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Watch Shia LaBeouf Scream At You For A Full Minute In Bizarre Motivational Art Speech

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Shia LaBeouf wants you to just do it. No really, he seriously does.

After watching the minute-long video of LaBeouf standing in front of a green screen yelling at the camera to "just do it," you may have a few questions. Is LaBeouf the new face of Nike? Is he practicing for a graduation commencement speech? Is this more performance art?

Yes and no. The one-minute clip is a segment from "#INTRODUCTIONS," a larger half-hour project starring LaBeouf in 36 short films. From LaBeouf, Finnish artist Nastja Säde Rönkkö and British artist Luke Turner, the project introduces the work of the graduating class of the Fine Arts BA at Central Saint Martins, one of the U.K.’s leading arts schools. Students were invited to send pieces of text to introduce their work, which LaBeouf then performed.

You can see what's actually projected on the green screens for each segment in the school's live stream of the fine art grad show from May 26. Or just watch 64 seconds of LaBeouf screaming at you on loop, whatever gets you motivated.

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Lynda Benglis' Massive, Drippy Sculptures Bring Storm King To Life

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If you are not familiar with Storm King Art Center, the 500-acre sculpture park located about an hour north of New York City, this summer is your time to discover it.

The sprawling green landscape is home to 100 gargantuan curated sculptures, from artists ranging from Sol LeWitt and Richard Serra to Isamu Noguchi and Maya Lin. The great outdoor space feels more like your own personal kingdom than a museum; the white walls and pushy crowds replaced with endless open air, lush grass and artworks so big you'll feel like you wandered into the majestic lair of a very art-savvy giant.

This season, Storm King's majestic topography welcomes new work by sculptor Lynda Benglis, whose exhibition "Water Sources" is a drizzly army of solid movement. Benglis, who is now 73 years old, has been an art world fixture since the 1970s, when she notably posed nude for an ad in Artforum holding a giant dildo. The general tone of her work, though similarly confrontational, is far more abstract, grappling with the sensual properties of materials in motion.

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Lynda Benglis, North South East West, 2009 Cast bronze fountain and steel Four elements, Courtesy the artist; Cheim & Read, New York; and Locks Gallery, Philadelphia.


"Water Sources" channels Benglis' familiar gift for coupling animate forms with the massive dimensions and sturdy materials often associated with a medium long dominated by men. As Benglis awesomely said in an interview with Micah Hauser: "Remember: size does not matter to the feminine."

In her 2009 piece "North South East West," now on display, four bronze figures emerge from the ground like mythical Golems, their mud-colored anatomies resembling everything from an overgrown melting insect to a tidal wave touched by King Midas. Although they're huge, they remain gentle.

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Lynda Benglis, Pink Ladies, 2014. Courtesy the artist and Cheim & Read, New York.


"They are always delicate, but they are configurative," Benglis explained of the works in an interview with The Creator's Project. "I use that word configurative, because configuration is very important. To let the mind read in, the way you read in the clouds and tree formations, you read into your subject. When you read into your subject, you have a kind of reference in how you relate to what you believe you see. So, this is open."

The most attractive sculptures will likely be the "Pink Ladies," a troupe of almost translucent hot pink polyurethane totems that resemble the organic equivalent of the girl gang you want to be in. The ladies, as well as the fountains, feel at once natural, alien and strangely accessible, their human-size proportions providing an anthropomorphic connection that's hard to shake.

Go to Storm King before Nov. 8 to see Benglis' watery beasts in all their massive glory. In the meantime, check out a preview.




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'Fifty Shades Of Grey' To Be Re-Told From Christian Grey's Perspective

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E.L. James really knows how to stretch out a story, doesn't she?

On Monday, the Fifty Shades of Grey author announced via Instagram that she'll be releasing a new version of the S&M-thriller, told from the point of view of billionaire, Christian Grey.




Until now, the books in the Fifty Shades series were told from the perspective of Anastasia Steele, and were, in part, believed to be such a success with women for the way they embraced the importance of female pleasure.

"A lot of women have said that they've learned the most about what sex could be for them from erotica novels," Jaclyn Friedman, author of What You Really Really Want: The Smart Girl's Shame-Free Guide to Sex & Safety told CNN when trying to explain the series' popularity in 2012. "These stories focus on female desire and what's in it for the woman, and there's not a lot of that in mainstream culture."

Re-telling the story from Grey's perspective is sure to bring out many critics --- it will be a very different tale coming from the point of view of a character who "likes to whip little brown-haired girls" and is rather difficult to distinguish from a serial killer.

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John Waters Tells Grads To 'Make Me Nervous'

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PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) -- Filmmaker John Waters tells Rhode Island School of Design graduates it's their turn to go out in the world and cause artistic trouble.

Waters, known for the cult classic "Pink Flamingos" and other films that pushed the boundaries of good taste, was given an honorary doctorate Saturday at the prestigious art school's 132nd commencement.

He urged the 669 graduates to go out and "outrage outdated critics" and "make ME nervous."

"It's your turn to cause trouble," he said.

Waters also advised them to give their children a safe place to be creative, as his parents did for him.

Author Adam Gopnick of The New Yorker and musicians Chris Frantz, Martina Weymouth, and Jerry Harrison, all formerly of the band Talking Heads, also received honorary degrees. Frantz and Weymouth are alumni.

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Paris Removes 'Love Locks' From Famous Bridge

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Paris' famous "love locks" bridge is no more.

In recent years, as a symbol of the permanence of their relationships, hundreds of thousands of couples from all over the world have attached padlocks to the city's Pont des Arts, tossing the keys into the river Seine. But officials have said the padlocks, which weigh a whopping 45 tons in total, are damaging the historic bridge as well as posing a danger to visitors. Last summer, a section of the bridge's fencing collapsed under the weight of the locks.

On Monday, city workers began taking apart the bridge's panels, which will reportedly be replaced with plexiglass. "It's the end of the padlocks," said Paris' Deputy Mayor Bruno Julliard, according to the BBC.

Take a look at photos below that show the dismantling of the famous Parisian landmark:

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The locks are so numerous that they completely cover the bridge's sides. (Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP/Getty Images)


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Couples often write their initials on the locks before throwing the key into the river. (AP Photo/Thibault Camus, File)


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Workers remove panels laden with locks on June 1, 2015. (Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP/Getty Images)


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A worker removes a panel of locks attached on the railings of the Pont des Arts in Paris on June 1, 2015. (Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP/Getty Images)


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A Paris city employee uses a grinder to cut locks from a street lamp on the famed Pont des Arts in Paris on Monday. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)


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The locks reportedly weigh about 45 tons in total, and some have gone so far as to call them a form of vandalism. (Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP/Getty Images)


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Workers remove love padlocks attached on the railings of the Pont des Arts on June 1, 2015, in Paris. Started by tourists in Paris in 2008, the love locks ritual also spread in the early 2000s to cities including New York, Seoul and London. (Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN/AFP/Getty Images)


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The Ile de la Cite and another bridge, the Pont Neuf, appear through the lock-free railings of the Pont des Arts in Paris on June 1, 2015. (AP Photo/Remy de la Mauviniere)

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Richard Serra Receives French Legion Of Honor Award

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This post originally appeared on artnet News
by Lorena Muñoz-Alonso

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Richard Serra
Photo via: The Guardian


Today, artist Richard Serra will receive France's highest honor, the insignia of Chevalier of the French Legion of Honor, at the Cultural Services of the French Embassy in New York, The Art Newspaper reports.

The prestigious award—created in 1802 by Napoleon Bonaparte to reward outstanding services rendered to France—celebrates the close relationship of the American artist with French art institutions and galleries, as well as his great contribution to contemporary art (see You Must See This Amazing Richard Serra Sculpture in Qatar's Sand Dunes and Richard Serra Making a Huge Sculpture for David Zwirner).

“For the French, Richard Serra is among the greatest sculptors today," the French Ambassador to the United States, Gérard Araud, said in a statement. “His commissions like the Octagon for Saint Eloi and Philibert et Marguerite, and of course Promenade at the Grand Palais, transform and give new meaning to the landscape through their magnitude, singular material, and the unique relationship they cultivate between the space and the viewer," he added.

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Richard Serra's Clara Clara (1983) installed in Tuileries, Place de la Concorde, Paris
Photo via: Flickr


The American artist has indeed left his mark on France's cities, Paris in particular. One of his landmarks is his sculpture Clara-Clara (1983), formed by two identical steel conical sections, originally installed in the Tuileries, Place de la Concorde. (This artwork enjoyed a much warmer reception than the butt-plug installed—and removed shortly after—in Place Vendôme by his compatriot Paul McCarthy [see Paul McCarthy Beaten Up over Butt Plug Sculpture]).

In 2008, as part of the yearly "Monumenta" exhibition at Paris' Grand Palais, Serra installed the epic Promenade, formed by five gigantic slabs, each 56 feet high, 13 feet wide, and weighing over 73 tons.

Serra has also showed at the country's most prestigious museums, including the Louvre, the Centre Pompidou, the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, and the CAPC Musees d'Art Contemporain in Bordeaux and Lyon.

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Richard Serra's Promenade (2008) at the Grand Palais, Paris
Photo via: 40 Forever


Other Americans awarded the Légion d'Honneur include Miles Davis, David Lynch, and Toni Morrison, among other luminaries.

Follow artnet News on Facebook and @selfselector (Lorena Muñoz-Alonso) on Twitter.


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15 Mesmerizing Photos That Capture The Spirit Of Aging Musicians

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About five years ago, photographer Leland Bobbé, 66, went to a New York City club to hear a friend's band and spotted what he describes as "this cool looking guy with great long gray hair in the audience." As soon as he saw him, he knew he wanted to shoot a portrait of him.

The man turned out to be a guitar player named Al Maddy. Bobbé shot him and then revisited the photo on his computer last year -- wondering what it would look like in black and white. "I did the conversion and liked it so much I thought it would be something to pursue as a project," Bobbé said. "Musicians 50+ in black and white."

He hadn’t done anything in black and white since his New York City street photography from the 1970s, he told The Huffington Post.

Bobbé is an ex-musician with many close friends from that world. The photos were shot over the past year in his New York studio.

Bobbe's work has previously been featured in The New York Times and The Huffington Post.

"My intention was to take real and honest portraits of musicians close to my age who still play music. I find that older people's faces have much more character than younger people’s do. They have lived and it shows," Bobbé told The Huffington Post.

On a personal note, he added, "This project has connected my past as a musician and my present as a photographer."

Simply beautiful.

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Country Star Ty Herndon Hopes His Latest Project Marks A Shift Towards A More LGBT-Friendly Nashville

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Country singer Ty Herndon hopes that the support he received after coming out last year is indicative of a progressive Nashville, one that's becoming more tolerant toward the LGBT community than in years past.

"One of the biggest fears I had in coming out and being authentic was that I wouldn't get to continue doing what I do for a living, and that's country music," he told The Huffington Post in an interview. "How great is it that I have the opportunity, for the first time in my life, to sing about truth? That makes me a very happy man."

Herndon, 53, sees his latest project as a prime opportunity for him to pay that happiness forward. On June 12, he'll take the stage at the first Concert For Love and Acceptance at Nashville's City Winery, which he is co-hosting with Meghan McCain, the daughter of former Republican presidential hopeful John McCain and an outspoken advocate for LGBT rights.

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Earlier this year, Herndon performed at "TrevorLIVE LA" for The Trevor Project.


"How great is it that I have the opportunity, for the first time in my life, to sing about truth?"

The show, which will also feature performances by country artists Jennifer Knapp, Billy Gilman, Jamie O'Neal, Desmond Child and Melinda Doolitte among others, coincides with the 2015 CMA Music Festival and is being co-sponsored by GLAAD.

Herndon calls the forthcoming show "a milestone" that will hopefully start to shatter the general perception of the genre as unwelcoming towards the LGBT community. Plans are already in the works to make the concert an annual one, he said.

These days, he comfortably attends red carpet events with longtime boyfriend Matt Collum, but that wasn't the case for singer Chely Wright, who saw her record sales plunge and even reportedly received death threats after coming out as a lesbian in a 2010 People Magazine interview.

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Herndon made his first public appearance with boyfriend Matt Collum (left) last December in Los Angeles.


"We went through a lot of the same struggles [of] hiding who we were in a business that we thought we couldn't be in if we were gay or lesbian," Herndon said. "Her coming out was such… oh my gosh! None of us knew she was going to do that."

Herndon, who was still in the closet at the time, says his own fears prevented him from supporting Wright publicly. Still, he added, "That was the day I made the decision to start the process of my own coming out. Yes, she got pretty beat up [but] for me, it really was a lot different. I can't help but give her a lot of that credit."

Currently at work on a new album, Herndon says his music will reflect his coming out, even if any lyrical references are kept gender-free in an effort to reach as wide of an audience as possible. He describes his new material as delving into "Alanis Morissette"-style territory, but ultimately emphasizing "change, victory and love" even if the "drums are louder and the guitars are screaming."

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In May, Herndon performed at the 2015 GLAAD Media Awards in New York.


"To see that kid having such a chance at life because he was so brave so early, and yet to understand the 75-year-old man who is finally at peace with himself because he was able to walk out of that fear…if I've been a small part of any of that, it really is humbling."

Overall, the past year has opened Herndon's mind to the sheer scope of the LGBT community. Ultimately, he sees being a role model as secondary to simply expressing "life experience, good and bad" through his music and performances. He says he is "humbled" by fans who say they've found inspiration in his coming out story.

"I have parents bringing 15-year-olds to my shows, and they say, 'My kid just came out, and he wants to be a singer. And all I can do is look at them and go, 'My God, look at this special kid you have,'" he said. "And then, I'll have a 75-year-old man come to my show and say, 'I just came out to my entire family, and I was received with love.'"

"I relate to that struggle on so many levels. To see that kid having such a chance at life because he was so brave so early, and yet to understand the 75-year-old man who is finally at peace with himself because he was able to walk out of that fear… if I've been a small part of any of that, it really is humbling. I receive that," he added.

The Concert For Love and Acceptance will take place June 12 at City Winery in Nashville, Tennessee. Head here for more details.

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Bethann Hardison Strips Down For StyleLikeU And Reveals Her Greatest Accomplishment

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The mission of StyleLikeU's captivating video series, "The What's Underneath Project," is to honor how style isn't simply about the clothes you wear.

It might first seem strange, then, for the site to profile someone who's made a career of modeling stylish clothes and helping others to do the same. Except, of course, if that someone is Bethann Hardison.

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Hardison is a fashion icon, so watching her strip down to her underwear while talking about her storied career is nothing short of amazing.

The Brooklyn-born beauty's accomplishments -- just to name a few -- include being one of the first black models to debut in Europe during the legendary 1973 "Battle of Versailles" group show, the so-called "coming out party" for American fashion design. She went on to open her own modeling agency and became the outspoken leader of the Diversity Coalition, a group that's fighting to end racism on the runway.

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In the 10-minute video, Hardison talks about the struggles she faced becoming an entrepreneur, the importance of finding happiness beyond material possessions, and her greatest achievement -- being the mother of Kadeem Hardison, the accomplished actor who played Dwayne Wayne on "A Different World."

"I need to be in a place where people have less," Hardison says about living part-time in Mexico. "It helps me to remember to get rid of some of those things in your closet, get rid of some of that junk on your shelves."

"Those people that are really happy don't have a quarter of the things you have," she adds.

Check out the video above and head to StyleLikeU.com to see more "What's Underneath" profiles.



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One Tiny Particle Inspires Scientific Paper With More Than 5,000 Authors

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We're not sure how many scientists it takes to screw in a light bulb, but in one recent case it took more than 5,000 scientists to write a single scientific paper.

The paper, published recently in the journal Physical Review Letters, is believed to have set a new record for the greatest number of co-authors for one piece of research. Its list of authors -- 5,154 in total -- takes up 24 out of the total of 33 pages for the entire document, and there are more authors than there are words in the paper.

Though its epic roster has some asking whether scientific publishing has jumped the shark, many scientists at least say the broad authorship makes perfect sense.

The paper, which offers the most precise measurement yet of the Higgs boson's mass, is the product of a massive collaboration between two teams at CERN, the Geneva-based research organization that operates the world's largest particle accelerator.

"Big science requires big collaborations," Dr. Tiziano Camporesi, director of CERN's CMS experiment, told The Huffington Post in an email. "This does not change the facts that the individual contributions (which can be at many different and equally fundamental levels) remain at the base of our achievements. If we were less people, we probably would produce results much slower and probably of lesser quality."

Slimming down the author list might cause many important contributions made early on in the "research 'food-chain'" to go unrecognized, Camporesi said. Even worse, he added, it "might induce very pernicious consequences, like people wanting to concentrate only on the last steps of the analysis and not contributing to guarantee the exceptional quality of the underlying raw data."

But other experts argue it may be time to rethink how scientists get credited for their work -- and even how new research gets published -- as new technology and giant collaborations like those at CERN usher in a new era.

"Our prizes, criteria for academic promotion, lines of authority, and expectations of responsibility were set in a time when one or two or a dozen or two people could do an experiment," Dr. Peter Galison, a science historian at Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., told The Huffington Post in an email. "We simply have to adapt and change our view about credit, and learn to recognize that the large-scale experiment of today is not the analogue of an experiment in 1850 or 1950."

In a post on his "In the Dark" blog, Prof. Peter Coles, a theoretical astrophysics professor at the University of Sussex in England, called the paper a "reductio ad absurdum proof that the system is broken." He suggests the solution may be to move toward creating a new credit system that distinguishes between different research contributions -- and instead of writing papers, researchers could create online documents that can be continually updated.

"It seems quite clear to me that the academic journal is an anachronism," he wrote. "Digital technology enables us to communicate ideas far more rapidly than in the past and allows much greater levels of interaction between researchers."

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Quirky New Web Series 'The Impossibilities' Tackles Yoga, Magic And Sexuality

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On a freezing-cold day last winter, producer Anna Kerrigan walked into a New York City restaurant and immediately recognized the hostess. After chatting for a few minutes, Kerrigan realized she was Kati Rediger -- an actress who had come in to audition for the lead role in a play she wrote at Second Stage Theatre.

"We ultimately had not cast her. It was very awkward," Kerrigan told The Huffington Post. But the two started talking, and Kerrigan was immediately drawn to Rediger's bubbly energy. And when she heard that Rediger's then-fiance Ashley Springer was working on a short film, she was so intrigued with the couple that she wanted to collaborate with them on a larger project. In the end, something great came out of that initial awkwardness: "The Impossibilities," an eight-episode comedy web series written and produced by Kerrigan, starring Rediger and Springer.

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Rediger stars as Willa, a "daffy lesbian yogi," and Springer plays Harry, a "jaded children's-party magician." Both have backgrounds in their characters' businesses -- Rediger is a yoga instructor, and Springer was a teen magician champion -- so, knowing this, Kerrigan found their characters easy to write.

"We read the first draft and we were like, 'Woah, Anna really nailed it,'" Springer said.

Although the series centers on two artists who are a bit lost, both in career and in love, issues surrounding sexuality are addressed in an interesting way. The first episode is full of adorable moments between Harry and Willa when they meet at a party in New York, but Rediger told HuffPost that it was important to Kerrigan to keep Willa's sexuality firmly in place.

“A lot of people see this show and they’re like, ‘Oh, I bet at the end Harry and Willa are going to get together.’ But from the beginning, Anna was very adamant about wanting to give this character her sexuality. She’s a lesbian, and she’s not just waiting for the right guy to come along," Rediger explained. "It was important for us to portray this character as has having a very solid sexuality and not have that be the main drama.”

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The series also has a transgender character, an ex of Willa's who is transitioning from being a woman to a man. Kerrigan told HuffPost that highlighting how rough that transition can be on an individual was important to her as well.

“One thing that I wanted to address that I’ve seen with gay friends, and have observed especially with some older lesbians, is that it can be hard even within the LGBT community to go from being a lesbian to identifying as trans," she explained.

Intrigued yet? Every episode of "The Impossibilities" is available on its website.

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Drone Photos Take You Right Inside Bulgaria's Spooky Sunken Church

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Meet haunting beauty at its finest.

These breathtaking drone photos capture St. Ivan Rilski, a partially-submerged church near Bulgaria's Zhrebchevo Dam. The church was part of a village that flooded to the point of disappearance when Bulgaria's communist regime built the dam nearby in 1965.

When water levels are low enough, you'll see remnants of the church cemetery, the Daily Mail reports. The hauntingly empty area is popular with photographers and artists, who set up tents to capture the landscape in all its lonesome glory.


Rex/REX USA



Rex/REX USA



The Zhrebchevo Dam is about a three-hour drive from Sofia, Bulgaria's bustling capital and one of the cheapest places to travel this year. Aside from its flooded civilization, Zhrebchevo is a popular place for bird-spotting, fishing and camping getaways.

And if you're into the whole sunken-buildings experience, then you can head over to Croatia to walk on a submerged town and kayak in a sunken prison.

Overall, these are pretty much the perfect places to unplug, unwind and savor the (semi-spooky) great outdoors.

H/T Daily Mail



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Northwestern Student Drops Complaint Against Professor In Laura Kipnis Case

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A Northwestern University graduate student who filed a Title IX complaint against the school's faculty senate head for discussing a controversial essay withdrew it over the weekend.

Stephen Eisenman, an art professor and faculty senate president at the school in Evanston, Illinois, was named in the complaint for publicly discussing the school's investigation into film professor Laura Kipnis, who wrote an essay arguing against Northwestern's ban on sex between professors and students. The student who filed the complaint suspended her grievance against Eisenman a week ago, and officially withdrew it on Sunday.

The Title IX complaints against Eisenman and Kipnis, which Northwestern is required to investigate under federal gender-equity law, sparked alarm in higher education, with concern that official investigations may compromise academic freedom.

"I don't blame any students who brought charges against me," Eisenman told The Huffington Post on Monday. "They're just students, they're learning, they're smart, they're trying things out, they make mistakes." He continued: "I do hold responsible the administrators overseeing Title IX. It was well within their prerogative to examine the charge and to determine it was without merit."

The student filed a complaint against Kipnis over her February essay in The Chronicle of Higher Education that critiqued student-faculty dating policies. The student complained the article misrepresented a lawsuit involving a philosophy professor. The complaint sparked a Title IX investigation into Kipnis by the university, and she chose Eisenman as a support person in the case. Kipnis was cleared of the charges on Friday.

The student filed an additional complaint against Eisenman for discussing the case, without using anyone's name, at a faculty senate meeting in May. One faculty member was said to have responded to Eisenman's description by saying the situation was out of "Stalinist Russia."

The student's complaint against Eisenman contended he was obligated not to discuss the case against Kipnis. The Department of Philosophy subsequently voted to ask whether Eisenman should step down for violating confidentiality, according to emails obtained by The Huffington Post.

But after Kipnis made her Title IX investigation public in another essay on Friday, and was then cleared, the student decided to withdraw her complaint against Eisenman.

The student, who didn't want her name publicly revealed, said part of the reason she withdrew her complaint against Eisenman was that investigators had begun to probe the case without getting her full statement.

"I cannot continue to be so naive as to hope that internal complaint processes can safely be made use of in good faith. It's clear that they cannot," the student wrote in withdrawing her complaint on Sunday.

Eisenman and Kipnis both maintained confidentiality had not been broken.

"I just thought this is getting absurd," Kipnis told HuffPost. "It started out absurd, and it's getting more absurd."

"The effect isn't trivial," said Eisenman. "Because bringing a charge against a professor [under Title IX] suggests that they may have done something profoundly bad."

Eisenman said he believes Title IX is essential, but the law's protections must "be treated with respect." He said he worries that unfounded investigations weaken the law. "This makes it much more [susceptible to] attacks with from the right," he said.

Northwestern said in a statement that it followed the law. The school declined to discuss specifics of either complaint.

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A Catalan Artist Is Replacing The Floors Of Abandoned Buildings With Hand-Painted Mosaics

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Standing in a historic room, whether it's ancient or famous or clandestine, admirers are often quick to daydream of the goings-on of yore. "If these walls could talk," they muse. For Catalan designer Javier de Riba, he's more concerned with the floors.

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"It moves me to think that one day these floors harbored experiences," he explained to The Huffington Post, "and helped form a part of someone’s daily life, and now finally rest forgotten."

The sentiment explains his newest project, suitably deemed "Flors," in which de Riba seeks out graying, abandoned grounds in Spain to turn into canvas. Instead of laying a carpet or replacing the emptiness with tiled mosaics, the artist uses spray paint and stencils to infuse dejected concrete with a bit of street-art flair.



The patterns, simple geometric designs that spread like quilts, are indeed an homage to 19th-century hydraulic mosaic factories indigenous to Catalonia. Built in the 1850s to churn out cement tiles, the factories employed hydraulic presses -- some hand-operated, others electric-powered. The signifier of a hand-operated press: the varying quality of patterns resulting from inconsistent pressure applied. Akin to the handmade mosaics, these imperfections often gave the tiles the character we treasure today.

"Many homes in this area feature this type of tile," he said to HuffPost, "and I have lived with them all my life." To de Riba, the tiling adds personality and rhythm to the houses of the Catalan regions; despite being identical, the repeating shapes generate new forms, "born out of how each of the tiles join and intersect."

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Like the hand-operated presses, de Riba's painted floors are subject to the imperfections of handmade craft. He positions the stencils and unloads the spray paint, creating a nearly uniform product that bends and glitches according to the various surfaces and applications. "Through my intervention, I allow this sensation to flourish," he concluded, "and offer a testimony to these past lives.”




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Books About Women Don't Win Major Fiction Prizes. How Can We Change That?

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Man, woman, cyborg -- no matter what kind of writer you are, if you want to win a major literary award, there’s just one thing you have to do: Make sure your main character is a man.

Okay, it still helps to be a man, writing about men, but a woman writing about men will fare far better than a woman writing about women, at least if she wants to be a contender for awards such as the Pulitzer for fiction or the Man Booker Prize. Nicola Griffith, the acclaimed author of Hild and Ammonite, recently broke down the last 15 years of major fiction prize-winners by the gender of the author and the main character, and the resulting pie charts are pretty startling.

Griffith organized the books into several categories: by men about men, by women about women, by men about women, by women about men, by each gender about both, and unsure. In one case, the Newbery Medal for children's books, women writing about women dominated. In every other award, men writing about men carried the day. Women writing about men or both, and men writing about both, also received reasonable percentages, while books focused on women are nearly absent from the ranks of winners.

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(You can see all of the charts on Griffith's blog.)

As the VIDA count has effectively demonstrated over the past few years, apparent gains in gender equality in the literary arena may be blinding us to the more persistent imbalances. Though women are major consumers and creators of fiction, and select women such as Joan Didion, Alice Munro, Marilynne Robinson and Toni Morrison have achieved iconic status in the field, women’s stories and voices are still more rarely celebrated than men's as the finest literature has to offer. Women authors are dogged by insinuations of unseriousness and by gauzy, chick-lit covers that set them apart from their male counterparts.

“My first novel was published in 1993 and I noticed it wasn't treated the same ways as books by peers: different treatment at all levels of the publishing process,” explained Griffith in an email to The Huffington Post. It wasn’t until now, however, that her attempts to blog about the disparity really took off. “I will never again underestimate the power of brightly-coloured graphics!” she joked.

It’s all too easy to dismiss the question of major literary prizewinners as small potatoes -- there are only a few major fiction awards every year, so the vast majority of writers aren’t directly affected by the decisions. But the ripple effect is strong, Griffith argues. “The big prizes matter. They are signposts. They point to what we should be paying attention to ... Lists are history.” And on a more practical note, she pointed out, “there's the instant publicity.” Literary fiction writers often struggle in the commercial market, but winning a Pulitzer or Man Booker Prize can instantly boost sales to sky-high rates.

A thornier question: How can this imbalance be rectified?

The question of women’s-only literary prizes recently resurfaced, as it periodically does. This time, in the New York Times’ Bookends column, in which Zoë Heller and Dana Stevens pondered the question: Does an award like the Bailey Women’s Prize for Fiction help or hurt women writers? Both authors supported these prizes, but with clear reservations, and Stevens’ concerns seem particularly apropros. “A small part of me fears that the gated-off arena can too easily become a prison,” she wrote.

The existence of a prize solely for women writers is both boon and bane to writers who happen to be women. It allows them to compete for recognition outside of the larger arena where prejudice favoring male writers and subject tend to overshadow female art; it also crystallizes a sense of women writers as other, as a separate category with potentially different standards. Plus, it fosters a sense that female representation has been fixed -- a woman doesn’t need to win the Man Booker Prize, when one is bound to win the Bailey’s! -- possibly lessening motivation to ensure women are treated as equal contestants in the broader field.

Griffith isn’t turning her back on the Bailey's Prize, though, saying, “It's an addition, not a silo. A good addition.” She advocates more data, like the VIDA count, to uncover these inequities; in a follow-up article she notes, as well, that "It’s not just gender diversity that needs fixing, of course," referring readers to Malinda Lo's articles on diversity in Y.A.

To really make progress toward a better world for women and minority writers, she said, we should devote ourselves to fixing “the bias at the foundation of our culture.” A tall order, but for some things, there are no shortcuts.

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The Many Faces Of Marlene Dumas, A Painter For The 21st Century

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Amy - Blue, 2011 . Oil on canvas, 40 x 30 cm. National Portrait Gallery, London, acquired 2011. Photograph by Alex Delfanne




The image only spans from her forehead to her chin, but the subject is instantly recognizable. The oversized, cat-winged eyeliner hanging heavily on her lids gives a large hint, clumpy and fading as if worn on a hot day. But there's more to Marlene Dumas' portrait, simply titled "Amy -- Blue," that captures the more ineffable features of a late singer's pained beauty.

The diminutive oil painting, only 40 centimeters tall and 30 wide, is rendered mostly in blacks and blues, with the occasional pink and violet accent peaking through beneath the surface. It feels heavy, despite its size, as if the portion of face we're privy to is a cropped, zoomed-in portion of a portrait too large to grasp. The subject is, of course, Amy Winehouse, and was painted in 2011, the year she died from alcohol poisoning at 27 years old.

Winehouse is the perfect muse for Dumas, whose work is on view this summer at Fondation Beyeler in Switzerland. The South African-born painter, now 61 years old, is known for her blurred portraits of faces and bodies, both real and imagined, that transcend a physical likeness to communicate invisible blemishes flaring below the surface. Hungry women and children populate her painted canvases, lusting for different things, their ugliness worked over so thoroughly it somehow becomes beautiful.

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Helena's Dream, 2008. Oil on canvas, 130 x 110 cm . Kunsthalle Bielefeld. © Marlene Dumas. Photograph by Peter Cox, © 2015, ProLitteris, Zurich


In the painting, Winehouse looks down and off to the side, her mouth hanging open ever so slightly. An artist who often expressed her rampant insecurities, especially regarding her physical appearance, the singer appears as if avoiding contact with the viewer, who has had to zoom in so closely just to get a glimpse. Dumas renders her not quite as a starlet, a phantom or a "real person" -- but something in between. In fact, Dumas has described her portraits as depicting "imagined beings, closer to the world of ghosts and angels, daydreams and nightmares than real people."

Dumas was born in a farming town near Cape Town, South Africa under apartheid. She grew up without a television, taking little notice of cameras. "I never wanted a camera,” she wrote in a catalogue for a prior exhibition at the Tate Modern. "I loved to play and draw in the sand. I loved the illustrations of fairy tales, and the stories of the Bible and American cartoons that were around. I drew bikini girls on the back of cigarette packets to impress my parents’ friends."

After graduating from the University of Cape Town, Dumas moved to Amsterdam, where she resides to this day. Her childhood resistance to cameras is evident in the paintings she's created throughout her lifetime, which resist using line to describe shape and instead employ knots, mounds and sites of excavation to convey the feeling of seeing.

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Marlene Dumas . For Whom the Bell Tolls, 2008 . Oil on canvas, 100 x 90 cm . The Rachofsky Collection and the Dallas Museum of Art through the DMA/amfAR Benefit Auction Fund . © Marlene Dumas . Photograph by Peter Cox, © 2015, ProLitteris, Zurich


"Painting for her," Peter Schjeldahl wrote for The New Yorker, "as for others of her generation, becomes a parasitic enterprise feeding on a world that is fat with fascinating and estranging visual information. Her creative act is part tribute to that profusion, part protest, and entirely corrective: in place of how something appears, she depicts how it appears to her."

As Fondation Beyeler expressed in their museum statement, "what the camera time freezes in photography, Dumas brings back to life in her paintings." Indeed, there is a tangible life force, or perhaps after-life force, to the works that make up the exhibition, from the pale, detached family unit represented in "Nuclear Family" to the mirror-like flesh of Dumas' daughter Helena in the portrait "Helena's Dream." Whether it's a relative or a pop star, Dumas manages to channel a similar combination of intimacy and alienation with each of her subjects.

Since the 1980s, Dumas has secured her position as one of the most inquisitive forces in contemporary painting. Tackling domestic subjects with a gritty and grotesque hand, Dumas operates in a realm where the hyper-feminine veers into a kind of machismo. As the artist said in 1993: "If painting is female and insanity is a female malady, then all women painters are mad and all male painters are women."

A retrospective focusing on Dumas' faces and bodies, with works spanning from the 1970s to the present, will be exhibited until September 6 at the Fondation Beyeler in Switzerland. In the meantime, see a preview of Dumas' works.





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Award-Winning Violinist Finishes Father's Piece That Nazis Broke Up

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RAANANA, Israel (AP) — In 1933, the promising young Jewish-German violinist Ernest Drucker left the stage midway through a Brahms concerto in Cologne at the behest of Nazi officials, in one of the first anti-Semitic acts of the new regime.

Now, more than 80 years later, his son, Grammy Award-winning American violinist Eugene Drucker, has completed his father's interrupted work. With tears in his eyes, Drucker performed an emotional rendition of the Brahms Violin Concerto in D Major, Op. 77, over the weekend with the Raanana Symphonette Orchestra.

"I think he would feel a sense of completion. I think in some ways many aspects of my career served that purpose for him," the 63-year-old Drucker said of his father, who passed away in 1993. "There is all this emotional energy and intensity loaded into my associations to this piece."

Thursday's concert, and a second performance Sunday night, commemorated the Judischer Kulturbund — a federation of Jewish musicians in Nazi Germany who were segregated so as not to "sully" Aryan culture.

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In this photo taken Wednesday, May 27, 2015, Grammy Award-winning American violinist Eugene Drucker, poses for a photograph at the Music Hall in Raanana, central Israel. (AP Photo/Dan Balilty)

After the humiliation in Cologne, the elder Drucker became a central player in the Kulturbund, a unique historical phenomenon with a mixed legacy.

On one hand, it gave Jews the opportunity to carry on with their cultural lives and maintain a sense — some would say the illusion — of normalcy in the midst of growing discrimination against them. On the other, it served a Nazi propaganda machine eager to portray a moderate face to the world. It was a prototype for the "Judenrat" system in which relatively privileged Jews naively operated under Nazi auspices all the way down the road to destruction.

Long before the Nazis placed Jews in ghettos and gassed them to death in concentration camps, they were mostly preoccupied with "purifying" German institutions with racist laws and street justice. Jews were fired from their government jobs, excluded from almost all organizations and public events and harassed into emigrating.

For the largely assimilated German Jews, who had a deep connection to the country's culture and history, the Kulturbund offered a much-needed creative outlet as their world was crumbling.

"They wanted to show the Germans why it was important to preserve us and why we were better than they thought we were. There was this delusional sense that this may alter their fate," said Orit Fogel-Shafran, general manager of the Raanana Symphonette Orchestra. "This was their mistake. They thought this gave them some sort of immunity."

Initially, the Nazi culture ministry granted the Kulturbund relative freedom, so long as its performers and audiences were exclusively Jewish.

At its height, thousands of musicians, theater actors and other performers took part, including some of Germany's most notable artists, at dozens of venues across the country. As the years progressed, however, and the Nazi ideology took deeper root, greater restrictions were imposed until eventually they could only perform Jewish works, with Bach and Beethoven off-limits.

The Kulturbund was reduced significantly after the pogroms of Kristallnacht in 1938 — when Nazi-incited riots marked the start of the campaign to destroy European Jewry. Musicians went underground or fled, like Drucker's father, who went to America.

Many found their way to the Holy Land where they helped establish what would later become the world-renowned Israel Philharmonic Orchestra. Most of those who stayed until the end in 1941 were sent to concentration camps.

Hillel Zori, a cellist and artistic director of the Raanana symphonette who initiated the event after much research, said he had mixed feelings. By organizing themselves, he says the Jews offered the Nazis a blueprint for "unwitting self-destruction." Still, he said he was in awe of the way they preserved their humanistic values through Germany's descent into genocide.

"They felt 'we are preserving our culture. We belong to the German culture,'" he said.

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In this photo taken Wednesday, May 27, 2015, Grammy Award-winning American violinist Eugene Drucker, plays his violin during a rehearsal concert at the Music Hall in Raanana, central Israel. (AP Photo/Dan Balilty)

In many ways, Ernest Drucker's experience was a watershed moment that made the Kulturbund necessary. As a top student at the Cologne conservatory of music, he was scheduled to play the entire Brahms concerto at his graduation ceremony in the summer of 1933.

Shortly before the event, he noticed his name had been crossed off the program. His teacher threatened to resign if Drucker's name was not reinstated, and a compromise was reached with the school's newly installed Nazi administrators whereby Drucker could perform the first movement only before being replaced by a non-Jew. Drucker played in front of rows of Nazi Stormtroopers before being whisked offstage and ultimately into the refuge of the Kulturbund.

"This showed the writing on the wall. The bells were ringing at full volume," said Fogel-Shafran, who traces her own family history in Germany back several generations. "But the German Jews didn't want to believe it."

Drucker fled Germany in 1938 and moved to the U.S., where his son was born. The younger Drucker said the incident in Cologne was a "dramatic experience" for his father that stayed with him for years. "Music was practically everything to my father," he said.

Drucker, a founding member of the nine-time Grammy winning Emerson String Quartette, said he was not willing to criticize those who clung to their German culture in those difficult times.

"It may have lulled some people there into thinking that they had more security existentially than they really had," he said. "But it was an organization that kept the Jews culturally alive through the 1930s when they were increasingly segregated and kept out of most areas of personal fulfillment in the Third Reich."

Thursday's performance in the central Israeli city of Raanana was preceded by a panel discussing just such dilemmas, as well as a musical rendition of the Jewish prayer Kol Nidre, with archival black-and-white footage of the Kulturbund showing in the background along with its logo of a flame inside a Jewish Star of David.

Drucker said he didn't know if it was "my place to correct a history wrong." But backstage, after the performance, he was clearly moved.

"As a musician I feel like the circle is never completely closed," he said. "But I was standing there at one point ... and I really did start to think about my father."

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Artist Asks How Far We've Really Progressed In The 150 Years Since The Civil War

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"Unravelling and Unravelled"




On April 9, 1865, Robert E. Lee surrendered the last major Confederate army to Ulysses S. Grant, thus ending the Civil War. On April 9, 2015, artist Sonya Clark began unraveling the Confederate Flag.

"It’s not an easy task. This is the thing. It’s not an easy thing to undo," Clark explained to Leila Ugincius of Virginia Commonwealth University "Thread by thread. It’s a little frustrating." Although this sentiment primarily points to the physical act of deconstructing the flag piece by piece, it also extends to the slow and toilsome task of dismantling the ideals of the Confederacy and the notion of racism in the United States.

"The performance of it is almost a meditative kind of ‘what does it mean to undo the symbol?’" Clark continued. "What does it mean to then use the raw elements that came together to make this symbol? To take them apart and potentially make something new again out of that?"

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Clark began the undoing process in her studio on the 150th anniversary of the Civil War. She'll continue to unthread the loaded symbol before an audience at Mixed Greens Gallery in New York, as part of the exhibition "New Dominion."

The name "New Dominion" riffs off the term "Old Dominion," which has served as the state of Virginia's nickname since the mid-17th century -- back when it was only a colony. The time-honored epithet, coined by King Charles II, references Virginia's allegiance to the crown during the Civil War in England. The contemporary art exhibition, featuring only artists living and working in Richmond, Virginia, explores the tension between past and present in Virginia today.

Virginia's history is littered with pride and shame, glory and violence, pain and progress. As you likely know, the state seceded during the Civil War and served as the seat of the Confederacy. Fast forward 150 years and Richmond is a burgeoning cultural capital stocked with breweries, bicycles, street style, and of course, a singular art scene, grown from the city's unique hybrid history of celebration and struggle.

Clark was born nearby in Washington, D.C., to a psychiatrist from Trinidad and a nurse from Jamaica. "I gained an appreciation for the value of the handmade, and the stories held in objects from my grandmother who was a professional tailor," Clark explains in her artist statement. "Many of my family members taught me the value of a well-told story and so it is that I value the stories held in objects."

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Her upcoming performance at Mixed Greens Gallery, "Unravelling," combines her interest in symbols, race and identity with a passion for unconventional takes on traditional craft techniques. Clark will invite audience members to collaborate with her in deconstructing the many threads of the polarizing emblem, along with special guests including curator Lowery Sims and civil rights lawyer Olatunde Johnson. The physically time consuming and demanding ritual will allow visitors to reflect on the ways the state and country have changed over the past 150 years, as well as what changes we're still waiting for.

It's no coincidence that the performance arises amidst the Black Lives Matter movement and recent tragedies in Ferguson, Baltimore, and Cleveland. Clark's piece subtly alludes to these contemporary manifestations of hate and confusion, prompting viewers to contemplate what comes after anger. "Anger is justified," Clark said in an interview about the work. "And then what? I'm much more interested in what happens next. How do we move forward? How far forward have we moved in 150 years?"

For "New Dominion," Clark will join forces with other Richmond-based contemporary artists like Susie Ganch, Ben Durham, Noa Glazer and Hope Ginsburg. We look forward to seeing what myths, traditions and silenced histories ooze forth as the iconic tapestry disintegrates. As Clark put it: "It’s absorbed all this dialogue around me and I want to... put my ear to the cloth and find out what it’s whispering."

"New Dominion," curated by Lauren Ross, runs from June 11 until July 17, 2015 at Mixed Greens Gallery in New York. See a preview below.






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Sorry, But This Stained Glass Depiction Of LeBron James Will Give You Nightmares

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Props to the artist. This is about as good of a representation of a human being as is possible considering the medium. But still: NIGHTMARES. NIGHTMARES. NIGHTMARES. NIGHTMARES. NIGHTMARES. NIGHTMARES.

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Jimmy Fallon Reviews Hilarious Books You Won't Believe Actually Exist

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Soranus' Gynecology sounds like a it might be a tough read.

In their latest edition of "Do Not Read" on Monday, Jimmy Fallon and sidekick Steve Higgins reviewed a few hilarious books that really aren't meant to be hilarious. You may not believe they exist but you can find them all on Amazon apparently.

Are you struggling to co-exist with the fancy plants in your home? Then Living With Fancy Plants may be the key to saving your relationship.

But hurry up and grab your copy, because Fallon is adding that and others to his "Do Not Read" list.

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