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Statue Of A Mormon Alien Stirs Controversy In Salt Lake CIty

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The two Mormon missionaries in artist Brook Robertson’s piece “Zion / Rocky Mountain Alliance” look determined. The figures are both wearing crisp white shirts and ties, resolutely staring forward as their vehicle heads towards it destination.

Such a statue normally wouldn’t be out of place in Salt Lake City -- the worldwide headquarters of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.

Except for the fact that the vessel is a spaceship. And one of the missionaries has the bright blue skin of a sharply-dressed alien.

The temporary installation is part of Salt Lake’s “Flying Objects” series, funded by the city’s redevelopment agency and managed by its Arts Council. It is currently on display at a prominent intersection downtown, according to Karen Krieger, the Arts Council’s executive director.

“The intent was to be fun and whimsical,” Krieger told HuffPost. “We were looking for colorful pieces that would activate the streetscape.”

Although the piece was vetted by the citizen review board and a number of other city organizations, at least one member of the community isn’t happy about the artist’s work.

Nathan Zaugg, an LDS member, found the piece “deeply offensive” because it suggests that Mormons come from an alien culture. He told The Huffington Post that he’s filed a complaint with the city and is hoping the piece will be removed soon.

We have many tourists come to our city knowing of it's history as a Mormon pioneer settlement. Many are still confused about some of the beliefs of the LDS religion. Some even confuse Latter-Day Saints with other religions like Heavens Gate, Branch Davidians, Scientology, or others. I find it in extremely poor taste that this piece would be commissioned or displayed.


Krieger, on the other hand, took the complaint as proof that the artwork had completed its mission.

“That’s the role of public art,” says Krieger. “To bring alive conversation in communities. Everybody interprets pieces differently.”

The project is still slated to remain in the intersection until the summer of 2016.


The 23 Best Songs Of 2014

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23. "No Black Person Is Ugly" by Lil B



Lil B has always managed to acquire some of the best beats in hip-hop, but it is #rare that the rawest rapper alive's unfiltered stream of consciousness permits him to really focus in on his flow and subject matter. "No Black Person Is Ugly" is Lil B's most purposeful and uplifting song, carefully delivering nuggets of truth like, "Never been racist so I understand if you wanted / Try to change places / I've seen the other side and I know that's amazin' / Life is amazin'." #TYBG. -- Ryan Kristobak

22. "Take Me Away" by Bleachers ft. Grimes



Short and sweet, "Take Me Away" is bizarre: A synth-heavy freak pop song fueled by Jack Antonoff's and Grimes' mismatching styles. Antonoff's an unabashed fan of grandiose hooks and Grimes has mastered dark, ADD-style electronica. The combined effect makes this song, off Bleachers' first album "Strange Desire," sound like something so comfortable and otherworldly all at once. -- Jessica Goodman

21. "Stolen Dance" by Milky Chance



German duo Milky Chance came out of nowhere, but the infectious combination of minimal electronic beats and indie strums in “Stolen Dance” provide the perfect closing number for any night out celebrating life with friends. -- RK

20. "Yayo" by Snootie Wild



Sometimes “bad” rap songs are just the best. Snootie Wild’s “Yayo” says very little, but when he rhymes “burritos” with “torpedo,” it’s hard not to love it for what it is: a turn-up anthem. -- RK

19. “Trap Queen” by Fetty Wap



Fetty Wap, the New Jersey-based artist whose over-the-top “Trap Queen” clocked in some serious internet time this summer, had a no-nonsense debut. His four-minute after-hours party mixes melody rap with, yes, trap to leave you screaming one message at 4 a.m.: “I’m like hey wassup hello!” -- JG

18. "Down On My Luck" by Vic Mensa



Even in his relatively brief discography, Vic Mensa has proven his ability to flow overtop a wide variety of genres infused with hip-hop. “Down On My Luck” furthers that trend with some dance-floor-ready action. Spitting dizzying stabs that circle around a four-on-the-floor beat, the young MC’s mesmerizing cut proves that he is one of Chicago's, and hip-hop’s, best kept secrets (but for only a little while longer). -- RK

17. “Gunshot” by Lykke Li



On the surface, “Gunshot” is the peppiest track off Lykke Li’s heartbreak-addled album, but violent lines like, “I’m longing for your poison like a cancer for its prey/ I shot an arrow in your heart where you waited in the rain" make it the soundtrack to a revenge plan we’d never actually have the guts to execute. -- JG

16. “Octahate” by Ryn Weaver



Ryn Weaver made her own little dent in the Internet in June, when she uploaded “Octahate,” produced by Benny Blanco and Passion Pit’s Michael Angelakos, to Soundcloud. It gained 1 million listens in two weeks and became one of the most talked about tracks of the year. Weaver’s voice is subtle and imperfect, catching delicate lyrics and sharp house beats to make something so new seem so familiar. -- JG

15. "We Dem Boyz" by Wiz Khalifa



Few songs can rile an entire bar with a single chord, but “We Dem Boyz” became a war cry for, well, boys who go bananas. Now it’s got a Grammy nomination, inspires Karen Gillan to dance with John Cho and has, like, eight Red Bulls worth of energy. -- JG

14. “Steal My Girl” by One Direction



One Direction’s greatest new track -- on an album of straight-up surprise hits -- starts as a power ballad, hell bent on waxing poetic over “my girl.” Everyone wants to steal her! There are a couple billion in the whole wide world! Find another one! If we can forget for just a second that they sing about women “belonging” to men, it’s really the only song to sing at karaoke. -- JG

13. “True Love” by Tobias Jesso Jr.



It’s not included on Tobias Jesso Jr.’s full album, "Goon," due out next March, but, wow, “True Love” is so sad and simple. It’s like looking at your eighth grade diary and actually relating. Jesso Jr. has written what, on the surface, seems like the year’s easiest track, but, let's face it, we could never build silence into lyrics like, “Everyday just trying to get by/ No time to cry, no he can't afford to/ And she waits through everything/ Anything for you.” Nope, not if our betrothed’s life depended on it. -- JG

12. "Waking Light" by Beck



“Waking Light” is the sum of all of Beck’s “Morning Phase”: it has piano, strings, guitar and soaring vocals. The final note of Beck’s dream, the last minutes of night, the haze is finally broken with a closing guitar solo — after seven or eight years away from his guitar do to a spinal injury, this is a particularly powerful ending. It is with hope that Beck sings, “When the memory leaves you / Somewhere you can’t make it home / When the morning comes to meet you / Fill your eyes with waking light.” Beck is ready to embrace the new day, are you? -- RK

11. "Stay With Me" by Sam Smith ft. Mary J. Blige



Sam Smith’s “In The Lonely Hour” was a very sad album, and nothing hit deeper than Smith’s desperation for human contact in “Stay with Me.” The search for love isn’t always easy, and sometimes it just sucks, and when that story is told by the harmonies of Smith and Mary J. Blige, you’re going to shed a few tears even if you’re loved one is sitting right next to you. -- RK

10. "i" by Kendrick Lamar



All ears have been to the ground since murmurs of Kendrick’s follow-up to “Good Kid, m.A.A.d. City” legitimately took form. While many were disappointed with the mainstream appeal of “i,” Kendrick brought out a classic soul sample to match his call to action. “I love myself” is a message that couldn’t have come at a more important time for black youth, and all those marginalized by the unjust powers that be. “I” proves that Kendrick is ready to change the world. -- RK

9. "Chandelier" by Sia



Sia has written for many of pop’s biggest stars, but “Chandelier” finally gives her the opportunity shine like she deserves. A semi-insight into her own life examining the dangers of unchecked drinking and partying, there is a certain intensity to Sia that sets her apart from her many peers. “Chandelier” also features one of the most intriguing vocal progressions of the year in its chorus, a line that will be stuck in our head for years to come. -- RK

8. “Can’t Do Without You” by Caribou



The first single from Caribou’s sixth album is a postponed present. Ninety seconds in, the entire song morphs from a slow beating ballad into a psychedelic dance track before transforming again into a completely elated, thrashing surprise. -- JG

7. "Never Catch Me" by Flying Lotus ft. Kendrick Lamar



Beside Kendrick Lamar proving that he is capable of surfing the most un-rappable of beats, “Never Catch Me” is one of the most electrifying instrumentals of 2014. The song opens with a jazzy groove as Lamar calmly croons “I can see the darkness in me and it’s quite amazing / Life and death is no mystery and I wanna taste it.” Then, with little warning, the song breaks into a light-speed, laser-filled bass solo that has listener’s asking, “Did I eat mushrooms earlier?" -- RK

6. "Turn Down For What" by DJ Snake and Lil Jon



Make way for the turn up song of the year. Though it came out last December, Lil Jon and DJ Snake's masterpiece became the anthem to frat parties, club life, your office's holiday party and, uh, the internet. In a horrible year for news, "Turn Down For What" was the song we needed to collectively say, "Ughhhhhhh." -- JG

5. "17 New Years" by Polyenso



Polyenso might be the most promising rising act in music today. “17 New Years” is nothing short of a perfect blend of R&B, indie and pop, and its chorus has listener’s singing along before they finish their first play through. Feeling as refreshing as it does familiar, “17 New Years” proves that, even at such a young age, Polyenso wants to consistently experiment and take risks. But more importantly it proves that their evolution is on the right course. -- RK

4. "0 to 100/The Catch Up" by Drake



Very few phrases were uttered as often as “Zero to one hundred, real quick” was in 2014. Even without releasing an album, Drake managed to come out on top of hip-hop in 2014, and “0 to 100” shows him at his best. Mixing boasts like Stephen Curry comparisons in his ever-growing tone of confidence with self-examinations like “know yourself, know your worth.” And to top it all off, the song’s beat is so hot, that Diddy was willing to fight months after its release. -- RK

3. “Tuesday” by ILoveMakonnen Ft. Drake



Has there ever been a song that made you love a random weekday this much? Of course not, but there’s more to Makonnen than this breakout song about getting effed up on a Tuesday. The Atlanta-based rapper rose to fame and earned a Grammy nod within six months, and this isn’t even the best track on his EP, "I Love Makonnen." The club went up and Makonnen’s still rising. -- JG

2. “Two Weeks” by FKA Twigs



The first single from Twigs' stellar debut album, "LP1," "Two Weeks" is a perfect combination of sexy and weird. No one else has brought us lyrics like this -- "Feel your body closin', I can rip it open/ Suck me up, I'm healin' for the shit you're dealin'" -- with a beat that makes us wish we could dance like the star delivering its message. She's made her self vulnerable, and we're grateful. -- JG

1. "Close Your Eyes (And Count To Fuck)" by Run The Jewels


Run The Jewels is at its most merciless on “Close Your Eyes (And Count To Fuck),” leaving no chambers unloaded on the corrupt politicians, manipulative clergy, prison profiteers, money-sucking corporations. Trading vicious line after line, Killer Mike and El-P demonstrate in full that no one is as lyrically adroit and pissed off as them, while Zach De La Rocha provides his most blazing verse in recent years, closing out the track with an unmistakable declaration of war, “The only thing that close quicker than our caskets be the factories." Run The Jewels has had enough of these “dog-fuck political agendas,” and with a “grin and a gun,” they are ready to give the “slavers of men and women” in this world a hearty serving of their “anarchist’s cookbook." -- RK

Listen to the songs here:


Check out HuffPost's best albums of 2014 here.

9 Things You Didn't Know About The Artist Wassily Kandinsky

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Today is the birthday of Russian artist Wassily Kandinsky, a man whose abstract art made history in the 20th century and whose name continues to stump English speakers long after his death. The beloved painter and printmaker -- celebrated with a Google Doodle today -- would be blowing the candles out on his 148th year were he still alive today.

In honor of Vah-SEEL-ee Kahn-DIN-skee's big day, we're collecting together some of the more interesting facts from his storied life and career. From his birth in Moscow, back when the Russian Empire was still in existence, to his death in France at the age of 77, here are the 9 things you might not have know about dear Vasya.

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Vasily Kandinsky's "Improvisation 28 (second version)." (Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images)




1. Kandinsky began seriously pursuing art when he was 30 years old. Which makes him somewhat of a late bloomer. In fact, he had previously been studying law and economics, but he opted to abandon the fields (and a a professorship in jurisprudence at the University of Dorpat) in favor of studying painting in Germany.

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A visitor views a painting by Russian artist Kandinsky which is part of the exhibition presented at the Pompidou Center in Paris Wednesday April 8, 2009. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)



2. He was an "average" student. Though his appearance, marked by pince-nez glasses and sharp suits, gave the impression of a formidable teacher, he was mostly an average art student. He studied for two years under Anton Ažbe, then for one year alone, before finally being accepted into the Munich Academy, showing a proclivity toward color theory. He received his diploma in his mid-thirties and enjoyed a few years of mid-level success as a professional artist thereafter.

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Conor Jordan, Department Chairman of Impressionist and Modern Art at Christie's, speaks about Wassily Kandinsky's "Strandszene," painted in 1909, on display May 2, 2014 during a preview of the Impressionist and Modern Art sale at Christie's. (STAN HONDA/AFP/Getty Images)




3. He believed art and music went hand in hand. This famous quote sums up his penchant to equate painting with composing music: "Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the harmonies, the soul is the piano with many strings. The artist is the hand that plays, touching one key or another, to cause vibrations in the soul."

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"Krass Und Mild (Dramatic and Mild)" by Wassily Kandinsky hangs during a preview of the Impressionist and Modern Art fall sales at Sotheby's in New York, U.S., on Friday, Oct. 30, 2009. (Photographer: Daniel Acker/Bloomberg)




4. He gushed over Monet's "Haystacks" just like the rest of us. Monet's lily pads and haystacks have converted more than a few admirers into artists. For Kandinsky, the sight of the Impressionist's harvest landscape was simply revelatory:

"That it was a haystack the catalogue informed me. I could not recognize it. This non-recognition was painful to me. I considered that the painter had no right to paint indistinctly. I dully felt that the object of the painting was missing. And I noticed with surprise and confusion that the picture not only gripped me, but impressed itself ineradicably on my memory. Painting took on a fairy-tale power and splendour."

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Wassily Kandinsky's 'Circles in a Circle, 1923' is displayed at the 'Bauhaus Art as Life' exhibition at The Barbican on May 2, 2012 in London, England. (Photo by Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images)




5. He is credited with being the first artist to create a purely abstract work. It was an untitled watercolor, now in the Centre Pompidou in Paris. According to most historians, by the time he painted Composition VIII in 1923, all representational elements had been removed from his work. Francis Picabia and Piet Mondrian were exploring similar patterns in "pure abstraction" during this period as well.

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A visitor passes a painting of Wassily Kandinsky "Komposition VII", 1913, oil on canvas, in the Kunstmuseum in Basel, Switzerland, Friday, Oct. 20, 2006. (AP Photo/Keystone, Georgios Kefalas)




6. Kandinsky allegedly had synesthesia. Synesthesia is defined as "the production of a sense impression relating to one sense or part of the body by stimulation of another sense or part of the body." In essence, he would see colors when listening to music, which makes sense -- given he also credits Richard Wagner's “Lohengrin” as a reason for leaving law behind and chasing art.

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Two members of Christies staff wait by painting by Wassily Kandinsky entitled 'Schwarze Spitzen" 1937 during a press preview at Christie's auction house in London, Friday, March, 28, 2014. (AP Photo/Alastair Grant)




7. He didn't just loved painting, he saw it as a form of worship. In Kandinsky's book Concerning the Spiritual In Art (1910), the artist declared that "colour is a power which directly influences the soul." He felt that the use of color was not merely a means of representing objects and forms, but rather a method of reaching a level of spirituality.

"All means [in painting] are sacred when they are dictated by inner necessity," he wrote. "All means are reprehensible when they do not spring from the fountain of inner necessity... The artist must be blind to "recognized" and "unrecognized" form, deaf to the teachings and desires of his time. His open eyes must be directed to his inner life and his ears must be constantly attuned to the voice of inner necessity."

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Visitors stand in front of the charcoal drawing "Kandinsky" (1927) by Georg Hartmann during a preview at the exhibition "Bauhaus." (AP Photo/Jens Meyer)




8. His art was confiscated by the Nazis before he died. While he was a Bauhaus professor, three of his first "Compositions" were seized by Nazis and put on display in the now infamous "Degenerate Art" exhibition in 1937. They were then destroyed.

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The painting "Picture with white border" of Wassily Kandinsky is displayed at the exhibition 'Visions Of Modernity' at the Deutsche Guggenheim on November 14, 2012 in Berlin, Germany. (Photo by Christian Marquardt/Getty Images)




9. His art now sells for millions and millions of dollars. His 1909 painting "Studie fur Improvisation 8" sold for $23 million at Christie's in 2012.

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Kandsinky, (1866-1944), Studie für improvisation 8, painted in 1909 in Murnau, oil on cardboard laid down on canvas, 38 5/8 x 27 ½ in. (98 x 70 cm.)

Cameron Diaz, Director Will Gluck Talk 'Annie' Remake's Modern Message

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Will Gluck’s “Annie,” which hits theaters on Dec. 19, transplants the beloved Depression-era musical into the present day by adding a pop spin on its classic tunes and a politically-tinged subplot about social media.

With that in mind, Cameron Diaz wanted to make sure Miss Hannigan felt contemporary, too. In previous incarnations of “Annie,” the villainess had been played as a booze-swilling spinster, but Diaz told The Huffington Post at a press event that she wanted to make her sexy and sassy -- and, above all, desperately seeking self-validation.

“The original Miss Hannigan ... she couldn’t love herself because she never found a husband,” Diaz said of the character, played memorably on Broadway by Dorothy Loudon and in the 1982 film by Carol Burnett. “She was of the time, of the era that the story was being told.”

Her interpretation of Miss Hannigan, she added, has a specific message for modern women.

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“I feel like she represents today’s idea of how we find our self-worth and how we validate ourselves through how many ‘likes’ we have, how many people are following us and whether or not we can obtain fame,” she said. “Miss Hannigan is locked in her own prison of self-hatred ... Many people try to get value of how people see them. They’re not learning that they’re worthy of just love and that they deserve love no matter what.”

Of course, Diaz relished the chance to play such a devious role, even if she lends her Miss Hannigan a more sympathetic edge than her predecessors.

“Whenever people give me permission to yell at children, I take it,” she quipped with a laugh.

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For his part, Gluck shrugs off the fact that some have branded the film “the black 'Annie,'" and says the casting of African-American actors Quvenzhané Wallis and Jamie Foxx in the roles of Annie and Will Stacks, respectively, was coincidental.

“When I came aboard this, we were just looking for an Annie. It didn’t matter who it was,” the director said. “We cast the best actors we could find for these roles, and they were both cast [regardless of race].”

He went on to note, ‘When all [the media coverage] blows over, it’s not going to be a 'black Annie.' It’s just going to be 'Annie.' We’ve reached a moment in time when [a racially-divided mindset] should go away very quickly.”

Lea Michele Sings 'Let It Go' In 'Glee' Final Season Promo

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Start saying your goodbyes, Gleeks. The sixth and final season of "Glee" begins with a two-hour premiere on Jan. 6, and the first promo teases what's ahead. Rachel (Lea Michele) and Kurt (Chris Colfer) return to Lima, Ohio to bring back the Glee club. ("Welcome to the Thunderdome," says Sue Sylvester.)

Bonus, though! Michele lets it rip for one final, show-stopping performance of "Let It Go." Mama Berry -- eek, we mean Idina Menzel -- would love this one.



"Glee" Season 6 premieres Friday, Jan. 9 at 8 p.m. on Fox.

Sam Smith Reveals He's Dating 'Like I Can' Video Extra

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It's no longer the "lonely hour" for Sam Smith.

The 22-year-old singer-songwriter, who nabbed six Grammy nominations earlier this month, revealed in an interview with The Sun that he's dating an extra he met on the set of his latest video, "Like I Can."

“It’s very early days. I’m talking very, very, very early days," he told The Sun, via Towleroad. "But he’s really sweet…he was one of 20 extras. It’s a surreal thing to be talking about because I haven’t even confirmed with him that we’re officially seeing each other."

Fans of Smith's melancholy tunes needn't fret too much, though.

"The reason I do what I do is because I’m an artist who is always going to be blue about something," Smith, who came out publicly this spring, was quick to add.

As 2014 comes to a close, Smith has a lot to celebrate. Earlier this fall, he was named Breakout of the Year as part of Out Magazine's annual OUT 100 list. His Grammy-nominated album, "In The Lonely Hour," was just certified platinum, boosted by smash singles "Stay With Me" and "I'm Not The Only One."

Watch the "Like I Can" video above, and be sure to check out Smith's rendition of the Christmas classic, "Have Yourself a Merry Little Christmas," which was written for 1944's "Meet Me In St. Louis" and originally performed by Judy Garland.

Ringo Starr On Hall Of Fame Induction: 'Finally, The Four Of Us Are In'

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The following article is provided by Rolling Stone.

By ANDY GREENE

Ringo Starr first learned he was receiving the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's Award for Musical Excellence when Paul McCartney called him up about two weeks ago. "He said, 'Would you accept the award?'" Starr says. "I said, 'Sure, man.' He said he'd been talking to Dave Grohl and other people and they were stunned that I wasn't in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, and he needed something to do that night and he's going to give me the award." Rolling Stone spoke to the affable drummer about his reaction and why he'll still be drumming.

Congratulations on the big news.
Yeah, the big news! My goodness! I'm so excited.

Green Day, Lou Reed, Joan Jett, Ringo Starr Lead 2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

What was your first reaction?
I think it's good. I didn't know that George and John were in it. I'm not keeping up with it all the time. We'll have a very nice evening and it'll be my pleasure to receive the award.

So this isn't something you thought about much?
No. I didn't think about it much or expect it. This year has been quite busy. I've been touring a lot. I got the humanitarian award from GQ. I became a male model for John Varvatos, so my life is busy anyway. This came out of the blue. I didn't expect it. I got the call from Paul two weeks ago. He said, "This could happen. Do you want to do it?" I said, "Sure."

What does this mean to you personally?
It means recognition. And it means, finally, the four of us are in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame even though we were the biggest pop group in the land. You know that won't look funny in black and white.

Tell me your memories of the 1988 ceremony when the Beatles got inducted.
1988 was a long time ago, I'm afraid. It was a big dinner with a lot of people. Mick [Jagger] was there. It's interesting that you do those gigs and you bump into a lot of people you haven't met in a long time, so that's always good.

In Pics: 20 Best Moments at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame 2014 Induction

Do you recall Mike Love's speech that night?
I don't. Did he mention me?

He chewed out most people in the room, including the Beatles, and said that Mick Jagger was too "chickenshit" to get on stage with the Beach Boys.
Yeah. I don't really ever listen to what he has to say [laughs].

They're also inducting Bill Withers.
Oh, great! I only know about me, but Bill Withers! How great is that.

He hasn't really performed much in public in the last 25 years.
I met him about six months ago. He came to a session we were doing. It was so great. He's not playing anymore or coming out much. We all said, "Come on, Bill, get up and play." He was like, "Oh no, I don't do that anymore." But that's great company already. Who else is on the list?

In Pics: 26 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Reunions That Actually Happened

Stevie Ray Vaughan and Double Trouble and the Paul Butterfield Blues Band.
My gosh.

Joan Jett and the Blackhearts.
Oh yeah, Joan Jett is great!

Green Day.
Oh yeah, I love Green Day. It's actually, in its fashion, very rock and roll this year. Some years it's not very rock and roll.

As an early influence, they're bringing in the 5 Royales.
Do I know them? I can't put my finger on it.

They were an American R&B band that was popular around 1952.
That was before even my time.

The ceremony is back in Cleveland this year.
I was just in Cleveland over the summer. It was great. I had a really good time and the people were great.

In Pics: See All of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees, From 1986 to Today!

Are you going to perform?
Not that I know of. I told Paul that I'm not putting a band together. If he puts a band together, I'll do "With A Little Help From My Friends."

I can't think of a better song for the all-star jam at the end of the night.
That part of it I'm leaving to my producer, Paul [laughs].

You're going back on tour in a few months.
I'm doing America and South America in February/March. I come back in April and I'll be in Cleveland, of course.

You used to take a year off between tours, but they seem to go every single year now.
I often do three tours a year now: summer, spring and fall. This year, we're going back to South America. We did Japan. I'm doing anywhere I can. I love this band. I'm trying to keep it together. The next tour we're doing is mad because we do four gigs in America, fly to Puerto Rico for a gig, fly back to Florida for a gig, fly to Brazil and do a gig and then work our way through South America until we get to Mexico City and then back to California and we've got four gigs there and a gig in Vegas.

Do you see yourself still doing this in your 80s and beyond?
I can only look to Tony Bennett and B.B. King. We can go as long as we can go. That's always been the way. If I can hold the sticks and I can stand up, I can do what I love to do. If people are still coming, that's the deal. I don't want to play with myself.

In Pics: 20 Classic Artists Still Not in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Tell me the coolest thing about having Joe Walsh as your brother-in-law.
The way he plays. I just finished my next record and Joe and I wrote a track and I asked him to come back and play on another track that I wrote with Todd Rundgren. He's just the best. If you look at my Twitter site, I keep saying that Joe Walsh is the best.

I see that most of your solo albums are on Spotify. Do you ever use that or other streaming services?
No. I go on iTunes and pay the artist so at least there'll be some remuneration for them and they can keep going. I heard the story of some artist, who we all know and love, who had five million streams and they gave him a check for $17. We're not all very excited about those streamers.

So I imagine the Beatles catalog won't be on Spotify then.
It'll probably be streaming before I put the phone down [laughs]. I'm only joking.

The Anatomy of A Love Affair With Jean-Michel Basquiat

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Note: This post contains frontal nudity and may not be suitable for work.

It's hard to imagine a more talented, passionate and mercurial lover -- with better hair -- than Jean-Michel Basquiat. During his brief lifetime (he passed away of a drug overdose at only 27), the iconic artist rose to an almost mythical status, creating canvases that jumbled Abstract Expressionism, graffiti, medical jargon and classical mythology, sprinkling in clues of his personal history all in screaming bright colors.

He was also quite the pop culture icon. For one, he was known to paint in expensive Armani suits without shoes, then wear the paint-splattered garb to galleries about town. He dated Madonna, collaborated with Bowie and produced a hip-hop single. Despite the obvious wonders of his life, though, there were dark elements to his fiery personality constantly straddling immortal fame and self-destruction.

So what would it actually be like to be Basquiat's lover? It's a question we've asked ourselves on many a sleepless night, and one that was on our minds when we stumbled upon Jennifer Clement's Vulture piece "What It Was Like to Be Basquiat’s Lover". The piece excerpts from Clement's poetic novella "Widow Basquiat," rehashing Basquiat's longtime love affair with her friend, Suzanne Mallouk -- a tumultuous relationship filled with sex, drugs and excess. We've compiled a list of the most important details from Clement's work, along with key notes from other ex-lovers, to best imagine what it would be like to go steady with the art world's biggest rock star.

He didn't like to read

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"Jean-Michel never reads. He picks up books on mythology, history and anatomy, comic books or newspapers. He looks for the words that attack him and puts them on the canvas. He listens for things Suzanne says and writes them on his drawings. He listens to the television."
-Jennifer Clement on Suzanne Mallouk



He had a serious drug habit

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"Jean always did drugs, he never stopped. Whenever he went to Europe or Japan or any new place you could count on it that in a couple of hours upon arriving he knew where to buy what he wanted. It was like he had a radar for it. Once when he came to Canada to get me, within five minutes he was off on my brother’s motorcycle buying drugs."
-Jennifer Clement on Suzanne Mallouk



He liked a lady who loved to eat

basquiat photo

"They went out to Brooklyn to a black neighbourhood and went to a White Castle and had eight hamburgers and then two people came in with big sticks and they thought they were going to kill them."
-Andy Warhol on Paige Powell



He liked ladies. Period.

basquiat

"His other major interest was girls, women. He loved women. He loved sex. He always had a lot of women. The only time he was faithful to me was the first few months that I lived at the Crosby loft. He had many small relationships with many different women. He would become bored quickly, though. That’s why I always had a problem knowing if I was really special to him. I still sometimes don’t know."
-Jennifer Clement on Suzanne Mallouk



He often lounged around in the nude

bas

Enough said.
-image courtesy Paige Powell



He made the world his canvas

basquiat

"Things were constantly transforming. You see that in his later artwork. He was always adding to things, reimagining things, repositioning things. One day he painted my refrigerator door, and I said, 'This is so beautiful,' and the next thing you know, it was painted over."
-Alexis Adler



He was nocturnal

basquiat

"Jean-Michel is made for the night, like a mole. The day­light hurts, the sun hurts, but at night he is transformed into a magician, a Merlin with everything wound up tight and sparkling. Nights are for drugs. Drugs are for nights. In daylight he looks for his shadow and crawls up inside it."
-Jennifer Clement on Suzanne Mallouk



He was attracted to people of all genders, shapes and styles -- as long as they were smart

basquiat

"It was clear that his sexual interest was not monochromatic. It did not rely on visual stimulation, such as a pretty girl. It was a very rich multichromatic sexuality. He was attracted to people for all different reasons. They could be boys, girls, thin, fat, pretty, ugly. It was, I think, driven by intelligence. He was attracted to intelligence more than anything and to pain. He was very attracted to people who silently bore some sort of inner pain as he did, and he loved people who were one of a kind, people who had a unique vision of things."
-Jennifer Clement on Suzanne Mallouk


A Brief And Booty-Filled Guide To The History Of Erotic Photography (NSFW)

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Note: This article spans the history of erotic photography. Consider yourself warned.

Since the dawn of time -- or at least the dawn of the daguerrotype -- one subject has captivated artists of all mediums and movements alike with its beauty, intrigue and mystique. The odalisque, au natural, in her birthday suit. naked.

Yes, nude photography -- ahem, erotic photography -- has captivated artists, theoreticians and consumers for over 150 years. Prior to 1839, nude renderings were namely produced via drawings, paintings and engravings, all of which lacked the detail and veracity of the photograph. Thus, there was something inherently more illicit about an erotic photograph than a painting of the same subject, for they were considered closer to real life.

Taschen's "1000 Nudes" chronicles the early years of the erotic photography industry, from its birth in 1839 until those nudes became classically modern circa 1939. The compendium of NSFW snapshots comes straight from the collection of the late Uwe Scheid, a prominent collector of erotic artworks and member of the German Photographic Society. Schied authored the book along with Munich-based Hans-Michael Koetzle.

The sepia-toned history of sexually suggestive imagery covers genres from the surreal to the pornographic and every nook and cranny in between. Below is a brief preview of the book, courtesy of Taschen.

c. 1855:
nude
Anonymous


c. 1890
ero
Anonymous


c. 1911
wil
by Wilhelm von Gloeden


c. 1930
crotch
Anonymous


c. 1935
erotic
Anonymous


c. 1935
idi
by László Moholy-Nagy, courtesy VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2014

Matthew Morrison And Kelli O'Hara's 'Home For The Holidays' Will Be A Reunion In Song

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Given that Christmas is a time for faithful friends, the New York Pops' forthcoming "Kelli and Matthew: Home for the Holidays" concert, which reunites Broadway co-stars and longtime pals Kelli O'Hara and Matthew Morrison, couldn't be more appropriate for the season.

O'Hara and Morrison, who were seen together in "The Light in the Piazza" and the 2008 revival of "South Pacific," will croon holiday classics and a few standards with the Pops in the concert, which hits New York's Carnegie Hall on Dec. 19 and 20 and will be conducted by Steven Reineke.

The performance will undoubtedly be yet another highlight in what's been a prolific time for both stars. O'Hara nabbed a Tony nomination for her role in "The Bridges of Madison County" on Broadway, while her turn as Mrs. Darling in NBC's "Peter Pan Live!" was seen as one of the best in the broadcast. In 2015, she'll return to Broadway in the revival of "The King and I" after making her Met Opera debut in "The Merry Widow." For his part, Morrison tied the knot with Renee Puente in Hawaii, and is set to begin rehearsals for "Finding Neverland" just days after he finishes filming "Glee," which wraps in 2015 after six seasons.

"It is so fun when you know somebody and you have a history," O'Hara says of her yuletide reunion with Morrison. "There's a trust there that you can't develop very easily … it doesn't feel like the holidays if I'm not having some kind of musical experience, so I feel like this year will be complete."

Added Morrison: "If you can have your ideal work environment, you want it to be with the people that you love. We know each other so well, we know each others' voices so well, so it's really easy to put together songs and material for the both of us."

new york pops
Steven Reineke conducts the New York Pops at Carnegie Hall.


With 2014 coming to a close, the stars also see the show as a festive way to gear up for their respective 2015 projects, and both couldn't be looking to the new year with more optimism.

"It's interesting when roles come along at the right time in your life," O'Hara, 38, says of Anna in "The King and I," which opens at Lincoln Center's Vivian Beaumont Theatre on April 16. "She's a really strong woman who sets off on a big, bold journey. Having journeyed to a new place myself and had to make a life there, it's something I can identify with. I love her strength."

"Finding Neverland," Morrison notes, "really focuses on restored optimism and the power of imagination" through "complex character relationships." For the 36-year-old actor, it's a project that will not only play to his strengths as a performer but, in some ways, couldn't be more different than "Glee."

That's not to say the success of "Glee" is lost on Morrison, of course.

"We tackled so many issues. We didn't really dance around anything -- whether it was bullying, being openly gay in high school, teen pregnancy and so on, we always hit it full on," he says. "But the lasting impression of the show, I think, will always be the music. It was a new way to bring popular music, in the context of a story, into America's living rooms. I think that's what it will always be known for."

"Kelli and Matthew: Home for the Holidays" hits New York's Carnegie Hall on Dec. 19 and 20. Head here for more information.

‘Boyhood' Is President Obama's Favorite Movie Of The Year

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In a new interview with People magazine, President Barack Obama revealed some highly classified information: his favorite movie. Turns out, Obama fell in love with "Boyhood," Richard Linklater's coming-of-age film that took 12 years to create.

"'Boyhood was a great movie," Obama said. “That, I think, was my favorite movie this year.”

First lady Michelle Obama was a huge fan of Gillian Flynn's "Gone Girl." But, because she was talking about the book and not the film, she stayed mum on Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike's performances. “I’ve read others [since, but] I read ‘Gone Girl’ a couple summers ago, which is one of my favorites," she said. "The book is much better than the movie.”

The interview, which also hits on harder points like racial profiling, prejudice and the president's experience in dealing with both, is not yet available online in full. For excerpts, head over to People.

Hundreds Tango At The Vatican For Pope Francis' Flashmob Birthday Surprise

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VATICAN CITY (AP) — Pope Francis got a cake, cards and a tango demonstration for his 78th birthday Wednesday — and 800 kilograms (1,760 pounds) of chicken meat for the poor.

The Vatican said Wednesday the meat, provided by a Spanish producer, would be distributed to soup kitchens.

Francis also greeted eight homeless people bearing sunflowers during his Wednesday general audience, held under brilliantly sunny skies in St. Peter's Square.

As he drove around in the open-air car to greet the crowds, children handed up birthday cards they had made for him. Francis asked one: "Did you make this? It's good!"

Others held up signs saying "Feliz Cumpleanos" ("Happy Birthday" in Spanish) and sang to him.

Outside the square, dozens of couples danced the tango, the Argentine pope's favorite. The pope quipped: "It looks like a two-by-four!" — a reference to tango.

"The tango is a dance that unites all people no matter where they come from," said Patrizia D'Aquino, part of a group from the Abruzzo region of Italy.

Despite the joyous occasion, Francis ended his audience with a sobering prayer for the victims of recent "inhuman terrorist attacks" in Australia, Pakistan and Yemen.

"May the Lord receive in his peace the dead, comfort the relatives and convert the hearts of the violent who don't even stop in the face of children," Francis said.

A Taliban attack on a school in Pakistan left scores of people dead, most of them children. In Yemen, two suicide bombers rammed their vehicles into a checkpoint as a school bus was nearby, killing about two dozen people, more than half of them primary school students. In Australia, an Iranian-born man took 17 people hostage inside cafe; two hostages were killed along with the hostage taker in a barrage of gunfire as police rushed to free the captives.

J.K. Rowling Publishes New Writing About Vampires On Pottermore

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Pottermore's 12 days of Christmas roll on: Today, a new piece of writing from J.K. Rowling on vampires was published on the site. To unlock the new story, fans must solve the daily riddle.

Here's today's quiz:

pottermoreclue

Those who answer correctly earn entrance into a a new Moment -- the Christmas party thrown by Professor Slughorn for his favored students, the Slug Club. Amid a festive hubbub and sprigs of mistletoe, one vampire lurks.

In her new writing, Rowling notes that Sanguini, the vampire Harry Potter meets at Slughorn's party, is the only actual vampire he encounters in the series. Unfortunately for Severus Snape conspiracy theorists, this means Snape himself was merely a wizard, not a vampire, though fans have circulated the hypothesis that his pale complexion and bat-like appearance indicate a vampiric origin. On the other hand, "we meet him outside the castle by daylight, and no corpses with puncture marks in their necks ever turn up at Hogwarts," Rowling points out wryly. So much for that.

Rowling's new piece also reveals why vampires played such a negligible role in the series. Though she initially planned for one Hogwarts professor to be a vampire, the character was quickly written out and no vampires were included as major characters in the books.

New ‘Parks And Rec' Teaser Previews A Futuristic Final Season

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Coming to you from the future, 2017, the new teaser for the final season of "Parks and Recreation" gives us a few hints about what's ahead for our best friends in Pawnee. The 30-second clip, which debuted on EW.com, shows a time where drones fly over Leslie and Ben's house, April plays with a hologram tablet (we think), Andy has his own TV show and Jerry -- we mean Gary -- goes by Terry.

The seventh and last season of "Parks and Rec" returns to NBC on Jan. 13 and will roll out two episodes a week until the one-hour series finale on Feb. 24.

Madonna Says Leaked Album Is Actually 'Unfinished Demos Stolen Long Ago'

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UPDATE: In another Instagram post on Wednesday that has since been deleted, Madonna reportedly wrote:

This is artistic rape!! These are early leaked demo's half of which wont even make it on my album the other half have changed and evolved. This is a form of terrorism. Wtf!!!! Why do people want to destory artistic process??? Why steal? Why not give me the opportunity to finish and give you my very best?


PREVIOUSLY: Madonna is having a tough time keeping her unreleased album under wraps.

After Oh No They Didn't posted a full 13-song track listing of the alleged album in its entirety on Wednesday, Madonna took to Instagram to respond:

"Thank you for not listening! Thank you for your loyalty! Thank you for waiting and if you have heard please know they are unfinished demos stolen long ago and not ready to be presented to the world," she wrote in the photo caption.





The newly leaked album -- which has yet to be given an official release date or title -- comes just weeks after a new song, purportedly called "Rebel Heart," hit the Internet. After the leak, the 56-year-old shared a photo of a smashed iPod on her Instagram account, writing, "This broken ipod is a symbol of my broken heart! That my music has been stolen and leaked! I have been violated as a human and an artist! #fuckedupshit:"





For more on Madonna's alleged leaked album, head to Billboard.

Sony Reportedly Discussed Ending Of 'The Interview' With U.S. Government

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According to leaked emails published by The Daily Beast, Sony executives reportedly discussed the controversial ending of "The Interview" with U.S. government officials.

In the correspondence between Sony Entertainment CEO Michael Lynton and RAND corporation senior defense analyst Bruce W. Bennett, which The Daily Beast obtained following a massive cyber attack against Sony Pictures, Lynton revealed that he spoke to an anonymous State Department official about the comedy. An email apparently sent by Lynton to Sony General Counsel Nicole Seligman, published by Reuters on Wednesday, also referenced a conversation Lynton said he had with Assistant U.S. Secretary of State Daniel Russel.

In previous emails, Bennett had told Lynton that while toning down the end of "The Interview" -- which depicts the assassination of Kim Jong Un -- was likely to curtail any response from North Korea, the positive aspects of the movie outweighed the negative ones.

I believe that a story that talks about the removal of the Kim family regime and the creation of a new government by the North Korean people (well, at least the elites) will start some real thinking in South Korea and, I believe, in the North once the DVD leaks into the North (which it almost certainly will).


Lynton is on the RAND Corporation board of trustees. A RAND spokesperson told The Huffington Post that Lynton had sought Bennett's opinion on the film. Representatives for Sony and the State Department were not immediately available for comment.

The end of "The Interview" was the source of much discussion in the months leading up to the film's planned release. Hacked emails previously released online detailed the debate between Sony Corporation Chief Executive Kazuo Hirai and Sony Pictures Entertainment co-chair Amy Pascal about the finale, which includes Kim exploding in a helicopter as Katy Perry's "Firework" plays on the soundtrack. Tweaks to "The Interview," which was originally supposed to arrive in theaters in October, were first reported back in August by The Hollywood Reporter (at the time, the trade magazine noted that Sony had considered cutting the end sequence). And while the finale appears to have been slightly altered from its apparent original form, little in "The Interview" was reportedly changed.

"They made us digitally change some photos and images, because it was decided they weren't [legally] cleared," star and co-director Seth Rogen told the New York Times in an interview published Tuesday. "We couldn't source the photographer in North Korea who took the photograph of Kim Il Sung [Kim Jong Un's grandfather] 65 years ago. He could sue us. There was a moment where they were like: 'They've threatened war over the movie. You kill him [Kim Jong Un]. Would you consider not killing him?' And we were like, 'Nope.'"

The Times interview is one of the last Rogen will likely do in support of "The Interview." After a note purportedly written by the hackers threatened terrorist attacks against theaters showing "The Interview," Rogen and co-star James Franco canceled many planned media appearances through Thursday. In addition, the film's New York premiere was canceled by Landmark's Sunshine Cinema. While Sony plans to go ahead with the Christmas Day release, the New York Times reported that it has told theater owners they can cancel showings at their discretion. Thus far, Carmike Cinemas, which controls 278 theaters in 41 states, announced it won't show "The Interview." UPDATE: Following the lead of Carmike Cinemas, AMC Entertainment, Regal Entertainment, Cineplex Entertainment and Cinemark have pulled "The Interview" from the release schedule.

For more on "The Interview," head to The Daily Beast and Reuters.

Colliding Galaxies Mount 'Spectacular Light Show' In New NASA Image

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Just in time for the holidays, NASA has released a new photo showing a spectacular light show created by a pair of merging galaxies 130 million light-years from Earth.

The photo is a composite image of the spiral galaxies NGC 2207 and IC 2163, located in the constellation Canis Major.

(Story continues below image.)
merging galaxies
Spiral galaxies NGC 2207 and IC 2163.

The image is a mash-up of X-rays captured by NASA's Chandra X-Ray Observatory (shown in pink), visible light data from the Hubble Space Telescope (shown in red, green, and blue), and infrared data from NASA's Spitzer Space Telescope (shown in red).

What makes NGC 2207 and IC 2163 look so dazzling? Together, the galaxies are home to 28 separate "ultraluminous" X-ray sources. The X-rays they produce are more intense than those produced by most star systems.

NGC 2207 and IC 2163 were discovered by English astronomer John Herschel in 1835.

Largest Movie Theater Companies Drop 'The Interview' (UPDATE)

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UPDATE: Sony said in a statement that "The Interview" will not be released in theaters on Dec. 25.

In light of the decision by the majority of our exhibitors not to show the film The Interview, we have decided not to move forward with the planned December 25 theatrical release. We respect and understand our partners’ decision and, of course, completely share their paramount interest in the safety of employees and theater-goers.

Sony Pictures has been the victim of an unprecedented criminal assault against our employees, our customers, and our business. Those who attacked us stole our intellectual property, private emails, and sensitive and proprietary material, and sought to destroy our spirit and our morale – all apparently to thwart the release of a movie they did not like. We are deeply saddened at this brazen effort to suppress the distribution of a movie, and in the process do damage to our company, our employees, and the American public. We stand by our filmmakers and their right to free expression and are extremely disappointed by this outcome.


EARLIER: The five largest movie theater companies have dropped "The Interview" after threats from the Sony hack. According to The Hollywood Reporter, Regal Entertainment, AMC Entertainment, Cinemark and Cineplex Entertainment have joined Carmike Cinemas in pulling the film from release.

Landmark Sunshine Cinemas also canceled its New York premiere of the film, and another Northeast chain with 55 locations, Bow Tie Cinemas, decided to abandon plans to show the film following the threats. "The safety and comfort of our patrons is foremost in our minds," Bow Tie CEO Ben Moss told Variety. It was previously reported by TheWrap that ArcLight Cinemas would not show "The Interview," but in a statement given to The Huffington Post, a representative said that no decision has been made.

Carmike Cinemas, was first to drop "The Interview," which is scheduled for release on Christmas Day. The decisions to pull "The Interview" come after a cyber hack against Sony Pictures threatened the theaters that showed the film. "We will clearly show it to you at the very time and places 'The Interview' be shown, including the premiere, how bitter fate those who seek fun in terror should be doomed to," a note published Tuesday read.

When the threats surfaced, officials from the Department of Homeland Security told the Huffington Post that even though they were aware of the note, "there is no credible intelligence to indicate an active plot against movie theaters within the United States."

Combined, these companies make up approximately 1,646 movie theaters in North America.

"Due to wavering support of the film 'The Interview' by Sony Pictures, as well as the ambiguous nature of any real or perceived security threats, Regal Entertainment Group has decided to delay the opening of the film in our theaters," a representative for Regal said in a statement to The Huffington Post.

Representatives for Sony, as well as AMC, Cinemark and Cineplex Entertainment were not immediately available for comment. According to Variety, Sony executives have reportedly discussed releasing "The Interview" via on-demand services.

A previous version of this story stated that ArcLight Cinemas had pulled "The Interview."

Here's What To Do At A Boring Cocktail Party This Weekend

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After the initial hellos, a few glasses of champagne and the exchanging of white elephant gifts, holiday parties can experience a bit of a lull. The next time you find yourself facing boredom, but unable to leave without coming across as rude, grab a cocktail napkin and impress your friends with this origami-inspired Christmas tree.

In the video above, YouTuber and home-hack master Dave Hax explains how to make a Christmas tree fashioned out of a (preferably green) napkin, in less than a minute:

1. First, make sure the napkin is folded so all the open corners are at the bottom.


2. Take the top leaf and fold it over.


3. Repeat by folding over the next three leaves.


4. Turn it over and draw a line through the center of the napkin.


5. Fold the sides over (the bottom will be the top of your tree).


6. Flip your tree over and fold the leaves, tucking them into the leaf above them.


7. For the final step, fold the bottom and tuck it under a flap in the back.


Hax also showed how to add little stars to make the tree more festive and add a wine cork as a stump. It might be made from a napkin but this tree is exponentially easier to clean up.

You're welcome.

These Photos From Cuba Show What American Tourists Have Been Missing

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As U.S. and Cuban governments announced a renewal of diplomatic relations on Wednesday, many in America may have already started dreaming of a trip to the island nation. A long-standing tourist destination for the rest of the world, the unique sights of Cuba are beautiful and fascinating, while simultaneously inextricable from the country's contentious political history.

While President Obama has already made it easier to travel to Cuba, his previous measures and today's announcements have stopped short of completely lifting the U.S. ban on visiting the country. Until all restrictions are gone, however, most Americans will still have to view Cuba from afar.

These photos show one side of what they're missing.

Taxi! #cars #Havana #cuba #vintage #pink #instapic #tapfordetails

A photo posted by Lamiya Boumlaki (@lamiyaboumlaki) on




lamiyaboumlaki embedded via Instagram


#Habana #cuba

A photo posted by Ibon Lopez (@ibonlog) on



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#havana #cuba

A photo posted by Camilla (@camillikum) on



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Cuban highway from the 50's? #havanna #cuba #wanderlust #9monthsnomad

A photo posted by Tony S. (@tonystep) on




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Through the glass. #Cuba #Viñales #oldcars #Chryslers #cadillacs

A photo posted by Pictures by Fran Castaño (@fran_castano) on




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Havana #cuba #havana #habana #lahabana #ciudad #capitolio #campidoglio #sky #travel #picohtheday #photooftheday

A photo posted by Chiara Galli (@lachiara) on




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A photo posted by Marcin Brzózka (@abeduloco) on




abeduloco embedded via Instagram


Time for some change. Lift the embargo!!! View of the Capitol photo by @claudiapizza123

A photo posted by Saul Jesse Beas (@jesse_beas) on




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