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Hooray! The NYC Porn Festival Is Returning!

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The New York City Porn Festival, an annual event that has become synonymous with summertime for queer and non-queer people alike in the Big Apple, is returning once again this weekend -- and we couldn't be more pumped about it.


Presented by Pornhub, the premiere festival of sex will take place in Brooklyn and feature the works of renowned artist Amalia Ulman, James Franco andTim O’Keefe's band, Daddy, and a panel including legendary porn star Ron Jeremy alongside NYC nightlife icon Gerry Visco -- just to name a few.


“We need to get off our computers and engage with the real issues,” the festival's organizer Simon Leahy told The Huffington Post. “We need to visually see — collectively. There is no shame in this. Whatever you’re [sexually] into, it’s ok. But what we need, as a society, is to make things healthier — for a more equal ideal — to understand the reasons why we’re turned on by what we are.”


What more information or tickets for the NYC Porn Festival? Head here.

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Artists Are Painting With Polluted Water For An Important Reason

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Artists in the Philippines turned dirty river water into striking works of art and ignited a conversation about pollution at the same time. 


The nine painters, who were commissioned by the Filipino ad agency TBWA\SMP, used gritty pigments sourced from the rivers of Manila to create 22 pieces of art -- each one highlighting a different scene from a river bank in the area.


"At first it was difficult because it was the first time I experienced using dirty pigments, and second was the smell," painter JC Vargas told Reuters. "Although the pigments have already been decontaminated, the smell of the sludge was still present, so that was a big challenge for us artists."


According to Greenpeace, at least 50 of the 421 rivers in the Philippines have been declared "biologically dead" because they've been depleted of oxygen and therefore can't support very many marine lifeforms. 


The project, which is currently on display in a Manila mall, is already raising funds to make a difference. The pieces will be sold starting from around $854 each to support a local charity dedicated to cleaning polluted rivers. 


Learn more about the story in the video above. 

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'Mary Poppins' Returns To The Big Screen With Some 'Hamilton' Magic

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No spoonful of sugar required to make this news go down. 


Everybody's personal fave Emily Blunt and "Hamilton" maestro Lin-Manuel Miranda have officially signed on to star in Disney's "Mary Poppins" sequel scheduled for release on Dec. 25, 2018. That means you have two years to learn how to spell supercalifragilisticexpialidocious (we copied and pasted). 


"Mary Poppins Returns" will pick up with P. L. Travers' iconic nanny (Blunt), as she reunites with the children, Jane and Michael Banks, whom she once duped into taking medicine. From the synopsis, it sounds like Blunt's Poppins could not have returned at a better time, as Michael now has three young children and the family has recently suffered a personal loss. 


"Through her unique magical skills, and with the aid of her friend Jack (Miranda), [Mary Poppins] helps the family rediscover the joy and wonder missing in their lives," reads the Disney press release


The sequel will be directed and produced by Rob Marshall, who recently helmed Disney's big-budget adaptation of "Into the Woods" starring Blunt. Mark Shaiman will produce an all-new score for the film, as well co-write original songs with Tony Award-winner and frequent collaborator Scott Wittman. 


“I am truly humbled and honored to be asked by Disney to bring P.L. Travers’ further adventures to the screen," Marshall said in a statement. "The iconic original film means so much to me personally, and I look forward to creating an original movie musical that can bring Mary Poppins, and her message that childlike wonder can be found in even the most challenging of times, to a whole new generation.”


This is undeniably exciting, but did NO ONE alert Tobias Fünke?




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Want To See What Toxic Masculinity Looks Like? Watch 'The Bachelorette.'

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On last night's episode of "The Bachelorette," viewers witnessed the birth of an alpha-male-reality-TV villain in the form of self-described "man" (subtext: real manly man) Chad. 


Chad is buff. He has a suitcase full of protein powder. He eats a lot of meat. He constantly does pull-ups. He hates men who have feelings and thinks women who ask men to share their feelings are "naggy." He knows beautiful women, er, "girls," just want "a man," and he seems to believe he is uniquely qualified to fulfill that role. Essentially, Chad is a caricature right out of the He-Man Woman Hater's Club or an MRA sub-reddit -- toxic masculinity, personified. 


When we talk about toxic masculinity, we're referring to the worst parts of our society's prevailing definition of what makes a man a man. Physical prowess, financial success and acquiring (yes, acquiring, because women are ultimately seen as objects) a conventionally hot girlfriend are rewarded. Emotional intelligence is not. That's how we end up with men like Chad, who enter a social situation and immediately comment on their own "rugged" manliness, while looking down on men who deign to talk about their feelings.


"I'm afraid, I have feelings," Chad says to the camera, mocking his male peers during "The Bachelorette" premiere. "Shut up."





During last night's episode, Chad continued to make it clear how much he dislikes the men around him, who don't live up to his standards of masculinity or who receive things he believes he deserves. Former marine Alex is short, therefore the only reason bachelorette Jojo Fletcher is keeping him around is so that America won't think she hates short guys. The men who get a date when he doesn't are "the B Team." When the other dudes have a cheeky singalong about Jojo to pass the time in the mansion -- reminder: they have literally nothing to do but sit around, eat, drink, and talk -- Chad looks on, disgusted.


"I think Jojo wants a man," he later says. "I cannot see Jojo falling in love with a childish boy, like some of these guys."


Toxic masculinity is also built on the assumption that "honesty" means saying any thought that jumps into your mind, without considering whether that thought could be damaging or disrespectful. We watch Chad consistently spew verbal garbage without regard for the fallout. This plays out both in his interactions with the other men (see above) and in the way he "courts"Jojo. (Spoiler alert: Both involve healthy doses of open disdain.) 


First Chad rails against "nice guys" while claiming that he is, in fact, the real nice guy.





Then, he goes full-on pickup artist during the second group date of the week, employing a technique called "negging," in which a man uses backhanded compliments or outright insults to assert his own confidence and manipulate a woman's affections.  


During a faux proposal -- the sort of cheesy "Bachelorette" activity for which the show is famous -- Chad is obviously unenthused. After he fails to have any fun with the exercise, simply dropping to one knee and muttering "will you marry me?," Jojo pushes him to talk about what he loves about her. 


"You need me to tell you all the things I love about you?," Chad says. "You're startin' off a little 'naggy' here."





Later, he doubles down, arguing that he's just being "honest." And astoundingly, it works! Jojo eventually acquiesces, agreeing that Chad's rudeness is simply an indication of how "real" and "mysterious" he is. (On a side note, the way Jojo talks about Chad's appeal is disturbingly similar to the way Americans talk about Donald Trump's appeal, something that did not go unnoticed by Bachelor Nation.)






"The Bachelorette" is supposed to flip the script on the traditional gender norms that govern "The Bachelor," giving a woman the chance to be in the driver's seat controlling the fate of her romantic relationships while the men around her profess their love. But unlike the women on "The Bachelor," who generally only push back on the premise of the show when the lead is being a colossal asshole (see: Juan Pablo's entire season), the men on "The Bachelorette" often feel righteously entitled to the lead's affections on their terms. They may be there to win the bachelorette's heart; but if they don't, it must be because she failed to understand what she truly needs.


"I am ready to take care of Jojo in the way that she needs to be taken care of," Chad told fellow dude-bro Daniel during last night's episode. And more than once during Kaitlyn Bristowe's season of "The Bachelorette," we saw men blow up when they didn't receive the affirmation they believed they deserved.


Of course, the franchise's messy gender politics mean that viewers get mixed messages about the value of traditional masculinity. When a man goes far in the season, like Josh Murray, who became Andi Dorfman's fiancee, characteristics that might be toxic are played off as hunky and appealing. (Andi has since publicly said Josh was emotionally and verbally abusive throughout their relationship.) When a man is destined to become the villain, like Chad, we see those same tendencies for the burning hot garbage they really are.


Chad's hyper-masculinity does not exist in a vacuum. He is an exaggerated product of the subtle messages boys and men in this country receive on a daily basis. Feelings are bad. Muscles are good. Being too nice is bad. Telling it like it is is good. Affection is bad. Blind rage and physical violence are good. And it looks like we'll be getting both in spades during next week's two-night "Bachelorette" Chad extravaganza


Remember, dudes: the patriarchy is quite literally bad for your health. So maybe it's time for Chad -- and other bros like him -- to redefine what it means to be a man.


For more on Chad and the second episode of "The Bachelorette," listen to HuffPost's "Here To Make Friends" podcast:






Do people love "The Bachelor," "The Bachelorette" and "Bachelor in Paradise," or do they love to hate these shows? It's unclear. But here at "Here To Make Friends," we both love and love to hate them -- and we love to snarkily dissect each episode in vivid detail. Podcast edited by Nick Offenberg.


 

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Here's Why This African Country Is Banning Skin Bleaching

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The harmful practice of skin-bleaching remains a serious issue across Caribbean, African, and Asian countries; but fortunately, one country is doing something about it. The West African nation of Ghana has taken a stand against the multi-billion dollar skin-bleaching industry with a new daring piece of legislation. 


According to Answers Africa, the Food and Drugs Authority of Ghana has issued a ban on the importation of all products which contain the skin-lightening chemical hydroquinone. Hydroquinone, found in popular products like Fair & Lovely, has been known to cause side effects like skin irritation, blistering, and severe discoloration. It's also been suggested that skin-lightening products have the potential to cause skin cancer. 



Ghana joins countries like Australia, the United States and Japan which have already isntalled regulations against these kinds of products. The ban in Ghana is especially significant given the prevalence of skin-bleaching on the continent, where 70% of Nigerian women alone admit to using skin lightening products


In large part, the popularity of these products is the result of colorism: the discrimination of people with dark skin complexions. In many countries in Africa, men and especially women with lighter skin are favored over those with darker skin, leading to better opportunities and treatment in society. 


As a result, millions of women across the continent choose skin-bleaching products in order to achieve a "yellow" or "red" glow, putting themselves at risk for all kinds of skin issues and diseases. 


Hopefully, the ban in Ghana and other African countries like Cote d' Ivoire will encourage other nations to crack down on a harmful and archaic practice. It's a tiny step in the right direction, but the fight to solve the systemic issue of colorism still has a long way to go.

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Introducing HuffPost’s ‘My Natural Hair Journey’ Blog Series

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We've made a lot of progress when it comes to embracing what makes us unique, but there's one thing we seem to forget about: our awesome natural hair. 


Embracing one’s natural hair -- especially after years of heavily styling it -- can be a truly liberating and exciting experience. It's more than just a "trend." It's a way of life. And with relaxer sales on a steep decline, the growing natural hair community can attest to that. They can also attest to some serious misconceptions people still have about natural hairstyles (like schools deeming natural hair worthy of suspension or style outlets calling Kim K.’s French braids a “new style.”) So for that reason, we’re launching My Natural Hair Journey, and we want to hear from you.


If you have transitioned to wearing your hair natural and learned a lot about hair care, self-love, beauty standards, racial identity and yourself in the process, we’d love to hear your story. Send a 500- to 800-word essay or an idea for a blog post to MyNaturalHairJourney@huffingtonpost.com


To get started, check out these enlightening personal stories on the experience of learning about and loving one's natural hair. 


If I Could Control My Hair, I Could Control My Life -- Tanya Wright







With a busy career as an actress on 'Orange Is the New Black,' my life sometimes feels more out of control than ever. At the same time, I know that the opposite is also true: That I am the captain of my ship; I am the master of my fate. And I would never have known that if it were not for my hair.



How I Fell in Love With My Natural Curls -- VeCoya Greene



A photo posted by VECOYA (@vecoya) on





Fall in love with your texture and your natural curls. Do not compare yourself to others, because this is your journey. That applies to products as well. What works for me may not necessarily work for you and vice versa.



Why I Stopped Wearing Wigs -- Antonia Opiah



A photo posted by UN-RULY (@hairunruled) on





I cannot and I will not say that I 100 percent adore my hair and feel great in it. The struggle is still very real for me. But I know that in time, maybe a couple years from now, I'll be at a different part of my journey and telling a different story.



A Journey to Never Having Big Curls and Loving Myself Anyway -- Shanae Wildgoose





Whether this 4C hair seems to twist on command or not, it’s mine. It’s beautiful and loving it means loving myself. Embracing my natural hair journey was freeing, exciting and worth every minute.



I Never Wanted to Go Natural... So Why Did I? --Mionna Henderson





My hair isn’t like a lot of the natural hair types I see on social media, and that’s okay. My hair is special, just like me, so it requires special attention, time, care, and patience.


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Meet Grown-Up Hermione And Ron In 'The Cursed Child' Cast Photos

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On Tuesday, the first official cast photos for “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” a stage production written by Jack Thorne and based on a story by J.K. Rowling, were released. They show Harry, Ginny and their angsty-looking son Albus huddled together for a tense yet sweet family photo, meant to have been taken 19 years after the conclusion of the "Harry Potter" book series.


Fans, hungry as they are for anything whiffing of Rowling, flocked to see and comment. “I'm so relieved right now,” a commenter on the play’s Facebook page wrote. “Gonna see the play in three weeks and I think they fit perfectly. I was scared I couldn't see someone else as Harry and Ginny but they're fitting like an old jacket.”


Site io9 wrote, not inaccurately, that the actor playing Harry, “very much looks like he’s ready to toss this whole wizarding thing in a lake.” But, for the most part, readers were amused.


On Wednesday, new official cast photos were released of the trio playing Ron, Hermione and their daughter Rose. Ron looks like a lovably wizened goof, while Hermione looks just plain wise. Rose, meanwhile, looks mischievous in her cast photo, but a caption assures that she’s “like her mother,” “bossy but deeply lovable.”


So, Hermione-loving theatergoers have much to anticipate, including a performance by Noma Dumezweni, who, according to the play’s Facebook, “gets Hermione inside out."


When her casting was announced last winter, some took to social media to complain, arguing that Hermione was white in Rowling’s books. The author herself casually swooped in to set the record straight. “Canon: brown eyes, frizzy hair and very clever,” she tweeted. “White skin was never specified. Rowling loves black Hermione.”


Seriously, same.










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Ballet Has A Sexism Problem, And Even Its Brightest Stars Don't Know How To Solve It

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There’s one truly goosebump-inducing moment in "Strictly Bolshoi," the 2007 documentary about British choreographer Christopher Wheeldon’s efforts to create a new ballet, centered on the dancers of the infamously insular Russian institution. On a day off from his rocky attempts to choreograph a balletic adaptation of "Hamlet," Wheeldon makes a pilgrimage to St. Petersburg and visits the famed Vaganova Academy, the nearly 275-year-old ballet school that has churned out generations of Russian ballet stars, training them all in the distinctive Russian style. 


For Wheeldon, the greatest attraction of the school that trained Mikhail Baryshnikov and Rudolf Nureyev is one particular studio: the room in which choreographer Marius Petipa created and rehearsed "The Sleeping Beauty." Wheeldon sits in a chair at the front of the empty studio, as he would do if he were running a rehearsal, and gazes out at the huge, historic room. He walks slowly around and leans on one of the barres that’s bolted into the wall, as though he’s wishing it could talk. It’ll give you chills.



"The Sleeping Beauty" premiered in 1890; Petipa died over 100 years ago. But the steps he created in the mid- and late-1800s are performed, whether in original form or adapted and embroidered over by subsequent choreographers, on stages around the world today. Some of the most famous and best-loved ballets -- "Giselle," "La Sylphide," and "Don Quixote" -- we owe to Petipa. The man is long gone, but his choreography, it seems, is forever.


Wheeldon says he doesn’t think about immortality when he’s making a ballet.


“It’s not part of a grand world domination plan,” he smiles, when asked if he thinks about the possibility that his works might still be performed a hundred years from now. “I just work to work.”


But as the most successful ballet choreographer of his generation, his dances are performed the world over, from sweeping story ballets -- "The Winter’s Tale," "Cinderella" -- to shorter and more abstract and contemporary pieces like "Danse à Grande Vitesse," commissioned to mark the anniversary of France’s high-speed rail network, and "After The Rain," a breathtakingly gorgeous pas de deux made even more compelling by the tendency to perform it in picturesque locales. He’s choreographed for ballet’s most prestigious companies, and last year, he took over Broadway, too, winning a Tony for his romantic, sinuous and classically inspired take on George and Ira Gershwin’s music in "An American In Paris."





Wheeldon trained at the English Royal Ballet School and danced for the Royal Ballet before moving to New York to join the New York City Ballet, where he danced for seven years, several of them as a soloist, the second highest rank in the company, before retiring to focus on choreography. Though some might question the decision to leave dancing behind when he was so close to the pinnacle of the profession, Wheeldon says he doesn’t regret it.


"I didn’t feel like I was going anywhere," he says, adding that his promotion to soloist felt like a reward for his service to the company, not a stop on the way to something bigger. "I’d danced a lot, and my body thanked me for [retiring]. I have colleagues who are retiring now, and their bodies are all busted up, with back and ankle injuries." Switching from dancing to choreographing was scary, he says, "like any big career decision," but "it felt right." He was 28, and "it might have still been that 'I can conquer the world' mindset you have in your 20s."


The following year, he was named the company’s first ever resident choreographer, marking a generational shift in a company that had long largely performed the works of just two or three older choreographers. Wheeldon would make more than a dozen ballets for City Ballet. In recent years, he’s returned to The Royal Ballet, choreographing "Alice’s Adventures In Wonderland," "The Winter’s Tale," and a one-act ballet about the scandalous portrait of Madame X by John Singer Sargent. Conquer the ballet world he did.





It’s little surprise, then, that Wheeldon is so often asked about one of the greatest problems plaguing that world: the dearth of women choreographers in classical ballet.


It’s a debate that has smoldered in the U.K. for years, occasionally leaping into flames, as it did earlier this year when choreographer Akram Khan warned against creating more opportunities for women to make dances "for the sake of having more female choreographers."


Women choreographers have long complained about an uneven playing field, arguing that they’re denied opportunities to choreograph, particularly for prestigious companies. That’s certainly the case in the U.S. When Wheeldon left City Ballet, his resident choreographer post was filled by another man, the celebrated Justin Peck, and last year, at a showcase of 21st-century choreographers, the company featured no work by women; this year, they'll perform short works by two. Their rivals across Lincoln Center plaza, American Ballet Theater, also perform very little choreography by women (despite a short-lived effort to provide more opportunities for women choreographers in 2008).


The dearth of women choreographers matters, because, as Wheeldon’s moment of awe in Petipa’s studio demonstrates, choreography can live forever. The ballerina is the symbol of the art form, and her tutu and pointe shoes are its most evocative icons. And some of the greatest teachers, those who pass on the knowledge of the art, have been women. But a ballerina’s career lasts two decades, at most, and teachers pass away. Choreography gets written down, which makes it far more likely to survive over time than a person, or that person’s knowledge.


It matters that women are excluded from the part of ballet with the most longevity. There are troubling ramifications when the bodies that represent an art form are female, but the minds moving those bodies around on stage -- for the last century and in the coming one -- are mostly male. Dancers come and go. Choreographers can enjoy a kind of eternal life, and immortality shouldn’t be granted to one gender but withheld from another.


“It comes up all the time,” Wheeldon says, of the over-representation of men in choreography. “People get really angry about it, and everyone’s desperate to figure it out.” Wheeldon says he doesn’t think the bias against encouraging women to choreograph, the way he was encouraged beginning in his teens, is conscious. Nor, he says, are those in charge of commissioning new works or programming existing ones deliberately excluding women. "No artistic director is going, 'I’m not gonna give this woman a chance.' Maybe it’s that it’s been male-dominated for so long," he muses, "and the tradition discourages women and young ladies" from trying their hands at choreography the way men do.


"I do believe that, especially now, there are strides being taken to change it," he says, though he says he doesn’t really have a long-term solution "besides reaching out and being encouraging" to women who want to choreograph. He serves as a mentor when he can, but struggles to do it consistently, as he travels so much. Still, when he’s working with a company and sees a dancer who’s interested in becoming a choreographer, he gives them advice, and occasionally connects a rookie choreographer with an artistic director who might commission a piece of work from them.


With the right opportunities to develop skills and vision, there’s no good reason for choreography to be so heavily male-dominated. After all, Wheeldon says, "choreography doesn’t discriminate. Talent is either there or it’s not."


Christopher Wheeldon's next project is a new production of "The Nutcracker" at Chicago's Joffrey Ballet.



In this series, The Huffington Post profiles some of the best ballet dancers in the world, working in some of the rarest and most unusual work environments imaginable, to try to understand how they deal with the same workplace issues that confront the rest of us mere mortals.


Most of us don’t get literal standing ovations from hundreds of people when we do good work. And most of us don’t have to visit the physical therapist at the beginning and end of every work day. But no matter what sector we’re in, the big questions are the same:


What does it mean to have your body under scrutiny on the job? How does it feel to be asked to represent your entire race in a company meeting? How do you find the right people to mentor and guide you? Read previous installments, about diversity in balletbeing a great partner, switching career tracks and navigating a workplace romance.


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John Green Admits To Grads That Adulthood Is Terrible

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Author John Green admitted to Kenyon College graduates that he's supposed to tell them adulthood isn’t so bad. He refused. 


"It is so bad," Green said in a commencement speech on May 21, in Gambier, Ohio. "If anything, it is far worse than I could even have imagined. I mean, have you ever been to a homeowners’ association meeting? Each of you in the Class of 2016 is wondrous and precious and rare life in a vast and almost entirely dead universe -- imagine devoting two hours of your bright but brief flicker of consciousness to a debate over whether the maximum allowable length of grass in your neighborhood’s front lawns should be 4 inches or 6."


Green is known for books like The Fault in Our StarsLooking for Alaska and Paper Towns, and is engaged in a number of video blogging projects. He graduated from Kenyon in 2000. In his speech to graduates, he explained how their liberal arts education has taught them the ability to be a great listener. This will help the class of 2016, Green said, when they are among the "miserable adults are debating grass length," because what they're really doing "is hashing out what kind of neighborhood they want to share."


"All of it, actually -- from the electricity bills to the job where your coworkers call themselves teammates even though this isn’t football for God’s sake -- all these so-called horrors of adulthood emerge from living in a world where you are inextricably connected to other people to whom you must learn to listen," Green said. "And that turns out to be great news. And if you can remember that conversations about grass length and the weather are really conversations about how we are going to get through, and how we are going to get through together, they become not just bearable but almost kind of transcendent."


You can watch his speech in the video above, or read his remarks here

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Yes, The 'Hamilton' Creator's First Musical Is Turning Into A Movie

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Theater geeks and general lovers of Lin-Manuel Miranda, the certified "Hamilton" genius: assemble. 


News broke this week that Miranda's first musical, "In the Heights," the story of a cast of characters living in the northern Manhattan neighborhood of Washington Heights, is headed to Hollywood. Yes, the Tony Award-winning production, that ran on Broadway from 2008 to 2011, is turning into a film, courtesy of The Weinstein Company.


For those unaware of the hugely successful musical, centered on a man named Usnavi, a bodega owner who dreams of winning the lottery, wooing a neighborhood crush, and returning to his home in the Dominican Republic, here's a quick rundown:


The show relays the memories and desires of a community populated largely by immigrants and first-generation Americans, all of whom grapple with beautifully complex relationships to ideas of family and home. The score features hip-hop, salsa, merengue and soul music, proving that Miranda mastered the multi-genre ensemble cast thing years ago -- specifically, 17 years ago, since he wrote a first draft for the musical when he was just a sophomore in college. 


Thankfully, for both those in love with and about to fall for "In the Heights," you can listen to the soundtrack on YouTube. For those who need more convincing, here are all the reasons you'll want to see the musical's film adaptation. 






1. Fans have pretty much been waiting years for this to happen, long before "Hamilton" won hearts and minds across the world. As Vulture reported, "interest in adapting the play into a film has been simmering for years, but Miranda, now the hottest playwright in America, is finally getting another chance to make the film happen."


2. If you are a true LMM fan, this musical is his breakout work. Did we mention Miranda wrote it when he was a sophomore at Wesleyan University? A SOPHOMORE. Be prepared to contemplate the heinous activities you were partaking in when you were 19 years old, you know, instead of writing a Tony-winning musical.



3. And the story is good. So good, "In the Heights" was a finalist for the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in Drama. Miranda would eventually win a Pulitzer for "Hamilton," but he probably wouldn't have done so without the success of his first hit.


From the Broadway.com synopsis:



At the center of the show is Usnavi, a bodega owner who looks after the aging Cuban lady next door, pines for the gorgeous girl working in the neighboring beauty salon and dreams of winning the lottery and escaping to the shores of his native Dominican Republic. Meanwhile, Nina, a childhood friend of Usnavi’s, has returned to the neighborhood from her first year at college with surprising news for her parents, who have spent their life savings on building a better life for their daughter. Ultimately, Usnavi and the residents of the close-knit neighborhood get a dose of what it means to be home.




4. Reviews of the musical, like this, are irresistible: "Directed by Thomas Kail, it is basically a salsa-flavored soap opera, and if there is an equivalent of schmaltz in Spanish, this musical is happily swimming in it." Who doesn't want to see that movie?


5. Oh, the music. Miranda won a Tony Award for Best Score for "In the Heights," so the soundtrack to the film is bound to be amazing. New York Magazine described the musical's sound "as the most serious piece of hip-hop theater to get anywhere near midtown." Count us in.



6. Two words: Mary. Poppins. We just want to take this opportunity to remind you that Miranda is set to star in Disney's Rob Marshall-directed reboot, as a lamplighter named Jack, alongside Emily Blunt. OK, back to "In the Heights." 


7. We don't know who will play the lead in the film adaptation, so there's some mystery. According to The Hollywood Reporter, "it's unclear whether or not [Miranda] will star, now that the 36-year-old is 10 years older than the character he first conceived." No word on the film's director either.



8. While Hollywood has an #OscarsSoWhite problem, Broadway experienced one of its most diverse seasons yet. Like Tony-winning producer Ken Davenport (“Kinky Boots,” “Spring Awakening”) told The Huffington Post, this year's Broadway lineup is "the most diverse group of artists and shows we’ve seen. Especially when compared to the lack of diversity in Hollywood.” If Hollywood wants to look to Broadway for guidance, we're not complaining. And we cannot wait to see who Miranda and company cast for "In the Heights."


9. Alas, you will probably sooner see this movie than feast your eyes on "Hamilton" IRL. Tickets for the latter are "extremely limited" (read: you literally need to win the lottery to see it), so you might as well rest your hopes and dreams on The Weinstein Co. turning "In the Heights" into a movie in the next several years.







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A Watercolor Artist Wants To Paint Female Nudity Without Shame

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Watercolors have an uncanny ability to turn even the most banal of subject matters into phantasmagorical visions that seem snatched out of a dream. Layered atop a canvas, the stuff seeps ever so gracefully in this direction and that, forming a fluid rhythm of colors and textures that appear at once weightless and intense, a contradictory wash of softness and strength. 


Artist Fahren Feingold noticed the dainty-yet-vibrant, mellifluous-yet-dynamic nature of watercolors. She realized the enchanting medium, so often used to depict glowing sunsets or picturesque landscapes, could communicate the gestures of the female form in a way no other medium could quite convey. 



"I grew up making art from as early as I can remember, painting with sticks in preschool," Feingold explained to The Huffington Post in an email. "I first started using watercolors to paint flowers and abstract shapes. It occurred to me that using the medium to paint nudes might be the perfect vehicle. While the subject matter often makes people uncomfortable and is considered taboo, the watercolors are soft and considered ethereal and dreamy. The medium almost masks the seemingly aggressive nature of a subject that people find threatening."


Feingold had been rendering the female nude since she first started figure drawing in the ninth grade. "I learned how to look at the human form as a work of art, without censorship and shame. When you are drawing the figure, you are forced to look past the body as self-condemnation, and rather as an abstract form in nature."



Although Feingold herself feels no discomfort in admiring and illustrating the unclothed female body, she can't help but feel the larger cultural stigma attached to female nudity, especially when expressed on a woman's terms. Her artwork is an attempt to undo the centuries of censorship, shaming and patriarchal politics that clouds the simple beauty of a naked body.


The artist spends a great deal of time seeking out subjects whose bodies -- through a certain mood, pose or gesture -- convey as much emotion as a facial expression. Her brushstrokes capture the eroticism of the human form, a unique artwork in itself, its fleshy boundaries as porous and unstable as the medium depicting them.  



Through her work, Feingold hopes to shift the conversation surrounding the nude woman in art, carving a space for a female body that is both sexualized and empowered.


"I hope to communicate a sense of femininity and sensuality, beauty and color, eroticism and freedom," she said. "I want to address issues in censorship, showing female nudity as a beautiful moment and not something to be ashamed of. I paint women of different shapes, because the female form is like a flower -- fascinating and alluring in it's uniqueness."


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These Rainbow Baby Photos Tell A Beautiful Story Of Hope After Loss

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After experiencing heartbreak and loss, a Michigan couple celebrated the hope and joy of their "rainbow baby" with a beautiful newborn photo shoot.



On Feb. 4, Cathy Matthews gave birth to a healthy baby girl named Charlotte. Welcoming her daughter into the world was especially poignant for the mom because her last pregnancy had ended in a miscarriage at five weeks along in March 2015.


"I was devastated," Matthews told The Huffington Post. "I had hoped and prayed for a baby for so long."


In the aftermath of the miscarriage, "the idea of a rainbow baby brought me joy, comfort and hope," she added.



After Charlotte was born, Cathy and her husband Matt enlisted the help of photographer Jen Priester to capture rainbow baby-themed photos of their newborn. Cathy's sister-in-law made a special headband for the occasion.


The resulting photos are precious keepsakes that tell a powerful story of hope and spark conversation around the somewhat taboo subjects of miscarriage and infant loss.


"Miscarriage is common, and my hope is that our story and our family can open the door for a discussion on a topic that can make you feel incredibly isolated and devastated," Matthews said. "It helps to connect with other moms who have experienced losses -- no matter how great. (And honestly, who are we to judge the size or value of a loss to someone else?)." 



Matthews told HuffPost that she's received some hurtful comments since sharing her photos. "Some people said that because I miscarried so early in my pregnancy, I didn't experience real or true loss as someone who miscarried in weeks later or who lost a baby shortly after birth," she said. "Or how could I love a baby that was so new? They also called me 'crazy.'"


"I know that there are all kinds of loss, and I don't think ours is the most tragic or the worst -- it just so happens that we had an amazing photographer who captured the beauty of our story," she added.


Ultimately, the mom wants her photos to inspire others going through the same difficult experience she had.


Said Matthews, "I would hope our Charlotte could be a beacon of hope to others who miscarried and are still hoping for two pink lines."



H/T BabyCenter

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Dancers Perform Hiplet, Mix Between Hip-Hop And Ballet, And It's So Lit

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This is not your mama's ballet. 


A video that's been taking off across the interwebs features ballerinas getting down to Jason Derulo's “If It Ain’t Love.”


The dancers, who are from the Chicago Multi-Cultural Dance Center, are performing hiplet, a style of dance that combines ballet and hip-hop. And they're so on pointe. 




Watch as the ballerinas, ages 12-16, boogie down while maintaining perfect command of their balance during the entire combination. The style is completely unique -- definitely not the traditional relevés or pliés we're used to seeing. 




The clip, which was originally posted to hiplet creator Homer Hans Bryant's Instagram account, went viral after Só Bailarinos shared the combination about two weeks ago. Since then, the video's racked up more than 8 million views. It's even landed Bryant and the dancers a recent segment on Good Morning America, where the ballerinas flaunted their grooves and moves. 



The School of Homer Bryant and CMDC Chicago IL. Www.cmdcschool.org."Hiplet" ____Because we can!!!!

A video posted by @homerhansbryant on




Bryant, who's also the founder and artistic director of CMCD, explained to GMA that he's no stranger to applying some twists to classical ballet. He said he's trained students in rap ballet before as well and explained that it's important to evolve with the times. 


“In order to stay relevant with young people, you have to do what they’re doing now,” he said, later explaining the unique dances take classical ballet "to another level." 


So, where can we sign up for a class?  

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This Poem About Sandra Bland Is A Powerful Reminder To 'Say Her Name'

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"They called it suicide. We called it murder. What if it was both?"


This was the question three poets posed about Sandra Bland's death. In their poem, named after the 28-year-old black woman who authorities say they found hanging in a Texas jail cell, Kai Davis, Nayo Jones and Jasmine Combs connect the abuse black woman have faced for centuries to Bland's death. Performing at Temple University for the 2016 College Unions Poetry Slam Invitational, the trio asked if the physical, mental and emotional abuse she faced was too much for her to overcome. 



"I know what it is to be crushed. To have hope drained from my bones, a trembling black woman with trauma stretching across generations. I've been crying for centuries. I cannot stop. I know what it's like to have one foot in the grave. To have a freezer stacked with liquor but an empty fridge. To come to stagnancy and decay in my own bed; my nightmares clamoring out of my own skull. Panic attacks shaking me until I, too, am a prison. I've wished death on myself many times but it was never my idea."



Oppression killed Sandra Bland from the inside out, the women suggest. They say the idea of constantly being labelled a "strong black woman" can be a too big of a burden to bear at times, especially when black women are often erased from the movements they create. 


"What if that night, her voice was a ceasefire" they ask. "What if she laid down her arms and walked into the light before they could drag her? A final act of protest. What if she wasn't the hero smiling in every picture? Does that make her any less deserving of a revolution?"




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How #BlackGirlMagic Can Help Change The World

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Yelitsa Jean-Charles is a successful young black woman who is busy showing the incredible influence black women can have on each other, and on the world.


Jean-Charles, an art student at Brown University, recently delivered a riveting TEDx talk where she confronts the serious and, sadly, all too common issues of colorism and internalized racism that plague communities of color. These are also issues Jean-Charles said she has dealt with personally, until she eventually decided to fight back. 


In her speech, Jean-Charles recalled the disappointment she said she felt as a child when her parents gifted her with a black Barbie doll for Christmas.


"I instantly started crying, because to me it wasn't the real Barbie because it wasn't the 'pretty' barbie," she said. She went on to explain how she had been conditioned as a child to believe that anything "beautiful" was associated with blonde hair and blue eyes, which she said distanced her from her blackness.



"When you're ignored by the mainstream media, you have to become a problem solver, an innovator...
Yelitsa Jean-Charles


However, Jean-Charles said that as she got older she began to unpack this harmful messaging and embrace her own beauty. She said she wanted to address the lack of diversity among children's toys and media so that more young girls of color could see themselves reflected among those offerings.


In doing so, she launched Healthy Roots, which is a toy company that comes with a line of dolls with natural hair and a book that teaches girls about haircare. 



"When you're ignored by the mainstream media, you have to become a problem solver, an innovator and you have to be smart about it," Jean-Charles said.


However Jean-Charles, who is a first-time business owner, understands the difficulties that come with finding funding when you're an entrepreneur of color. In her speech, she shoutouts several other black girls and women who are rising up to the challenge and pursuing their own dreams in hopes of helping more women and girls like them, including 14-year-old entrepreneur Maya Penn, 11-year-old book enthusiast Marley Dias and TV's matriarch Shonda Rhimes.  


"I do look forward to a future where more young women can rise to the occasion through innovative solutions and a little bit of 'black girl magic,'" she said. "My hope is that all of you here will support the work that I and other young women are doing because we need your help to change the world." 


We hope you keep up the good work, Yelitsa -- you have all of our support! 

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Boy Smashes $15K Lego Statue One Hour After It's Put On Display In China

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A life-sized Lego figurine, which took three days and nights to construct, was knocked to pieces only an hour after it was put on display in China on Sunday, Mashable reported.


The impressive figurine depicted a fox named Nick from the Disney film "Zootopia" and was being showcased at the Lego Expo in Ningbo.


Though the colorful artwork appeared to have been roped off, a boy was somehow able to get his hands on it, sending it toppling to the floor.


The heartbroken artist, only identified as Zhao, later posted pictures of his handiwork online. The images showed the piece in progress, completed, and then reduced to a pile of plastic bricks.





According to CCTV News, citing a Beijing Youth Daily reporter, the giant figurine was valued at more than 100,000 Yuan or approximately $15,200.


The artist accepted the parents' apology instead of compensation for the debacle, reportedly insisting, "The child did not intend to break it."


Oddly enough, the artwork's smashing came less than a month after video emerged showing two small children smashing a glass sculpture at a Beijing museum.


The two kids were filmed tugging and banging on the artwork inside of protective barriers as two amused adults filmed them on their cellphones. Only just before the piece smashes to the floor does someone try to pull the children away from it.


The artist chose not to repair her work but retitled it "Broken" and left it as is. Next to it, the museum put up a video of the shameful scene for other guests to view.

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Dad Takes Daily Photo Of His Kids To Celebrate Everyday Moments

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For photographer Tomasz Laskowski, the most ordinary moments in his children's lives are often the most beautiful.


Every day, the Dublin-based dad takes a photo of his 6-year-old daughter Suzie and 3-year-old son Constantin as they go about their regular activities -- from brushing their teeth to coloring together to jumping around the house and playing with toys.



Laskowski is originally from Poland, so the photo series is a great way to give long-distance relatives a glimpse into their day-to-day world. "It's a way to show their grandparents something that they cannot experience -- normal life of the grandkids," the photographer told The Huffington Post.


The beauty and power of everyday moments is the driving theme behind the dad's photos. "Life is what's happening here and now," he said. "When you take your kids to school and missed the bus, when they leave smudged fingerprints on the window. When they love each other for that split second before they start fighting again -- this is what we should remember. Those are the photographs that will be important in 20 years." 



Laskowski isn't sure his kids totally understand the daily project, but he said they sometimes ask to look at his photos. "We sit and go through them for a few minutes, they coo over themselves as little babies, laugh from the funny ones, and then they go back to whatever they were doing," he said. 


As for others who view the photos, the dad wants to convey this message to his fellow parents: "Please take picture of your kids in real-life situations. Take a picture of a messy room, or of a tantrum on the supermarket floor. Print them and hang them in your home."


"It's important to remember that there is beauty in the normal life," he concluded.


Keep scrolling and visit Laskowski's website and Facebook page to see his daily photos of his kids.



H/T BoredPanda

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Lupita Nyong'o, Miguel, Rosario Dawson And More Remind Americans We're All Immigrants

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As a reminder that nearly all American citizens share a common immigrant heritage, one organization gathered more than 50 high-profile celebrities to be a part of the "I Am An Immigrant" campaign.


Welcome.us, a non-profit organization that coordinates Immigrant Heritage Month every June, is honoring immigrants with the help of influential figures, such as Kerry Washington, Julianne Moore, Lupita Nyong’o, Tracee Ellis Ross, Alan Cumming, Rosario Dawson, Akon, Bobby Cannavale, Tom Colicchio, Miguel, Rosie Perez, Junot Diaz, Roselyn Sanchez and Guillermo Diaz. 


Many of the stars participated in a video for the campaign, above, in which they shared their thoughts on why immigrants are an important part of the United States while wearing the campaigns "I Am An Immigrant" t-shirt. 


"I don't know of anybody that didn't come over here from somewhere at some point," Bobby Cannavale says in the video posted Wednesday. 


Says actress Rosario Dawson: "[People say] well my family came over here on the Mayflower, and I'm like, 'Exactly! Hello, immigrant."


Each celebrity was also photographed by director Cary Fukunaga ("True Detective," "Beasts of No Nation"). Welcome.us is asking others to join the campaign by using the #IAmAnImmigrant hashtag on Twitter to talk about their own immigrant heritage or use their custom "I Am An Immigrant" photo filter. 


Here are what some participants are tweeting in solidarity:






















Check out a behind the scenes look at the "I Am An Immigrant" photo shoot below: 

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The Online Outrage Over This Racist Chinese Ad Says A Lot About How China And The West React To Racism

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The company behind the racist Chinese laundry detergent ad that sparked widespread online outrage around the world issued a half-hearted apology for the uproar it caused. Actually, it was one of those “we're sorry if anyone was offended” kind of apologies. Nonetheless, Shanghai Leishang Cosmetics did say sorry to Africans for any misunderstandings caused by the Qiaobi detergent ad: "We express our apology for the harm caused to the African people because of the spread of the ad and the over-amplification by the media,” the company said.


It's the second part of their "kind of" apology that is especially interesting. Deep down, it's highly likely that they are not really that sorry about the whole thing, but they do seem perturbed that international media made such a fuss: "The foreign media might be too sensitive about the ad," said a company spokesman.


Media outlets seemingly picked up on the massive internet outrage that erupted -- mostly in the U.S. and U.K. -- about the ad and the shocking characterization of black people as being "dirty." For most Westerners, this type of blatant in-your-face racism is more reminiscent of 19th century blackface media in the U.S. than the more subtle, yet equally destructive, stereotypes of black people that remain depressingly common in contemporary television and film.





Now that this incident appears to be settling down and we can step back to analyze what happened, it's apparent just how little Chinese society has progressed in understanding the importance of racial and cultural diversity, as well as how seriously much of the rest of the world takes this issue. Throughout much of this affair, it really seemed that Chinese and Westerners were speaking past each other as if it was two totally different conversations. Westerners, mostly white people, were visibly outraged by the Chinese callousness. Meanwhile, the prevailing Chinese response was often confusion over what the fuss was about. Not surprisingly, this led to a retreat into an instinctive defensive crouch that occurs whenever China comes under sustained criticism from the West.


Nicole Bonnah is the Beijing-based founder of the "Black Lives in China" blog and a documentary producer working on a new film about black and African experiences in China. In response to the recent controversy, Nicole wrote an entry for her blog that said the time is now here for the Chinese to accept some responsibility for the "Afro-Phobia" and anti-black racism that is prevalent in contemporary Chinese society. She joined Eric in the podcast above to discuss her recent blog post and to reflect on the Qiaobi ad controversy as a whole.


Join the conversation. We'd love to hear your thoughts on whether you agree with the online outrage that enough is enough and the Chinese can no longer hide behind the veil of "cultural context" that is so often used to justify offensive Chinese attitudes towards people of other races and ethnicities. Or do the Chinese have a point that the hyper-political correctness in the West, so often criticized by Westerners themselves (ahem, Donald Trump), is to blame and that everyone is getting excited over this simple TV commercial for nothing?


Tell us what you think:


Facebook: www.facebook.com/ChinaAfricaProject


Twitter: @eolander | @stadenesque

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Stunning Street Art Festival Energizes A Neighborhood In Madrid

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As the weather improves, the idea of being inside a museum becomes less and less attractive. People want to make up for lost time. In Madrid’s central Lavapiés district, an arts festival is bringing art out onto the streets.


Sixty Spanish and international artists are participating in C.A.L.L.E, the third Emerging Lavapiés Free Artistic Call Festivalbetween May 14 and June 5. The festival, co-orgainzed by the Lavapiés Merchants Association, seeks to boost artistic creation in the neighborhood, and draw people to its streets and local stores. 










Artists have created artworks on the neighborhood’s walls, shop-windows, and other exteriors under this year's theme: “The Future, Lavapiés 2029.” Angulo, an artist who painted the walls of local herb store El Druida for the festival, says she thinks C.A.L.L.E can help revitalize the Lavapiés district.


“Initiatives like this one push people to walk through streets where galleries are not as popular as they should be,” she told HuffPost Spain.


Scroll down for more photos from Lavapiés.



This post originally appeared on HuffPost Spain and has been translated into English and edited for clarity.

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