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The Spiritual Power Of Tattoos: An All Together Conversation

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It seems like everyone has a tattoo these days. Whether it is a small rose, a skull or a crucifix, people are marking their bodies in unprecedented numbers. While some may want to dismiss it as a merely a trend, tattoos tap into the human need for rituals and meaning


Welcome to All Together, the podcast dedicated to exploring ethics religion and spiritual practice in daily life. You can download All Together on iTunes, or Stitcher.


As fewer Americans identify with formal religious traditions, getting a tattoo can be a rite of passage and a means to claiming of identity. Tattoos can serve like stained glass windows that tell the story of the soul.


All Together host Paul Raushenbush talks with Noah Michaelson and Josh Korda, both of whose bodies are literally covered with tattoos. They talk about why they got their first tattoos, what spiritual significance tattoos have for them and what advice they have for people thinking about getting a tattoo today.


Noah Michelson  is a poet and the Editorial Director of the Voices department at The Huffington Post. Josh Korda is a well-known Buddhist and presiding teacher at Dharma Punx NYC as well as a teacher at Against the Stream.


 





 


Also On The Huffington Post


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Adorable Kittens Act Out Every Single 'Harry Potter' Movie

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These cats are magic.


"Harry Potter" has been given an amazing re-boot -- with the help of some adorable kittens.


The unbelievably cute cats were filmed playing out scenes from each of the hit franchise’s eight movies.


In the 7-minute video above, watch Harry, Ron and Hermione navigate their way through the world of magic at Hogwarts.


They don tiny capes and glasses and hold wands in the hilarious series of clips. YouTube channel The Pet Collective produced the video.


The Woodland Hills, California-based Cats At The Studios adoption service provided the stars of the show.


"Two of our kittens were in this as babies. They have now been adopted and are in their forever homes," the organization wrote on its Facebook page.







In the 7-minute video above, watch Harry, Ron and Hermione navigate their way through the world of magic at Hogwarts.


They don tiny capes and glasses and hold wands in the hilarious series of clips. YouTube channel The Pet Collective produced the video.


The Woodland Hills, California-based Cats At The Studios adoption service provided the stars of the show.


"Two of our kittens were in this as babies. They have now been adopted and are in their forever homes," the organization wrote on its Facebook page.


Also on HuffPost:






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See The Incredible Christmas Tree Made Entirely From Disney Toys

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And some say Christmas is too commercial.


A festive tree made entirely out of stuffed Disney toys has been unveiled in London.


It stands 45 feet high, and is jam-packed with hundreds of family-favorite characters.








Peter Pan, Olaf from "Frozen" and Sulley from "Monsters Inc." all make an appearance, as do Mickey Mouse, Dumbo, Simba  and Ariel.



A photo posted by Peter Hunt (@pedroh1962) on





A photo posted by Joe Rohde (@photojoe0) on




The tree, at St. Pancras International train station, was officially opened by singer and "Britain’s Got Talent" judge Alesha Dixon on Friday, the Mirror reported.



Also on HuffPost:


Disney Villains As Pinups



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18 Habits Of Highly Creative People

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Creativity works in mysterious and often paradoxical ways. Creative thinking is a stable, defining characteristic in some personalities, but it may also change based on situation and context. Inspiration and ideas often arise seemingly out of nowhere and then fail to show up when we most need them, and creative thinking requires complex cognition yet is completely distinct from the thinking process.


Neuroscience paints a complicated picture of creativity. As scientists now understand it, creativity is far more complex than the right-left brain distinction would have us think (the theory being that left brain = rational and analytical, right brain = creative and emotional). In fact, creativity is thought to involve a number of cognitive processes, neural pathways and emotions, and we still don't have the full picture of how the imaginative mind works.


And psychologically speaking, creative personality types are difficult to pin down, largely because they're complex, paradoxical and tend to avoid habit or routine. And it's not just a stereotype of the "tortured artist" -- artists really may be more complicated people. Research has suggested that creativity involves the coming together of a multitude of traits, behaviors and social influences in a single person.


"It's actually hard for creative people to know themselves because the creative self is more complex than the non-creative self," Scott Barry Kaufman, a psychologist at New York University who has spent years researching creativity, told The Huffington Post. "The things that stand out the most are the paradoxes of the creative self ... Imaginative people have messier minds."


While there's no "typical" creative type, there are some tell-tale characteristics and behaviors of highly creative people. Here are 18 things they do differently.


They daydream. 



Creative types know, despite what their third-grade teachers may have said, that daydreaming is anything but a waste of time.


According to Kaufman and psychologist Rebecca L. McMillan, who co-authored a paper titled "Ode To Positive Constructive Daydreaming," mind-wandering can aid in the process of "creative incubation." And of course, many of us know from experience that our best ideas come seemingly out of the blue when our minds are elsewhere.


Although daydreaming may seem mindless, a 2012 study suggested it could actually involve a highly engaged brain state -- daydreaming can lead to sudden connections and insights because it's related to our ability to recall information in the face of distractions. Neuroscientists have also found that daydreaming involves the same brain processes associated with imagination and creativity.


They observe everything.


The world is a creative person's oyster -- they see possibilities everywhere and are constantly taking in information that becomes fodder for creative expression. As Henry James is widely quoted, a writer is someone on whom "nothing is lost."


The writer Joan Didion kept a notebook with her at all times, and said that she wrote down observations about people and events as, ultimately, a way to better understand the complexities and contradictions of her own mind:


"However dutifully we record what we see around us, the common denominator of all we see is always, transparently, shamelessly, the implacable 'I,'" Didion wrote in her essay On Keeping A Notebook. "We are talking about something private, about bits of the mind’s string too short to use, an indiscriminate and erratic assemblage with meaning only for its marker."


They work the hours that work for them.



Many great artists have said that they do their best work either very early in the morning or late at night. Vladimir Nabokov started writing immediately after he woke up at 6 or 7 a.m., and Frank Lloyd Wright made a practice of waking up at 3 or 4 a.m. and working for several hours before heading back to bed. No matter when it is, individuals with high creative output will often figure out what time it is that their minds start firing up, and structure their days accordingly.


They take time for solitude.


"In order to be open to creativity, one must have the capacity for constructive use of solitude. One must overcome the fear of being alone," wrote the American existential psychologist Rollo May.


Artists and creatives are often stereotyped as being loners, and while this may not actually be the case, solitude can be the key to producing their best work. For Kaufman, this links back to daydreaming -- we need to give ourselves the time alone to simply allow our minds to wander.


"You need to get in touch with that inner monologue to be able to express it," he says. "It's hard to find that inner creative voice if you're ... not getting in touch with yourself and reflecting on yourself."


They turn life's obstacles around.


Many of the most iconic stories and songs of all time have been inspired by gut-wrenching pain and heartbreak -- and the silver lining of these challenges is that they may have been the catalyst to create great art. An emerging field of psychology called post-traumatic growth is suggesting that many people are able to use their hardships and early-life trauma for substantial creative growth. Specifically, researchers have found that trauma can help people to grow in the areas of interpersonal relationships, spirituality, appreciation of life, personal strength, and -- most importantly for creativity -- seeing new possibilities in life.


"A lot of people are able to use that as the fuel they need to come up with a different perspective on reality," says Kaufman. "What's happened is that their view of the world as a safe place, or as a certain type of place, has been shattered at some point in their life, causing them to go on the periphery and see things in a new, fresh light, and that's very conducive to creativity."


They seek out new experiences.



Creative people love to expose themselves to new experiences, sensations and states of mind -- and this openness is a significant predictor of creative output.


"Openness to experience is consistently the strongest predictor of creative achievement," says Kaufman. "This consists of lots of different facets, but they're all related to each other: Intellectual curiosity, thrill seeking, openness to your emotions, openness to fantasy. The thing that brings them all together is a drive for cognitive and behavioral exploration of the world, your inner world and your outer world."


They "fail up."


Resilience is practically a prerequisite for creative success, says Kaufman. Doing creative work is often described as a process of failing repeatedly until you find something that sticks, and creatives -- at least the successful ones -- learn not to take failure so personally.


"Creatives fail and the really good ones fail often," Forbes contributor Steven Kotler wrote in a piece on Einstein's creative genius.


They ask the big questions.


Creative people are insatiably curious -- they generally opt to live the examined life, and even as they get older, maintain a sense of curiosity about life. Whether through intense conversation or solitary mind-wandering, creatives look at the world around them and want to know why, and how, it is the way it is.


They people-watch.



Observant by nature and curious about the lives of others, creative types often love to people-watch -- and they may generate some of their best ideas from it.


"[Marcel] Proust spent almost his whole life people-watching, and he wrote down his observations, and it eventually came out in his books," says Kaufman. "For a lot of writers, people-watching is very important ... They're keen observers of human nature."


They take risks.


Part of doing creative work is taking risks, and many creative types thrive off of taking risks in various aspects of their lives.


"There is a deep and meaningful connection between risk taking and creativity and it's one that's often overlooked," contributor Steven Kotler wrote in Forbes. "Creativity is the act of making something from nothing. It requires making public those bets first placed by imagination. This is not a job for the timid. Time wasted, reputation tarnished, money not well spent -- these are all by-products of creativity gone awry."


They view all of life as an opportunity for self-expression.


Nietzsche believed that one's life and the world should be viewed as a work of art. Creative types may be more likely to see the world this way, and to constantly seek opportunities for self-expression in everyday life.


"Creative expression is self-expression," says Kaufman. "Creativity is nothing more than an individual expression of your needs, desires and uniqueness."


They follow their true passions.



Creative people tend to be intrinsically motivated -- meaning that they're motivated to act from some internal desire, rather than a desire for external reward or recognition. Psychologists have shown that creative people are energized by challenging activities, a sign of intrinsic motivation, and the research suggests that simply thinking of intrinsic reasons to perform an activity may be enough to boost creativity.


"Eminent creators choose and become passionately involved in challenging, risky problems that provide a powerful sense of power from the ability to use their talents,"write M.A. Collins and T.M. Amabile in The Handbook of Creativity.


They get out of their own heads.


Kaufman argues that another purpose of daydreaming is to help us to get out of our own limited perspective and explore other ways of thinking, which can be an important asset to creative work.


"Daydreaming has evolved to allow us to let go of the present," says Kaufman. "The same brain network associated with daydreaming is the brain network associated with theory of mind -- I like calling it the 'imagination brain network' -- it allows you to imagine your future self, but it also allows you to imagine what someone else is thinking."


Research has also suggested that inducing "psychological distance" -- that is, taking another person's perspective or thinking about a question as if it was unreal or unfamiliar -- can boost creative thinking.


They lose track of the time.


Creative types may find that when they're writing, dancing, painting or expressing themselves in another way, they get "in the zone," or what's known as a flow state, which can help them to create at their highest level. Flow is a mental state when an individual transcends conscious thought to reach a heightened state of effortless concentration and calmness. When someone is in this state, they're practically immune to any internal or external pressures and distractions that could hinder their performance.


You get into the flow state when you're performing an activity you enjoy that you're good at, but that also challenges you -- as any good creative project does.


"[Creative people] have found the thing they love, but they've also built up the skill in it to be able to get into the flow state," says Kaufman. "The flow state requires a match between your skill set and the task or activity you're engaging in."


They surround themselves with beauty.



Creatives tend to have excellent taste, and as a result, they enjoy being surrounded by beauty.


A study recently published in the journal Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity, and the Arts showed that musicians -- including orchestra musicians, music teachers, and soloists -- exhibit a high sensitivity and responsiveness to artistic beauty.


They connect the dots.


If there's one thing that distinguishes highly creative people from others, it's the ability to see possibilities where others don't -- or, in other words, vision. Many great artists and writers have said that creativity is simply the ability to connect the dots that others might never think to connect.


In the words of Steve Jobs:



"Creativity is just connecting things. When you ask creative people how they did something, they feel a little guilty because they didn't really do it, they just saw something. It seemed obvious to them after a while. That's because they were able to connect experiences they've had and synthesize new things."



They constantly shake things up.


Diversity of experience, more than anything else, is critical to creativity, says Kaufman. Creatives like to shake things up, experience new things, and avoid anything that makes life more monotonous or mundane.


"Creative people have more diversity of experiences, and habit is the killer of diversity of experience," says Kaufman.


They make time for mindfulness.



Creative types understand the value of a clear and focused mind -- because their work depends on it. Many artists, entrepreneurs, writers and other creative workers, such as David Lynch, have turned to meditation as a tool for tapping into their most creative state of mind.


And science backs up the idea that mindfulness really can boost your brain power in a number of ways. A 2012 Dutch study suggested that certain meditation techniques can promote creative thinking. And mindfulness practices have been linked withimproved memory and focus, better emotional well-being, reduced stress and anxiety, and improved mental clarity -- all of which can lead to better creative thought.


 


This list has been expanded into the upcoming book, "Wired to Create: Unravelling the Mysteries of the Creative Mind," by Carolyn Gregoire and Scott Barry Kaufman. Click here to pre-order on Amazon.


A version of this article originally appeared here.


 


Also on HuffPost: 


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Artists Share Images Of Peace And Solidarity After Paris Attacks

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As Paris and the world continue to reel from the devastating attacks on the city Friday, artists everywhere have been taking to social media to share images and messages of solidarity, hope and peace.


One such image, created by French graphic designer Jean Jullien, has become a symbol of unity following the attacks and has been shared by thousands worldwide.


Jullien, who had been on vacation when the attacks occurred, says he came up with the image -- an Eiffel Tower standing in the middle of a peace sign -- in an effort to express the barrage of emotions he was feeling in the aftermath of the tragedy.


"I thought we needed a message for peace," he told CNN.



A photo posted by @jean_jullien on




On Saturday, the Facebook page for Le Petit Prince ("The Little Prince"), the beloved 1943 book penned by French writer Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, shared its own take on Jullien’s image.


That picture has been liked by more than 150,000 people to date.





A series of powerful illustrations created by Joann Sfar, a cartoonist for Charlie Hebdo, has also been shared widely. 


"Friends from the whole world, thank you for #prayforparis, but we don't need more religion," Sfar, 44, wrote in an illustration shared on Instagram on Friday. "Our faith goes to music! Kisses! Life! Champagne and Joy! #Parissaboutlife."


In January, the Charlie Hebdo offices in Paris were stormed by gunmen. Before Friday, the horrific incident had been the deadliest terrorist attack in France in two decades.



A photo posted by Joann Sfar (@joannsfar) on




Social media has also been flooded over the weekend with many other images, created by both professional and amateur artists, that pay tribute to the lives lost in Paris and call for unity in the face of tragedy.







A photo posted by andre saraiva (@baronandre) on
















Also on HuffPost: 


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Watch Bryan Cranston's 'Malcolm In The Middle' Character Morph Into Walter White

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When Bryan Cranston gained worldwide fame as meth kingpin Walter White on "Breaking Bad," everybody commented on what a radical departure it was from his work as Hal, the father on family sitcom "Malcolm in the Middle."


But a new promo video from Comedy Central UK, advertising an upcoming set of "Malcolm in the Middle" re-runs, has twisted that theory seriously on its head, suggesting that Hal wasn't quite as mild-mannered as we all thought.


The video, uploaded to YouTube this week, is captioned: “Before he was Walter White, he was the Dad in Malcolm In The Middle.” Let's just say it puts Hal in a completely different light.


With the knowledge that Cranston went on to play White, some of the innocent things he said back then take on a much more sinister tone. Watch it above.


 




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Viral Poem Urging Prayers For World, Not Just Paris, Strikes A Chord

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Karuna Ezara Parikh, a blogger from New Delhi, put her thoughts on the Paris attacks into verse, and it became the poem heard around the globe.


"It is not Paris we should pray for. It is the world," her poem, which she posted on Instagram Saturday, begins. She urges us to keep Paris in our hearts but to think about other terror-besieged places, like Beirut and Baghdad, as well.



A photo posted by Karuna E Parikh (@karunaezara) on




Read More Paris Coverage



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The Weirdest Version Of MJ’s ‘Smooth Criminal’ You’ll Ever Hear

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It’s Michael Jackson … like you’ve never heard him before.


The King of Pop’s “Smooth Criminal” has been remixed for a barrel organ.


Frenchman Patrick Mathis filmed himself playing the 1987 smash hit on the bizarre instrument. The resulting video is quickly going viral, after racking up more than half a million views in four days.





Barrel organs are a favorite ofstreet performers across the world. The instrument works by taking in sheet music that rotates around peg-studded cylinders; the cylinders block off air flow to certain pipes to produce the sound.


They’re usually used to play simpler songs, so Mathis arranged his version of MJ’s track himself.


And you can hear how it compares to the original here:





Also on HuffPost:


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Freaky Girls Of The Sideshow

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When you’re known as "Percilla the Monkey Girl" or "Julia the Baboon Lady,” your life is anything but ordinary.


But the sideshow life could be empowering for women who were born different -- and those who demanded to be different. So says Ilise “The Lady Aye” Carter and Marc “Backwash” Hartzman, two featured speakers at the Morbid Anatomy Museum, who join us on the HuffPost Weird News Podcast


LISTEN: Freak Girls of the Sideshow


Hartzman, the author of  "American Sideshow," documents the lives of midway stars past and present. Carter, a writer, sword swallower and burlesque performer, explores the fringe side of show business through a feminist lens.


Part of the allure for these women in these show was taking control of the word "Freak," turning it from an insult into a badge of honor -- the right to be be different.


Check out photos of many of these ladies below as you listen to our guests. Many of the woman below were sideshow stars. Other starred in movies and plays that borrowed heavily from that tradition. It's an art form that is a curious reflection of American tastes and obsessions as it has evolved.


Also, check out the Morbid Anatomy Museum. It's one of our favorite spots in Brooklyn. And thanks for listening. 





 LOOK: Freaky Girls of the American Sideshow


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This Star Wars Shrine Can Now Be Rented For Just $50 A Night

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Trust your feelings by booking a night at this incredible Star Wars shrine.


British mailman Dave Oldbury has splashed out an astonishing $225,000 on packing his Southampton, Hampshire, home full of memorabilia.


The 46-year-old has more than 500 figurines, numerous posters, books, and life-size Storm Troopers, according to the BBC.



His body is covered in tattoos of Obi-Wan Kenobi and Darth Vader.


And he’s also traveled the world to track down some 9,000 cast and crew members to get their autographs.


Oldbury has offered fellow Star Wars nuts the chance to stay at his home in the run up to the UK release of the new “The Force Awakens” movie, on Dec. 17, for just over $50 per night.




He listed what he dubbed “The Solo Suite” on Homestay.com.


It’s described as being in a neighborhood “under control of the Empire and is protected by an energy shield that is able to withstand any bombardment.”


House rules include not using lightsabers indoors, nor going down a side path which “leads to the Dark Side.”



Most importantly, he said that visitors must “always let the Wookie win.”


Oldbury said that he’d gotten to hang out with his heroes from the films while getting their signatures, and that he could give his guests “the inside scoop.”


He said he became obsessed with the franchise as a child, and his dedication to the cause has snowballed ever since.



He admitted it was "not going to happen," but revealed his ideal guest would be actress Carrie Fisher dressed in her slave Princess Leia outfit.


And he said that guests would "go to bed dreaming of Star Wars and you wake up looking at Star Wars."


But those hoping to stay at the home look likely to be disappointed, at least for the time being. There currently doesn't appear to be any availability.


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The Bangladeshi Children Who Transform Landfills Into Playgrounds

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"The landscape around us is constantly changing," photographer Farhad Rahman explained in an email to The Huffington Post. "The skyline is getting busier, and even then there never seems to be enough space. In all this, where will children play?" 


"I am always searching for a place where I can find children playing with their own freedom," Rahman added.


He found it in Bangladesh, in the new land created by draining bodies of water and refilling them with sand and soil -- or worse, garbage -- to make room for the country's expanding population. Before building on these sites can start, while the soil in the pits settles, there is a period of in-between, when local children transform the empty areas into their own personal playgrounds. 



Rahman befriended a group of kids who frequently played on a landfill site, documenting their imaginative rituals and carefree games, camera in hand. Despite the looming reality that in no short time their playground would become a construction site, the children in his photos seem immersed in a reality all their own.


Burying themselves in the sand, disguising themselves with brown paper bags, biking and tumbling and falling over on purpose, the Bangladeshi children capture through still images the intense vitality of a fantasy-fueled childhood. Rahman's white-tinged landscapes, where land and sky are nearly indistinguishable, feel like they're documenting a dream. And in a way, they are. 



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Watch A Rare, Hilarious Kurt Vonnegut Lecture

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In a newly discovered lecture given by Kurt Vonnegut in 1970, the author kicks off his talk with a joke that’d make more sense in a stand up routine:


"I left Indianapolis following puberty [...] I learned to walk around looking tough. Because everybody had to do that. They’re still doing it. Walking around looking very tough. Because something might happen, you know?"


The audience, a crowd of New York University students, laughs heartily. Between his jokes, Vonnegut flatly shares more tragic scenes from his life: he was raised by a maid, and his mother -- toward the end of her life -- was put on barbiturates. The crowd’s laughter trails off abruptly, then Vonnegut shifts gears again, telling an anecdote about an afternoon when his parents broke into a racetrack to drive endless laps around it in their Oldsmobile. It was, his father told him, the best day of their marriage.


Vonnegut’s ability to couch sadness in life’s funny absurdities -- a skill that comes to live in his novels, but which seems also to come to him naturally -- is on display in the lecture, produced and animated by Blank on Blank.


The lecture also reveals a few of his tips for writing. "I heard a writer is lucky because he cures himself every day with his work," he says. "What everybody is well advised to do is to not write about your own life [...] you will be writing about your own life anyway, but you won’t know it."


For more pithy wisdom, watch the video above.


Also on HuffPost:


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A Different Kind Of Peep Show Explores Sex And Identity Before The AIDS Crisis

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Somewhere in New York City right now stand two dark booths, reminiscent of the Times Square peep show booths of yore. Above them reads a red neon sign: "Alone at Last." Enter one and your deepest fantasies will become reality -- a virtual reality.


Go ahead. Envision your fantasy seduction. Does it involve a man or a woman, or both? Do you appreciate a good striptease? A foreign accent? An innocent facade or some dirty talk? Artists Pat Ivers and Emily Armstrong developed their concept for "Alone at Last" in 1981, just before awareness of the AIDS epidemic truly spread. Both were pro-sex feminists immersed in the judgment-free sexual exploration of the time.


They also had a lot of friends in low-lit places. 


Back in '81, Ivers and Armstrong enlisted a variety of nightlife personalities to perform a single ritual of seduction before the camera. Today, viewers who step into Ivers and Armstrong's modern day peep show will be privy to their temptations. Participants enter a darkened booth and answer a series of questions aimed at determining their ideal seducer. Then, on a screen, the seducer or seducers appear to perform their raunchiest invitation, all behind the red, velvet curtain of the booth. 


Some performances last 30 seconds, others up to seven minutes. The raunchy screen tests offer a glimpse into an era of freedom, performance and fluidity that most Millennials can only imagine. They show fantasy on screen, not as a sugary-sweet love scene between husband and wife, nor as a dull hardcore pounding in a misogyny-addled porno, but as it is truly experienced by group of select individuals.


I reached out the artists Ivers and Armstrong to learn more. 



Can you describe the sexual climate in 1981, when the project was first conceived? How has the atmosphere changed over the past 30 or more years?


Pat Ivers: It was freewheeling and wide open. I just saw the 40th anniversary "Horses" show with Patti Smith and it just reminded me how utterly unfazed people were, back then, with fluid sexuality. No one blinked, it was all about the feel of abandon, celebration and exploration. Downtown New York in late '70s, early '80s, was refreshingly free of sexism and homophobia. It was a time where everyone breathed, and felt wildly free. There was a real Dionysian feel to things but also a lot of innocence.


We had absolutely no idea of the horrors that were ahead of us once the plague of AIDS came. Now, you have safe sex and thinking twice, all good. In truth, there was darkness back then as well, but the dizzying freedom to sleep with anyone whenever you wanted to -- that's gone.


Emily Armstrong: We shot this material in the moment before AIDS was identified.  Some of our friends were sick with a mysterious aliment, but no one knew what it was.  Lots of sexual experimentation was going on with no judgement and no consequences. People were doing theater, making videos, designing clothes, playing music, dancing and DJing in clubs. Participation was everything. So much more was going on than traditional girlfriend/boyfriend dramas. For the people who wanted it there were on-premises sex clubs, gay and straight. Cheap rents made it all possible.


But, having a huge swath of your friends suddenly die changed everything. 


Can you elaborate on your identifying as pro-sex feminists? What was the dialogue surrounding pornography that led to this distinction? 


EA: For me it was about being a feminist and still liking boys. I wanted to be the kind of girl that could front a band or own a store and still dig having a cute boyfriend. A women could be the sexual predator, the huntress. A feminist didn’t wait for some guy to ask her out.  


PI: There was controversy among some feminists about relationships with men and pornography and what constituted oppression. We believed that freedom of sexual expression was at the very center of women's liberation and experience. So we were pro-erotic, pro-exploration, pro-power of the pussy as some called it. "Orgasm is the body's natural call to feminist politics," as Naomi Wolf more recently said. We called that early.


In a statement describing the performance, you mention the romance, desire and manipulation involved in these '70s era peep show encounters. What do you mean by manipulation? 


PI: We had an expression back then, "Charm is currency." No one had any money and sometimes manipulation was a survival tactic. We recognized that as a potential element in any relationship, especially erotic ones which is always a negotiation about power. Who's on top, well you never know till you are in the moment, do you?




As far as the performance goes, how did you select your seducers? Are they actors? Real people? Do they disrobe? How far does the seduction go? 


EA: Pat and I had worked in nightclubs for years videotaping punk rock bands, doing video shows and being hired as artists to create video installations. The seducers came from our circle of nightclubbing friends: musicians, artists, bartenders, poets, coat check girls and performance artists. We held open calls, asking our friends to come and seduce the camera


Some of the seducers stripped, some danced, some sang, some told dirty stories, some told childhood memories. There is nudity and also innocence. No two seductions are the same. They are sexy, funny, raunchy and poignant.  


PI: All the seducers were Downtown originals, bartenders, bouncers and doormen from clubs we frequented, musicians and poets we admired, and friends and friends of friends. Haoui Montaug, doorman extraordinaire (and one of the seducers) used to call it the Fabulous Five Hundred, the people who made the scene. We found our seducers there, through word of mouth and a flier we gave out. That was our equivalent of the Internet -- paper fliers. Did some disrobe? Of course they did. They were trying to seduce you!


How does this experience diverge from the traditional way people now engage with sex alone -- watching porn on the Internet? 


EA: Back then everybody wanted to do something: have a band, perform at Club 57, read poetry, design clothes or walk in a fashion show … our seducers were comfortable performing and being out there, participating. The idea of watching porn at home alone would have been anathema to them. More likely they would have all watched the porn, wrote a musical comedy, made some outrageous costumes and performed it at the Mudd Club.


PI: It is all about context. When we created this project, it was 1981, pre-Internet, pre--Match.com, even pre-cable. I had worked with Nam June Paik and Brian Eno on video projects concerned with the manipulation of television and the nature of the medium. With this project, we wanted our seducers to shatter conventional ideas of romance and sex roles as they were being portrayed on network television and seize control of the narrative. Lots of our friends worked in what we called "the Adult Entertainment business," so for us, utilizing that visual metaphor of a peep show booth (where many of our pals actually worked) was very exciting. Conveying our own truth, not the banal cliches of pornography or popular culture but our own stories. Then compelling a viewer to take part in it and feel that power of seduction. It kind of closed the loop for us.




What do you think is one of the biggest misconceptions about sex in the 1970s?


PI: Well, it was incredibly fun, fantastically erotic, but dangerous, dark and scary at times, too. For most of us, that was the devil's deal. You cant experience the light without the dark, but with the onset of AIDS, it became very, very dark.


EA: There was a big difference between sex in the late '70s and the free love of the late '60s. Unless it was a satirical skit at the Pyramid, there were no flowers in anybody’s hair, no songs of let-the-sunshine-in. NYC was gritty and dangerous and our seducers worked around that, having the fun-est time, but always looking over their shoulders. We knew we were living on the edge.


What could contemporary culture learn from the '70s regarding desire and expression? 


EA: Lighten up? But that’s easy to say with the economic pressures of  contemporary cultureToday’s emphasis on gender identity has its roots in the sexual expression of the "Alone at Last" era. The easy-going fluidity of 1981, boys wearing makeup, girls dressing butch, were a preview to today's deeper gender identity exploration.


PI: Don't judge, just be. I'm starting to see a little of the language police rearing its head. It reminds me a little of Andrea Dworkin at her most extreme. I was chastised for using the word straight and gay in the project. Chill and rub up against each other and everyone relax a little. "Alone at Last" reflects a moment in time and that was how it felt.


What do you hope to communicate through the exhibition?


 PI: Being in the moment, being open to any experience, but I guess now, bring a condom in your back pocket.


EA: Me and Pat’s work is all about capturing the culture of a time, as we do in one of our other projects, the GoNightclubbing Archive which includes 115 punk band performances from 1975 to 1980. We followed Woody Guthrie’s advice: "The best way to get to know any bunch of people is to go and listen to their music."


"Alone at Last" captures a cultural moment, the blink of the eye before AIDS decimated NYC’s creative downtown community.  The seducers are deliciously relaxed, whether stripping or telling a funny raunchy story. The piece captures the free-wheeling, no-hassle, creative and sexual freedom of 1981.


"Alone at Last," a feature of the GoNightclubbing Archive, runs at Howl! Happening: an Arturo Vega Project until Dec. 6. 



 


 


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There Are Currently 3,594 People Teaching Bob Ross' Style Of Painting

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Bob Ross is back. The soft-spoken lover of landscapes may have died more than two decades ago, but in the hinterlands of the Internet, Ross is very much alive.


His "Joy of Painting" series -- the instructional painting show that aired on PBS from 1983 to 1994 -- recently hit the streaming platform Twitch, where Ross' unfiltered brand of happiness was met with a surprisingly appropriate response for an online community dominated by gamers -- positivity. A whopping 5.6 million people tuned in there. "TJOP" is also on Hulu and YouTube, where the first episode alone has been viewed over a million times since it was uploaded. Avid Ross followers can be found using the #KEEPBOB hashtag and by visiting the relatively active "Official Bob Ross Fan Studio" on Facebook. Fan theories about Ross' universe abound. As do ASMR videos.


There's just no denying the resurgence of Bob.


More on Vocativ: The Bizarre New World Records From Guinness


 


But Ross' disciples aren't just hanging out on the web. According to Vocativ's Jennings Brown and Allee Manning, there are IRL Ross protégés too, part of a 3,549-person deep world of Certified Ross Instructors spanning 39 countries around the world. They are the living, breathing people devoted to preserving Ross' happy little trees in his absence.



Becoming a Certified Ross Instructor is not exactly easy. Aspiring teachers must pass a Bob Ross Certification class. For those in the U.S., the only bona fide certifier is located in Smyrna Beach, Florida, run by Doug Hallgren and five other trainers. Students there embark on a three-week course (which costs around $395, not including materials and lodging), hoping to obtain one of three types of instructor certifications: Floral, Wildlife or Landscape. 


"It’s three weeks of grueling training," Mickey Cline, a Tennessee-based instructor explained to Vocativ. "You make 26 or 27 paintings. It’s pretty fast-paced and pretty hard. If you are not paying attention, you get lost."



The certifications are granted on behalf of Bob Ross Inc., the property of Annette Kowalski, Ross' longtime business partner. The organization produces and manages how-to books, videos, art supplies certifications and licensing based on the legacy of "TJOP." If you've come across a Bob Ross paint kit at your local craft store, you have Kowalski to thank. 


So how does the Bob Ross empire feel about the Internet's sudden love of all things Ross?


"Twitch.TV woke up the world," Joan Kowalski, Bob Ross Inc.'s media director and Annette’s daughter, explained to Vocativ. "They made everybody remember their childhood again even though we’ve always been here. The publicity has blown their minds. We are freakin’ out. It’s amazing what’s going on."


Bob Ross Inc. is in the process of producing new "TJOP" courses to be streamed on Twitch in early 2016. If today's bevy of Bob Ross parody videos and quote generators is any indicator of his blooming popularity -- these classes will be a hit. While some may watch with ambitions of becoming a certified instructor, others will cozy up under a blanket and simply let the zen wisdom of Ross wash over them.


Echoing the immortal words of Ross himself, "No pressure. Just relax and watch it happen."


For more on the happy gospel of Bob Ross, check out the entire Vocativ article here. 



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Liam Payne Proves He's The Biggest 'Harry Potter' Fan With This Purchase

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It's no secret that Liam Payne is the No. 1 direction "Harry Potter" fan.


The singer has openly proclaimed his love for the series and even had a "Harry Potter" cake for his birthday. And in an admission to Radio 1 Breakfast Show host Nick Grimshaw, Payne proved his true love for Potter once and for all. 


"Mate, I've got the thingy in my garden, haven't I? I bought the ["Harry Potter"] car and I put it in my garden," said the 22-year-old Payne to Grimshaw. "You know, the blue car, the flying one? I bought one because I’m a bit of a geek." 





(The "Harry Potter" talk starts at about the 6:25 mark in the video above.)


This is the car Payne is talking about, which is featured in "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets:" 





Payne also admitted that he would be in Gryffindor after a fan asked about his Hogwarts house.  


"I did this test -- there's a website. Me and Andy did this, there's a test on the Internet you can go and do to be in Hogwarts and I did it," Payne said on the Breakfast Show. "He got Hufflepuff and I got Gryffindor and he was so annoyed." 


It seems that J.K. Rowling is also a fan of One Direction, as it's rumored she has an ode to the band in her novel, Career of Evil. One of the book's characters, Niall, apparently got his name from 1D's Niall Horan. 






Hopefully, Payne will at least get a mention (or a character) in Rowling's next book.


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'Good Girls Revolt' Is A Promising Portrait Of A Newsroom In Flux

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The workplace is a fertile ground for television. The forced interaction of dissimilar people, the built-in hierarchies, and the soul-deadening florescent lighting all make for a potent playground for screenwriters and showrunners. "The Office," in both its U.K. and U.S. iterations, captured the ennui -- and the secret heart -- of dreary middle management. "Party Down" gave us delightful slackers made to don bow ties in the name of making rent. "Mad Men" gave us, well, "Mad Men," and all its delectable period costuming and quiet drama.


One new workplace-driven show picks up, in a sense, just as the aforementioned AMC drama leaves us with Don Draper and a bottle of Coke. The pilot episode of "Good Girls Revolt," an Amazon Prime original, follows the grind of a '70s-era newsroom. There, the celebrated -- and all male -- reporters get praise from the public and higher-ups, while the female "researchers" do the dirty work of journalism without ever seeing their bylines grace a page.


The show takes its name from the nonfiction work that inspired it, The Good Girls Revolt, a 2013 telling of how Newsweek’s female staff sued their company, citing gender-based discrimination in hiring and promotion. Aside from a name, both the U.S. covers and the promo card on Amazon feature hot pink, handwritten-style text, which feels gimmicky. Can the ladies only revolt if they do it with furiously scrawled lipstick?


Despite the packaging, though, the pilot shows us an intriguing setup. A young Nora Ephron (who seems to be one of the few characters with a real-life counterpart and is played by Grace Gummer, who is likeable even in a questionable wig) starts her first day at the fictional News of the Week magazine in New York, giving the audience a fresh look at the environment in a way only a newbie can. She meets the embodiment of free love counterculture in Patti (Genevieve Angelson), the rulebook-following Jane (Anna Camp) and the quieter, married Cindy (Erin Darke), who’s facing a pregnancy scare. All the women, despite their differences in temperament, are shown as having journalistic chops, but their hard work is overshadowed by the men in the bullpen -- the focus of the news magazine, both literally and culturally.






From the #millennial perspective, what strikes most in the pilot is just how overt -- and largely unquestioned -- the sexism in the News of the Week offices is. There’s a moment in which Nora points out the uselessness of Jane and Patti fighting over a story: "It’s like you guys are fighting over the lower bunk bed in jail." Regardless of which story makes the cover, neither of their names will be attached to it. The episode ends (spoiler alerts ahead) with Patti and Cindy at a meeting of feminists. They listen to a group member’s sordid confession that she’s been sleeping with her boss. "He says if I break up with him, it will be too distracting for him at work." It's worth noting the group's leader (Joy Bryant, playing real-life badass Eleanor Holmes Norton) is a woman of color, but we don't see many others in the pilot, notably on the News of the Week staff. It will be interesting to see this dynamic play out -- if the writers address the additional hardships faced by nonwhite women in the workplace, it would be timely: issues of intersectional feminism are as relevant in 2015 as they must have been in 1970.


Today’s media landscape certainly isn’t perfect in terms of gender parity, but it’s easy to forget the strides made in areas too often taken for granted now. Being able to work while pregnant, for example.


Despite its pilot showing on Amazon, the future of "Good Girls Revolt" is uncertain -- it's part of a host of shows vying for a full-season treatment on the streaming network. It's an interesting premise we haven't seen from Hulu or Netflix, both of which give us full seasons to like or to pan instead of just one episode. The pilot of "Good Girls Revolt" had a few blips -- this isn’t going to be as nuanced as, say, "Mad Men," or as artful as Amazon’s prize-winning "Transparent" -- but overall showed promise, and set up characters and tension that I’d like to see played out over a full season. Here’s hoping Amazon will give voice to the unheard women of the newsrooms.


 


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See Who Got Married This Weekend!

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Our readers who tied the knot this weekend celebrated on the East Coast, the West Coast and everywhere in between.


No matter the location, one theme remained the same -- a commitment to love. Check out some beautiful pics from their celebrations below: 



If you go to a wedding or get married yourself, hashtag your photos #HPrealweddings or e-mail one to us afterwards so we can feature it on the site!


For photos from other real weddings in 2015, check out the slideshow below:


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Oxford Dictionary's Word Of The Year Is An Emoji

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They say a picture paints a thousand words. This sentiment has been interpreted and misinterpreted countless ways, namely as evidence that pictures are somehow superior to words, in terms of what they can communicate. And anyone who’s ever texted with emojis -- which is to say anyone currently in possession of an iPhone, which is to say the majority of Americans -- knows that this can be true.


When you communicate text, you can’t convey the intent behind your words using facial or tonal cues. Unless, of course, you use a glyph standing in for a facial expression. Or, you know, a plump, phallic eggplant. Emojis provide a solution to texting miscommunications, which is one explanation for their quick proliferation. They’ve been embraced almost wholeheartedly by the public, but haven’t gotten much validation from linguistic communities regarding their usefulness. Until now.


Oxford Dictionaries announced its word of the year today, and unlike past years (2014 was the year of vape), its choice isn’t a word, per se -- at least one not belonging to the English language. An especially controversial choice, even for the notoriously press-hungry dictionary, 2015’s word of the year is the emoji known as "Face with Tears of Joy." Or,  .


In a statement about the choice, Casper Grathwohl, President of Oxford Dictionaries, wrote: "You can see how traditional alphabet scripts have been struggling to meet the rapid-fire, visually focused demands of 21st-century communication. It’s not surprising that a pictographic script like emoji has stepped in to fill those gaps -- it’s flexible, immediate, and infuses tone beautifully."


According to EpicTimes, the "word" won out over contenders, like "Dark Web" and "on fleek," confusing but mostly amusing language lovers.










"Can the dictionary be a troll," writer Rachel Syme tweeted. Apparently, it can. For an article I wrote earlier this year about teen language trends, I spoke with a few linguists about the "language" of emoji, and whether it functioned in the same way other languages do. Few were convinced. Particularly adamant was sociolinguistics scholar Lauren B. Collister, who said emojis were akin to tone indicators, not, you know, words.


"Emojis, while they do have some basic conventions for their use, do not have the regular, recursive grammatical structures that are a fundamental part of human language," she told The Huffington Post. "Furthermore, while some emojis do have cross-cultural meanings, each symbol has different cultural and even individual interpretations. There is a cloud of meaning around each emoji that makes it difficult to pin down its exact meaning."


Regardless of your thoughts on emojis, they seem to have earned semipermanent recognition by one of the trusted gatekeepers of language. It’s worth noting that Oxford Dictionaries is an umbrella organization under which the traditional print dictionary, and the more nebulous online dictionary, fall. The latter allows words in and out of its electronic pages fluidly, while the former has higher standards -- most importantly, whether a word has stood the test of time -- for admission.


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In Paris' 11th Arrondissement, Parents Help Children Draw Their Emotions

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PARIS -- The French Ministry of Education has sent suggestions to educators on how to discuss the events of Nov. 13 with their students, but some parents have taken the matter into their own hands. In Paris' 11th arrondissement, one mom, Kaoru Watanabe, invited all the children from the neighborhood to draw their emotions.



Among the images were broken hearts and gravestones -- but also suns, whole red hearts and the Peace for Paris drawing by Jean Jullien. There seem to be as many drawings as there have been emotions in the days following the attacks. These drawings, more than anything, allow these children to express the impossible.


"I was with my two girls at a friend's house when we heard the news," Watanabe, who lives on Rue de Charonne, told HuffPost France. "That night, there were families from the building outside with their kids. They didn't see anything, but they heard what was happening. They had to walk back to their homes from across the neighborhood."


"The children in the building are really close-knit, and I felt that they couldn't express everything they felt," she went on. "They were stressed. For instance, my 4-year-old daughter doesn't want us to watch TV anymore."


To offer a way to release these feelings, Watanabe decided to use a technique she knows well: art therapy.


"I offer a kind of mediation through art, when there are difficult events to work through," said Watanabe, who is the creator of the website Ki-Wa, meaning "Joy and Harmony" in Japanese. She said she had already used this technique in her building before, with success.


Marie Sophie Boivin, one mother from the neighborhood, joined Watanabe right away. "It's my oldest daughter who told me that her friend was organizing this," Boivin told HuffPost France. "Rather than us all staying closed up in the apartment, we wanted everyone to get together so that they could draw. It's something they do pretty naturally."


Watanabe invited nine children to her apartment and gave them pastels to draw with. "I told them they could work alone or in a group, and they preferred to work collectively. They said they needed to be together," she said. "They're all between 4 and 13 years old. They don't understand what's happening, but they feel the fear or the anger. It's their neighborhood, and they're very sensitive. Instead of hanging on to their emotion, having developed a kind of trauma, it's much better that they express it, in order to heal themselves."


"My 7-year-old daughter drew a tombstone with people crying, but also with many bouquets of flowers on the grave. This is her way of saying, 'Whatever happens, there will always be joy,'" Boivin said. "The reaction of each child depends greatly on their age. A little 12-year-old boy wrote 'world war,' and my 14-year-old daughter, Violette, is much more moved. She realizes more than her younger sister."


This fresco is still in Watanabe's home. She's hoping to offer it to the mayor of her arrondissement.


"The kids were so proud of themselves. They seemed proud and united," she said. "They're just children. They want peace, love. They need to be able to live with some calm."



Read More Paris Coverage



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Watch The Paris Attack Sites Blossom Into Memorials In These Heart-Rending GIFs

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As Paris heals, the wounds left by Friday's attacks are blossoming into tear-jerking memorials that remind us just how far-reaching the tragedy is.


At three of the attack sites popular among young Parisians -- the cafe-bar Le Carillon, the Cambodian and Vietnamese restaurant Le Petit Cambodge and the Bataclan concert venue -- mourners have left flowers, candles and tokens of love honoring the 129 killed and 350 injured. Watch the outpourings of love engulf the sites in the GIFs below. 


 







Read More Paris Coverage



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