicgroup.com.au 7. fanpop.com 8. VH1.com

Meet Michael Baxter, The Man Who Has 203 'Simpsons' Characters Tattooed On His Back

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This guy loves getting ink as much as Homer loves getting doughnuts.

Michael Baxter, an Australian prison officer, got 203 characters from "The Simpsons" tattooed on his back in a bid for a Guinness World Record.

Baxter reportedly spent 130 hours getting work done by artist Jade Baxter-Smith, shelling out $12,000.




The 52-year-old grandfather, who lives near Melbourne, says he's a big "Simpsons" fan. (Why are we not surprised?)

"I wanted to get something which was unique, which nobody else had or would even think of getting," Baxter told the Daily Mail.

Baxter said his love for tattoos began more than a decade ago, Australia's Herald Sun reported. "The Simpsons" work required 15 sittings over a year.

It’s an addiction,” he told the Herald Sun. “Once you get one you want more and more."

Colorful renderings of Homer, Marge, Bart, Lisa, Maggie and other inhabitants of Springfield create quite a skin-mural tribute.

Baxter said in the video above that he's vying to create a Guinness World Record for most cartoon characters tattooed on one person. In a related Guinness mark already established, Lee Weir holds the record for "Most tattoos of the same cartoon character tattooed on the body," with 41 images of Homer Simpson.

A rep for Guinness was not immediately available to comment.

H/T Uproxx

Why Surgeons Listen To Music In The Operating Room -- And How It Could Help You

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When you're going into surgery, the type of music that your doctors will be listening to is probably the last thing on your mind. But your surgeon's playlist could actually have some effect on how the procedure goes.

Music, which is generally chosen by the lead surgeon, is played roughly 62-72 percent of the time in the operating room, according to a new report published in The BMJ. The genre most often chosen is classical music.

Roughly 80 percent of operating room staff say that music benefits cooperation between team members, reduces anxiety levels and improves efficiency. Research has also suggested that music may improve surgeons' task focus.

The tradition of playing music during medical procedures dates back to ancient times, when the Greeks had identified Apollo as the God of both healing and music. In the early 1900s, Pennsylvania surgeon Evan Kane came out as a proponent of the "phonograph in the operating room," which provided a means of "calming and distracting the patient from the horror of the situation," according to the BMJ report.

While some medical experts argue that music might be distracting and hinder communication in the operating room, the Wales surgeons maintain that if noise levels are controlled, the benefits may outweigh the risks.

"Surgeons will inevitably continue to use music as a calming and familiar adjunct to their daily practice," David Bosanquet, James Glasbey and Raphael Chavez write in the paper. "We... embrace music in the operating theater whenever the situation allows it."

Relaxing music in the operating room may benefit not just doctors, but also patients. A 2009 study of 372 patients found that playing relaxing melodies that mimicked the resting heart rate was more effective than standard pharmaceutical interventions in reducing anxiety before patients went under anesthesia. This study and other research suggests that this positive effect may be maintained after surgery, the Wales surgeons note.

A growing body of research has also suggested that music's healing properties extend to pain relief. A 2012 study from the Pain Research Center at the University of Utah found that participants who actively focused on various melodies while receiving mildly painful electric shocks reduced pain levels by 17 percent. Research conducted in Singapore also found that palliative care patients who participated in live music therapy reported relief from persistent pain.

"Active music engagement allowed the patients to reconnect with the healthy parts of themselves, even in the face of a debilitating condition or disease-related suffering," the study's co-author, music therapist Melanie Kwan of the Association for Music Therapy, Singapore, told the American Psychological Association. "When their acute pain symptoms were relieved, patients were finally able to rest."

Here's The Christmas Song About Smoking Weed You've Been Waiting For

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Dent May's new song, "I'll Be Stoned For Christmas," is all about that moment over the holidays when your family starts driving you crazy, so you basically have to meet up with old friends from high school and smoke a bit of weed. As one of May's lines proclaims, "'Tis the season to be high."

"I'll Be Stoned For Christmas" is packaged and presented in May's trademark style of cheerful pop that really wouldn't feel too out of place among the more classic Christmas songs at your holiday parties this year.

The Huffington Post asked May a few questions about the song to see if he had any tips or suggestions about smoking over the holidays:

What sorts of things would you suggest doing while smoking over Christmas?

Well, I don't recommend doing your shopping while high. I've picked up some pretty wacky items while late night eBaying over the years. Weed is creative to me, so maybe you could paint a festive watercolor.

This is a super relatable song, but is there a time or a few times with friends that it's specifically based on?

It's inspired by being in college and coming home for the holidays to party with those from your past. Christmas night in my hometown was always super fun and wild, but there's also this melancholy connected to the holidays for me. I'm not sure if that came across in the song, but maybe it's lurking underneath the surface.

Will you be smoking weed this Christmas?

Perhaps a couple puffs.


Here's the track:





And here are the full lyrics if you'd like to sing along:

***


"I'll Be Stoned For Christmas"

I can’t wait to go out
On Christmas night
And see all my old high school friends
I just love my hometown
In holiday lights
It’s so good to see you how’ve you been

We load up
Your daddy’s car
And we drive to the party
And we’re gonna go hard
So fill my cup to the top
Light me up 'til i’m hot

I’ll be stoned for Christmas this year
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’m sorry mama

I have opened all my presents
Sweaters and slacks
So hit me up and tell me what you got
I’ve been chilling with my parents
They're driving me mad
So I’m trying to get lifted with you now

We roll up your cousin’s stash
And go wild at the party
Yeah we’re having a blast
So fill my cup to the top
Light me up 'til I’m hot

I’ll be stoned for Christmas this year
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’m sorry papa

There’s an angel on my tree top
And a devil in my mind
Have a smoke and pour a big shot
'Tis the season to be high

So fill my cup to the top
Light me up 'til I’m hot

I’ll be stoned for Christmas this year
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’ll be stoned for Christmas
I’m sorry mama

Rejoice! Her Majesty Yoko Ono Is Getting A MoMA Exhibition

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Looks like our wishing tree is finally paying off. Her majesty Yoko Ono -- queen of magically bizarre tweets, avant-garde cover songs, surreal makeup tutorials and groundbreaking conceptual and performance art -- is finally getting a big ol' exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art. May we just give an emphatic thank you.

The exhibition will be Ono's first official solo show at MoMA. But it won't be her first time taking over the walls and spaces of the New York City establishment. In 1971, she debuted a one-woman show titled "Museum of Modern [F]art." For the unorthodox artwork, Ono released a batch of flies onto the museum grounds and invited visitors, as participants in the work, to track the insects as they scattered across the city.

And who can forget that time Ono instructed MoMA patrons to scream in the museum's atrium in 2010?

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Painting to See in the Dark (Version 1). 1961. Installation view with the artist, Paintings & Drawings by Yoko Ono, AG Gallery, New York, July 17–30, 1961. Photograph by George Maciunas.


Nevertheless, a solo exhibition is big deal. "Yoko Ono: One Woman Show, 1960–1971" will bring together 125 works -- installations, performances, audio recordings, films and works on paper -- made during the decade prior to her "[F]art" show. This crucial period in Ono's artistic development, spent between New York, Tokyo, and London, yielded some of her most iconic and revolutionary works, including "Painting to Be Stepped On" (1960/1961). The work, as you may have guessed, demands audience participation too. A canvas is placed on the floor, beckoning onlookers to tip-toe and tread over the piece as a means of obscuring the harsh divide between art and life.

Also on view will be "Apple," a lone fruit placed atop a pedestal, and the seminal 1964 film "Cut Piece," in which Ono asks viewers to cut away her clothing as she sits still on stage.

For over 50 years, Ono has bewitched the world with her gifts of art at once humble and monumental, poetic and silly, revolutionary and cozy-as-a-warm-bed. As Michael Kimmelman said in 2000, "Ms. Ono's art is a mirror. We see ourselves in our reaction to it." We can't wait to eat up her early works in real life come May 2015. Between this and Bjork's upcoming retrospective in March, it's going to be a beautiful lady-centric springtime at MoMA. Until then, the preview below will have to suffice.

This Man Couldn't Have Picked A More Appropriate Time To Pop The Question

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There's an art to staging the perfect proposal, and this man has mastered it.

In April, Shenna Barkley and her boyfriend Brian Miller decided to host an art show called "Love Letters" at a local coffee shop in Griffin, Georgia. Participants were asked to come up with a letter of the alphabet that best described their love in any relationship, whether it was a significant other or anything or anyone else that made them "truly happy."

While Barkley was describing what the letter "K" meant to her -- kismet, which means fate, because she and Miller had crossed paths again after growing up together -- Miller was arranging the letters behind her into the words "Will You Marry Me."

will you marry me

“We’ve know each other since we were kids, and if i’m honest with you, if I'm honest with myself, I’ve loved you since then,” Miller said, as the audience loudly -- that's a warning to viewers! -- cheered. Of course, Barkley said "yes."

Now that's some serious kismet.

H/T RightThisMinute

'Star Wars' Character Names Finally Revealed

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We met some of the new faces in "Star Wars: The Force Awakens" when the teaser trailer was revealed last month, and now we have more important info about some characters: their names.

Director J.J. Abrams and Lucasfilm president Kathleen Kennedy made these announcements through Topps cards, which put our a series of collectible "Star Wars" trading cards for the 1977 "Star Wars," via Entertainment Weekly. Not all the cards give the characters away so easily, but now it's clear that Oscar Isaac will play Poe Dameron, Daisy Ridley's name is Rey and John Boyega is Finn (on the run!).

Isaac's trading card features him in an X-Wing, Ridley is pictured on a speeder and Boyega is outfitted in his Stormtrooper uniform. Other trading cards feature a cloaked character named Kylo Ren, who fans think might be played by Adam Driver, Stormtroopers, X-wings and the Millennium Falcon.

Head over to EW to see all the cards.

'Comic Papyrus' Is Basically Our Biggest Typographic Nightmare Come True

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What's the most hated font in the world?

Most of you would probably answer: Comic Sans. A fair guess, given the sheer amount of CS-hating that exists online. (See here, here, here and here. And that's just on The Huffington Post alone.) A smaller segment would probably shriek, "Papyrus!", that 1982 creation that tries to mimic calligraphy but fails miserably.

Alas, you'd all be wrong. Because, thanks to a cheeky designers at Barth and Co., there is a Frankenstein font that puts all other typographical disasters to shame. That font is Comic Papyrus.

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"Why waste valuable time bashing hated fonts individually?" creator Rob Barth wrote on his blog. "Now, thanks to Comic Papyrus from Barth and Co, you can diss two fonts at once!"

font

We reached out to Barth, wondering why on Earth he'd create such a hybrid. He replied:

"Well. The font doesn't really exist, per se. I merely designed the sample that is posted on my blog. I was really making a statement about the inordinate amount of time people spend bashing fonts online. I mean, there are font arguments on forums and in comments sections that go on for miles. Eventually everyone agrees that Helvetica is great and goes to bed. I wanted to provide a font that allowed critics to save time by hating both Comic Sans and Papyrus at once."


And there you have it. Hate on, dear design nerds. In case you were wondering, Barth agrees that Helvetica is the closest thing to a "best" font. "It can be used for almost anything without looking wrong," he added. "The worst font is Comic Sans. Or Papyrus. Or both."

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h/t Laughing Squid

J.K. Rowling Story On Pottermore Reveals Snape's Hometown

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It's been an exciting month for Harry Potter fans -- not only is J.K. Rowling's adult mystery series getting adapted for BBC One, but the author also announced on her fan site Pottermore that she'll be releasing 12 new features, one for each day leading up to Christmas.

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Some of the gifts will be stories, and others will be magical tidbits, such as new potions. The Telegraph reported that one of the stories will feature beloved villain Draco Malfoy -- we assume that's the most-anticipated tidbit, and will be saved for the end of the series. In the meantime, Rowling posted a riddle today, with a reward that reveals details about Severus Snape and Lily Potter's hometown, Cokeworth. Exciting!



Here's the riddle, posted on Pottermore's Facebook:

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If you know the answer, you can unlock today's story on Pottermore. For further Harry Potter reading, check out these stories J.K. Rowling posted earlier this year: One about the infamous reporter Rita Skeeter, and the other exploring the background of professor Dolores Umbridge.
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