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'Donald Trump' Spent The Morning Making Out With Himself In NYC

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Now here’s a sight you don’t see every day: two Donald Trumps furiously making out in the middle of New York City’s Union Square Park.


The figures ― dressed identically in suits and Trump masks ― also spanked each other’s backsides, held hands and caressed each other on Oct. 12 as morning commuters making their way through the park looked on in a mixture of awe and disgust.


“Trump doesn’t love America, he loves himself,” Timothy Goodman, who founded the “I’m With Her Because He’s Crazy” initiative alongside Jessica Walsh, told The Huffington Post in an email. “So with that idea we wanted to get two Trump lookalikes to go on the streets and do this kissing performance.”



According to the “I’m With Her Because He’s Crazy” website, the group is supporting Hillary Clinton for president because Trump is “crazy. And racist. And xenophobic. And misogynistic. And homophobic.” We couldn’t have said it better ourselves (see our editor’s note below)!


The mission statement continues, “You may not love every thing about Hillary, but we’re all in trouble if we don’t vote for her. Please register to vote!”


The site also offers a list of deadlines for registering to vote in swing states as well as graphics with slogans like “Stop the cray on election day” that supporters can share on social media.



Earlier this year, Goodman and Walsh unveiled their “Build Kindness Not Walls” project, which involved 100 volunteers creating a kindness “wall” around NYC’s Trump Tower.


For more from “I’m With Her Because He’s Crazy,” head here.


Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar,rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.

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20 Photos Show What 'Beauty' Looks Like Around The World

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One woman is going around the world in an effort to challenge unrealistic beauty standards. 


After three years of working as a fashion photographer, Sara Melotti began to feel like she was contributing to the damaging and problematic beauty standards found in mainstream media. So she decided to do something about it.


In October 2015, the Italian photographer created her ongoing photo series titled “Quest For Beauty.” The project features photos of women from 10 countries around the world including Mexico, Ireland and Morocco to show that “beauty” comes in all shapes, sizes and colors. 


“I started asking myself ‘What is beauty?’” Melotti told The Huffington Post. “I realized that I had to completely decondition my thinking in order to find out, so I went on a quest! I started traveling the world to ask women what beauty is for them, to give them a voice on the subject.”


Melotti hopes to photograph women from 10 more countries and interview most of them about what beauty means to them ― and what they find beautiful. She’s already traveled to countries such as Ethiopia, Vietnam, France, the U.S. and Cuba.



Melotti said most of the women she’s interviewed believe that beauty has nothing to do with outer appearances. “I am learning that for most people around the world beauty goes far beyond looks,” she said. “Women are getting really tired of being told what they should look like.” 


Although Melotti hasn’t been able to interview every woman she’s photographed due to language barriers, she’s received some very poignant answers from a few of the women she’s met in her travels. 


In response to the question “What makes a woman beautiful?” a French woman named Helen responded: “Oh, the soul of course! The life lived, consciousness, the things and people you care about, what you think of things, being gentle and pleasant with everyone and opening your eyes.”


Another American woman named Ashley (pictured above) answered the same question with an equally powerful answer. “The way a woman acts is what makes her beautiful,” she said. “As long as it’s true.”


Melotti explained that she hopes people realize that looks make up only one small part of beauty. “Kindness, confidence and empathy are much more important than symmetrical facial traits or than a ‘perfect’ body... whatever that even means!” she said. “I hope this project will make people find acceptance and pride in the way they look and to love themselves for who they really are.”


Scroll below to see some of the photos from Melotti’s “Quest For Beauty.” 



To see more from the “Quest For Beauty” series head here or click over to Melotti’s personal website to see more of her work. 

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The 'Well-Strung' Men Make A Moving Plea For Gun Reform In New Video

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With their latest video, the men of “Well-Strung: The Singing String Quartet” are getting political. 


The group — comprised of first violinist Edmund Bagnell, second violinist Chris Marchant, violist Trevor Wadleigh and cellist Daniel Shevlin — pay homage to the victims of the June 12 mass shooting at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub, along with a number of other recent tragedies, with a heartfelt mashup of the Green Day hit, “21 Guns,” and “Pachelbel’s Canon.”


The video for the song, which was released Oct. 11, shows the guys performing amidst what appears to be a room full of mourners at a funeral. Sadness soon gives way to joy, however, as the ceremony turns out to be a more celebratory affair in a surprise twist. 


The group said they aimed to convey a story that inspires hope and change in what’s turned out to be a tumultuous election year by pairing a somber song like “21 Guns” with “a classical piece that is typically associated with joy and happiness like at weddings,” Bagnell said in a press release.


The men haven’t shied away from tackling politics, albeit in a fun, cheeky way, before. Last year, they sang the praises of Hillary Clinton with “Chelsea’s Mom,” a musical parody of the 2003 Fountains of Wayne smash, “Stacy’s Mom.” That tribute racked up over 250,000 views on YouTube and even caught the eye of the Democratic presidential nominee herself. 

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Mother-Daughter Travel Pics Will Make You Want To Road Trip With Mom

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Alex Pawlowska had always dreamed of taking a girls’ trip with her mother, but it was a death in the family that finally made them both realize how precious life really is.


“After losing my grandma, I realized that neither me nor my mum will be here forever, and that I can’t wait for the right time to come,” the 27-year-old told The Huffington Post. So in August, the Polish Instagrammer and her 63-year-old retired mother, Halina, traveled to the United States for a three week adventure that took them from coast to coast. 



Pawlowska is the founder of Looking For Heroes, a social media project, in which she photographs many of the interesting people she encounters, sharing unique tidbits of their life stories at the same time. The mother-daughter duo traveled across the nation, visiting cities including Knoxville, Tennessee, New York City, Los Angeles and Washington. Along the way they took photos against famous backdrops in each city, making for some unforgettable memories. 



And it seems, Pawlowska learned a thing or two about her mother along the way.


“My advice to young people would be to learn. Because this is what will be your biggest asset in life. The most important thing is to keep growing,” Pawlowska’s mother told her, which she shared in a post. “With age you stop worrying about things that don’t matter and you grow out of your insecurities. Your priorities change, family and health become the most important.”


Wise words.


Head over to Looking For Heroes Instagram page to learn more about the journey. 




 


 

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Abstract Painting Was Never A Boy's Club, And It's Time To Stop Treating It Like One

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Everything that has ever been observed with Earth’s instruments, or, as NASA describes it, all “normal matter,” makes up only 5 percent of the universe. The rest comprises what’s ominously known as dark energy and dark matter, the latter being more easily defined by what it is not than what it is.


Before Los Angeles–based painter Sarah Cain knew the scientific definition of dark matter, she was drawn to the phrase. Specifically how it seemed to describe something true about the abstract paintings she created. 


“I write, and I keep words I like around for the titles of my paintings,” Cain explained in a conversation with The Huffington Post. “At first, I didn’t know what dark matter was, I just liked the words. When I figured out the scientific meaning I went into this deep internet hole and realized the idea of dark matter totally relates to how I work.”


Dark matter, very simply speaking, is unidentified matter that constitutes approximately 27 percent of the mass and energy in the known universe. It’s also the title of Cain’s ongoing exhibition at Galerie Lelong



“[Dark matter] is this thing in space that affects everything but people don’t really understand it,” Cain described. “That’s how I use abstraction. I take things in my life, or in the world, and translate them by pulling them through this other language to find some sort of truth. But there is an openness to it ― with abstraction, I don’t tend to overly explain things.”


Cain’s paintings are large-scale explosions of color, pattern and texture, translating cosmic energies into vivid portals that hypnotize rather than divulge. The massive canvases resemble contemporary cousins of paintings by Swedish mystic Hilma af Klint, who, guided by some occult force, created some of the first abstract canvases that predate Kandinsky and Mondrian. Her mesmerizing works, stretching over 10 feet tall, depicted eternal energies conveyed through gentle orbs, lopsided spirals and rainbow double helixes.


Despite the idea that a woman artist could literally have invented abstract painting, over the course of art history Klint’s name has been all but scrapped from the record of abstract art, which has been cast, however falsely, as a genre driven by machismo and muscle.


“I’m a full-blown feminist and I’m very conscious about taking up space in the art world,” Cain continued, addressing the warped way abstraction is often gendered as male. “Someone just gave me this goofy art history book and there were barely any women in there, when there are so many killer abstract painters that are women out there, especially now.” 



There is no single source of inspiration Cain turns to when embarking upon a new work. Sometimes it’s a song she likes, a current event she hates, a friend she loves, or her cat who won’t leave her alone. “They’re just feelings I’m trying to work out,” she said. Other times, it’s an object that influences the piece that ends up enveloping it, like an old pair of sunglasses or a repository of inherited parrot feathers. “There’s something fun in taking dumb objects and trying to make a sophisticated panting,” she said. 


Cain described her painting ritual as “waking and painting,” as facilitated by heavy doses of green tea, dark chocolate and loud music. She works fast, juggling approximately 20 paintings at a time, yielding images whose energy is infused into every stroke, slash and puddle of paint.


“I personally think my paintings feel really alive,” Cain said. “I strive to make paintings that feel like they’re in the present tense, not a dead artifact. It’s about embracing the risk factor. When most people would be frozen by the failure potential, that adds an energy that you can feel in the paintings.”



The resulting paintings don’t come across as portraits or political protests, but vibrating sites of overlapping matter, a place where sea foam green and salmon pink can peacefully but feverishly coexist, moderated by a draped string of mismatched beads. “Some colors are symbolic to me in personal ways,” she specified. “They are based in the feeling of the painting.”


Cain has only been exhibiting work for 15 years, but she still comes up against plenty of misogyny in the questions and critiques raised in response to her paintings. “One of my pet peeves is people talking about my use of color, like it’s childish or girly. It fucking drives me crazy. No one would say something like that to Frank Stella. They are strong, fierce paintings that use a lot of color.


Even the artist’s stature plays into the way viewers encounter her work. “People get off about how big the paintings are because I’m pretty petite,” Cain added. “It’s like a weird perversion.”



Despite the fact that it’s still difficult for many to fathom that women too can communicate in painted abstraction, Cain plans to keep painting in her signature style of radiant ambiguity, the language that comes naturally to her. 


“I want to make paintings that people can walk inside, to create a real intimacy with the viewer,” the artist said. “I think that’s just because of who I am and how I communicate. I relate to poetry more than novels; abstraction has that same openness. If something is defined, I’m like, OK, let’s look at it from this other angle. For me it’s more interesting not to know something. Abstraction creates that space.”


There is another factor separating Cain from the annals of art history’s most serious (read: male) abstract artists: her sense of humor. Even the show’s title “Dark Matter” seems so gravely scientific, it becomes something of a quip when juxtaposed with Cain’s paintings, as bright and loud as magnified confetti. 



It’s this sense of humor, which Cain described as a “rebellious attitude,” which frees her paintings of the serious aura which sometimes obscures abstraction in a cloud of pretentious jargon and devout significance. Although Cain acknowledges the long and storied history of painting, acknowledging the importance of small but daring gestures by artists like Richard Tuttle and Elizabeth Murray, she also takes pleasure in shaking things up a bit, and watching the ramifications rattle off accordingly.


Painting is super old, super deep, there is something mystic about it,” she said. “It has these basic parameters, and stepping outside them is this radical act.” It’s this simultaneous acknowledgment of painting as something sacred, but not grave, that makes Cain’s paintings dance without moving, buzz without making a sound. 


Sarah Cain’s “Dark Matter” is on view until Oct. 15, 2016 at Galerie Lelong in New York.


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Photographer Puts Faces To The Groups Trump Has Bullied In Powerful Series

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A compelling new project is taking Donald Trump’s hateful rhetoric and contrasting it against individuals whose lives and experiences are affected by the presidential candidate’s lies.


#NeverTrump is a portrait series from openly gay photographer Balthier Corfi, a Mexican immigrant who became fed up with the harmful language and stereotyping coming from the Trump campaign throughout the course of the 2016 election cycle.


Corfi brought friends and colleagues of different minority groups together to pose for #NeverTrump, and asked them to write responses on their arms to claims made by the republican presidential nominee about people in their communities.



”I am personally inspired by all of these people,” Corfi told The Huffington Post. “I tried to portray people from some of the groups that have been attacked by Trump’s speech: immigrants, latinxs, women ― the list goes on. Because it’s an ongoing project I still want to photograph people from groups that were not portrayed in the first set of images: veterans, muslims and try to include every group that has been bullied by his words. There are so many.”



Corfi told The Huffington Post that he thinks this is a crucial election for all minority groups, whose rights and livelihoods are under threat at the prospect of a Trump presidency.


As for queer people who are supporting Trump, the artist is having a hard time wrapping his head around that particular phenomenon.


“I feel somehow betrayed [by gay Trump supporters]. How can someone support Trump and Pence when they have been insulting us and fighting against our rights and other minorities’ rights?” Cofri continued. “I think they need to do more research about what these two men embody and the threat they represent not only to our LGBTQ community, but to the entire country.”



Corfi hopes that his work challenges viewers to consider the human impact of Trump’s rhetoric and the way he talks about minorities in America.


”I want to invite people to make a conscious decision when it comes to who they are going to vote for. Rights of LGBTQ people, women, immigrants, african americans, muslims and many others are on the table. I am sure everybody has at least one friend who is a member of one of these groups; I want the people to think about them and join the movement. We can’t let him win this.”


Check out more from #NeverTrump below. Want to see more from Balthier Corfi? Visit the artist on Facebook or Instagram.


Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liar, rampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.


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For This Famed Pianist, Life On The Road Is Stylish, Sexy And Sweet

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For world-renowned pianist Simon Ghraichy, a concert in New York represents more than just a performance, it gives him a unique opportunity to connect with the diverse aspects of his “melting pot” background. 


The 31-year-old musician, who was raised by a Lebanese father and a Mexican mother and now resides in Paris, returns to Manhattan’s Carnegie Hall Oct. 14 a year after his debut engagement for “My Hispanic Heritage.” As his show’s title suggests, the evening is a celebration of Latin American and Spanish composers like Arturo Márquez and Manuel de Falla, as well as those like Claude Debussy who drew inspiration from Hispanic culture, in honor of National Hispanic Heritage Month, which ends Oct. 15. 



“Reflecting [my Hispanic background] in music is quite unusual, because these composers are lesser known,” Ghraichy told The Huffington Post. The fact that “My Hispanic Heritage” hits Carnegie one year after his debut engagement isn’t lost on the pianist, who says he feels “extremely blessed” to return to the famed venue. “My first time in Carnegie was very special, and I remember being extremely excited and, at the same time, so stressed that I [thought that I] would lose half my life expectancy. This year is different and I’m much more confident.” 



Ghraichy, who is openly gay, also sees the show as a chance to break away from the “classical music intelligentsia” audiences who attend his shows in other cities and, instead, “share the music with a beautifully diverse audience: Jewish, black, Asian, European, Latino, gay and so many other things.” 


As Ghraichy geared up for his Carnegie Hall show, HuffPost Queer Voices asked him to share a behind-the-scenes look at his life on the road. Take a look at what he shared below! 


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Time Magazine Cover Reduces Trump To Full-On Goop

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Donald Trump is looking a little molten.


An upcoming cover of Time magazine features the Republican nominee for president and his campaign as a puddle in “Total Meltdown” form.


The face-melting illustration, released Thursday, reprises the publication’s Aug. 22 cover to show Trump’s transition from drippy during the summer to full-on goop in October.


Artist Edel Rodriguez intends “to capture the latest twists in Donald Trump’s campaign and the rising anger within the Republican Party leadership about their standard-bearer’s behavior,” according to Time staff.


Trump is dealing with the fallout from the now-infamous hot-mic recording of his 2005 comments about women with then-“Access Hollywood” host Billy Bush. Soon after the release of the video, House Speaker Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) announced that he would no longer defend his party’s nominee


And on Wednesday, four women came forward with allegations that Trump had sexually assaulted them


The Time issue is due out Oct. 24. 


Editor’s note: Donald Trump regularly incites political violence and is a serial liarrampant xenophobe, racist, misogynist and birther who has repeatedly pledged to ban all Muslims — 1.6 billion members of an entire religion — from entering the U.S.


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27 Tweets That Perfectly Capture How Baffling Bob Dylan's Nobel Prize Win Is

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Every year in the lead-up to the Nobel Prize announcements, a couple of names would circulate with particular feverishness for the prize in literature. Bob Dylan is among them, though many literati would laugh at the idea that a world-famous singer-songwriter would snag a prize typically awarded to novelists and poets. 


Well, who’s laughing now?


When the Nobel Prize in Literature was announced on Thursday morning, the committee awarded it to Dylan, citing his creation of “new poetic expressions within the great American song tradition.” Book Twitter promptly had a complete meltdown. 


Some, like Salman Rushdie and Lin Manuel Miranda, celebrated the Nobel’s stretching of literary boundaries to include music and lyrics:


















Others weren’t quite so sure, poking fun at the Nobel for presenting perhaps the most prestigious literary prize in the world to a musician, rather than a dedicated writer. Some pointed out that, by recognizing Dylan, the Nobel missed an opportunity to elevate a gifted author less well-known than the world-famous rocker, including perhaps a woman or person of color. 










Nothing better captured our feelings of utter bemusement and befuddlement over this unexpected swerve by the Nobel committee than the outpouring of snark and lighthearted ribbing on Twitter Thursday morning. Here are 27 tweets that captured the bizarro-world-ness of Dylan’s win:



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Tired of Netflix? Here Are 10 Short Films To Watch This Fall Instead

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The paradox of Netflix: scrolling through the selection of movies and series can feel both endless and very limited. 


Should you watch another episode of “Tiny House Hunters” to mock its idealistic shoppers, or should you plug your nose and wade through less, er, legal streaming sites, hoping the latest episode of “Outlander” has subtitles in a language you can read? 


Of course, these aren’t your only options. There’s a whole world of filmmaking out there that may be a little harder to access, but it’s a world that is experimental, entertaining and wonderfully diverse. We previously reported on the petri dish of short-film production, where projects are free to grow organically and directors don’t need to ask permission before casting actors of color, older actors, and others relegated to the fringes of Hollywood. For those who protest lily-white Oscars or the deplorable absence of women directors, writers and producers, watching short films provides an alternative.


How, then, can you access them? SundanceNow and shortoftheweek.com both offer streamable short films, and, if you live in a major city, there’s likely an annual shorts festivals happening at a theater near you. 


For New Yorkers, the 4th Annual Nitehawk Shorts Festival is coming up soon, from Nov. 9-13 in Brooklyn, and its slate is impressive. Selections include music videos and music-centered shorts, bewitching thrillers and quieter stories from across the globe. We’ve selected a few highlights here, including a story of delinquent teenhood in South Africa and a darkly twee short starring Oscar Isaac.



”Consommé”


The rundown: A woman is attacked while walking alone in Brooklyn, but the experience is transformative.


For fans of:A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night


Directed by Catherine Fordham. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Lightningface”


The rundown: With the same campy yet sincerely felt approach to dystopia as “Black Mirror,” a man’s life is forever changed after he’s struck in the face by lightning. 


For fans of: Oscar Isaac ― the actor stars in this dramatic short. 


Directed by Brian Petsos. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Clean”


The rundown: A young man struggles to make it to school on time due to his compulsions in a heartbreaking portrait of OCD. 


For fans of: “Autism in Love,” and other films navigating the struggle to connect in the face of mental illness. 


Directed by Gabriel Wilson. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Vegas”


The rundown: A man spends time with a cosplay prostitute after he’s stood up by an online date. 


For fans of: “Her” and other indie films about attempts to connect in a digital world.


Directed by Saj Pothiawala. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Dahlia”


The rundown: A pair of South African teenage girls break into homes to cause harmless trouble in a story about dabbling in danger to assert individuality. 


For fans of: Mustang


Directed by Marysia Makowska. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”An Eldritch Place”


The rundown: A man discovers a dangerous secret while working as a security guard.


For fans of: H.P. Lovecraft ― the director describes the film as “Lovecraftian.”


Directed by Julien Jauniaux. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Those C*cksucking Tears”


The rundown: Country music is often accused of being full of the same old cliches: women, dogs, trucks, broken hearts. But in 1973, the world’s first openly gay country album was released, breaking down barriers of the genre. 


For fans of: Do I Sound Gay?


Directed by Dan Taberski. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Frankie Cosmos / Art School”


The rundown: Somehow, teenage love is both listless and crazy-making. This music video about a girl who obsesses over Justin Bieber’s music and persona while lazing around in her bedroom embodies both feelings.


For fans of: Carly Rae Jepsen’s “Boy Problems” music video, directed by Petra Collins.


Directed by Sophia Bennett Holmes. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”Where We Are Now (Who Are We Anyway?)”


The rundown: Vito Acconci, a revered ‘60s artist whose work predicted selfie-centered art, puts together a retrospective at MoMA PS1 in Queens. 


For fans of: “Eames: The Architect And The Painter”


Directed by Zachary Heinzerling. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.



”The Latecomer”


The rundown: A woman isolates herself in order to reconnect with her art.


For fans of: Sofia Coppolla’s movies, and other atmospheric, imagery-rich films.


Directed by Albert Choi. Find tickets to the Nitehawk screening here.


The Nitehawk Shorts Festival will take place Nov. 9-13 at the cinema’s location in Brooklyn, New York. Huffington Post Arts & Culture is the Media Sponsor for the festival and will provide the inaugural Huffington Post Impact Award. 

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Artist Grappled With Schizophrenia Through Eerie Drawings Of Hybrid Human Forms

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In Charles Steffen’s drawings, human bodies lack bones, fat and flesh. Instead, faces and figures are composed of crosshatched lines that wiggle and bulge, like a spiderweb repurposed as a body mask. From a distance, the lines that stretch from head to toe resemble the gnarled wrinkles on a tree trunk or the scales on a reptilian creature.


“The figures are often transparent,” The Good Luck Gallery explains in a statement describing Steffen’s work, “as if their nerve cells and fibers were on display, and surrounded by aureoles of gray light; bodies and flowers often merge into each other.”


Steffen was born in Chicago in 1927, one of eight children. In the late 1940s, after graduating from Catholic high school, he enrolled in the Illinois Institute of Technology, where he studied art history, drawing and photography. His religious upbringing, however, clashed with the more agnostic philosophies taught in university.


About a year into college, Steffen rebelled against his philosophy class by lighting a stack of his course papers on fire and threatening to kill himself. The outburst was, perhaps understandably, viewed as a mental breakdown. Steffen was kicked out of school and subsequently fell into a deep depression. This led to his institutionalization at Elgin State Hospital, a psychiatric hospital in Illinois. 


For the next 10 years, Steffen moved back and forth between the hospital and his family home. Diagnosed with schizophrenia, he was forced to undergo electroshock therapy as a form of treatment. The entire time, Steffen drew, around one to three images a day ― portraits of his mother and himself, of women he used to love and strippers he slightly recalled. He drew them not quite like people, but like balloon animals that had been meticulously mapped out. 



Steffen would often scribble notes around his images, turning the scores of drawings into a sort of diary. On an illustration of a burlesque dancer, rendered with stars covering her nipples and a triangular loin cloth atop her genitals, he wrote: “Jet Carol burlesque dancer rather stripper [sic], little gem burlesque house state and congress streets Chicago, 1943 she was the hottest number on the marquee at that time, a thin girl about twenty seven blond brown hair and what a show she could put on, the boys in Chicago came from as far as blue (?) island to see her ... ”


Much of Steffen’s work has erotic undertones, though funneled through a strange, sci-fi ― and often somewhat androgynous ― lens, one which swaps out human heads for sunflowers, feet for aquatic fins, and melts together both male and female parts. His favorite subject, however, was his mother, with whom he lived on and off before, during and after his hospitalization until her death in 1994. (Steffen himself died in 1995.) His depictions of his mother, although also rendered in his signature, otherworldly style, still capture her likeness as well as the authentic human emotion written on her face. 


Steffen made his love for his mother known in a note scrawled alongside one of her portraits. “[M]y mother is a real sweet heart to me a man realizes that as he gets older, like at the age of sixty one she always help me out financially no one else in the family ever did, brothers and sisters I felt I was a bad son when I was younger, lazy ???  like I am now what a hell of a life I have lived, I am sorry for all of it.”



After he was released from the hospital, Steffen moved back into his childhood home with his mother and siblings. He continued to draw, constantly, on brown wrapping paper with colored pencil and graphite. Steffen stored his creations in the house basement, eventually acquiring so many his sister made him discard them, fearing they were a fire hazard. Because of this, only work made after 1989 survived. Still, in the six years before his death, Steffen created 2,000 drawings, some as large as eight feet tall, which he eventually left to his nephew.


Steffen is often described as an outsider artist, that slippery term that describes artists working outside the mainstream art institution. As with many artists under the label, Steffen doesn’t quite fit. His struggle with mental illness and isolated conditions in a psychiatric hospital resonates with Lyle Rexer’s definition of outsider art as “the work of people who are institutionalized or psychologically compromised according to standard clinical norms” or “created under the conditions of a massively altered state of consciousness, product of an unquiet mind.”


However, what really constituted a schizophrenia diagnosis in the 1950s, when Steffen was committed? By many accounts he appeared to have a relatively stable existence beforehand. And, seeing as he did study art and art history in school, was Steffen’s work really as far removed from the cultural conversation as the designation “outsider” or “self-taught” artist leads one to believe? 


Steffen’s spidery depictions of tuberous human forms don’t subscribe to the traditional rules of human anatomy. They aren’t all that different, however, from the work of other experimental yet “insider” draftsmen like Huguette Caland, Jim Nutt, and Victor Brauner.


While it’s surely interesting to draw parallels between the horrors of electroshock therapy and portraits that seem to have electric currents flowing through them, causal conclusions are impossible. Even without diagnosing Steffen’s images, it’s fascinating enough to observe the uncanny way he viewed the world around him, like an alien trying to document and make sense of the human world. 



Charles Steffen’s work is on view at The Good Luck Gallery in Los Angeles until Oct. 29, 2016.

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Elton John To Write About 'Rollercoaster' Life In Upcoming Memoir

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The Rocket Man is writing a memoir.


Sir Elton John is writing his first official autobiography, slated for release in 2019, according to a press release.


The Grammy, Oscar, Golden Globe and Tony award-winner will be co-writing the book with writer and music critic Alex Petridis. The work will be “a no-holds-barred account of Elton’s life and work.” 


Hold us closer tiny dancer!!!



Of the upcoming memoir, John said:



“I’m not prone to being a nostalgic person. I’m often accused of only looking forward to my next gig or creative project. It’s come as quite a surprise how cathartic I am finding the process of writing my memoirs. As I look back, I realizw what a crazy life I have had the extreme privilege of living.  I have grown up in a period of extraordinary change in our world – and have had the joyful honor of rubbing shoulders and working with so many of the people at the heart of these changes. My life has been one helluva rollercoaster ride and it’s still lumbering on. I hope readers will enjoy the ride too.”



Henry Holt & Company, a division of Macmillan, won the rights to the book over two other publishers, according to The New York Times.


We hope you don’t mind, Elton, but we’re so excited we can’t even put it down in words.

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Doug The Pug's Adorable Travel Photos Are Making Hearts Explode

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If there’s anyone who knows how to look ridiculously cute on the road, it’s Doug the Pug. The furry social media sensation recently took his one of his first trips to London and conquered an epic slate of activities that would make even human travelers run in circles with excitement.


And luckily, you can make plans to follow in his footsteps ― er, paw prints― thanks to a series of aww-worthy Instagrams from the trip.


Muggle or puggle? Either way, Platform 9 3/4 looks magical.





They might as well call it Puggingham Palace.





Woof, that’s a lot of fish ‘n’ chips for a little dog.





London Eye selfies are the best kind of selfies.





And now’s the time to see London’s red phone booths, which could soon disappear




Big Ben meets little Doug.





D’aww, we have a feeling Doug could stick around here forever.





Wanna be like Doug? Check out this list of everything you just have to do in the United Kingdom

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These 'Sexy' Halloween Costumes For Moms Are So On Point

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After noticing the absurd amount of the “sexy” Halloween costumes on the market, a mom and author decided to turn the concept on its head in a hilarious way. Since 2014, Suzanne Fleet has been creating “sexy Halloween costumes for moms.”


From the “Bodacious Boxtopper” to the “Shameless Chauffeur” to the “Science Fair Femme Fatale,” these satirical costumes bring “sexy” back ... down to Earth.




Fleet told The Huffington Post she came up with the idea for “sexy” mom costumes two years ago while searching for Halloween costumes for her two sons ― now 9 and 4-and-a-half years old. 


“After visiting a bunch of online costume sites, I noticed that the sexy versions of costumes had changed from your typical naughty schoolgirl and short-skirted Goldilocks to sexy ... everything,” she recalled.


“Ridiculous things were now available in ‘sexy’ versions. Sexy Pandas and Sexy ‘Sesame Street’ characters. Sexy Donald Trump and Sexy Corn. No seriously. There is a Sexy Corn costume,” she added. 


Sexy Halloween Costumes for Moms” is Fleet’s satirical take on the madness.




As soon as she thought of the idea, Fleet reached out to some of her funniest blogger friends to see if they’d like to help bring the project to life.


“They immediately jumped on board,” she said. “I had a list of suggested ‘sexy’ costumes. Some of them chose from the list, some came up with their own costumes.”


Fleet’s original 2014 blog post with the costumes was a huge success, getting so much traffic that her website crashed several times. She also shared her costume ideas on The Huffington Post blog, where even more parents got a kick out of her humor.




After the first year, more moms reached out to the author to inquire about participating.


Others created their own replicas of Fleet’s costumes and shared their ideas for other sexy Halloween costumes for moms on her Facebook page.


Fleet told HuffPost she hopes parents get “a good laugh” out of her costumes. “We sure need it, “ she said. “Being a mom can be very isolating sometimes, especially for SAHMs or WAHMs like me, so it makes me happy that something I helped create can inspire people and make them laugh.”



“I’m making fun of the sexy costume trend, but at the same time, showing that moms wear so many hats, play so many roles ― that even if we’re just wearing our pajamas or yoga pants, we can still rock it!” she added. 


Visit Fleet’s website for more hilarious photos of “sexy” Halloween costumes for moms.

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Gina Rodriguez Shows Where Her 'Badassery' Is From In Throwback Video

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Gina Rodriguez is one badass lady, and she knows exactly where she gets her no-nonsense personality from. 


On Wednesday, the “Jane the Virgin” star got a bit nostalgic and shared a throwback video on Instagram of her father refereeing one of boxer Ronald Weaver’s matches. Rodriguez said she trained with Weaver in New Orleans last summer at the New Orleans Boxing Club. 


“This gem just came up, the time MY DADDY-O referred his [Weaver’s] match and my dad almost devoured him,” the actress wrote in the caption. “Old footage of my pops is the BEST!!! Where I get my badassery from, don’t mess with a Rodriguez!” 



Rodriguez has been vocal about how boxing was a huge part of her life thanks to her father’s career as a referee. In an April interview with Women’s Health magazine she praised the sport for giving her inner and outer strength. 


“My father was a referee for boxing, so I grew up boxing since I was three,” she told the magazine. “[The] strength – inner strength – the idea that you can protect yourself and never have to use it, the idea that it doesn’t matter what size I am, inside is so strong. Mind over matter is so strong. It’s something you learn in the ring, you can’t give up. To me, it’s interesting, I feel like boxing is very much like acting, except you’re just fighting yourself.”


Watch old footage of Rodriguez’s dad in the video above. 

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Leonard Cohen Reveals He's 'Ready To Die' In Candid Interview

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In a new interview with The New Yorker, music icon Leonard Cohen has revealed that, at age 82, he’s “ready to die.” 


Cohen, whose new album “You Want It Darker” comes out next week, spoke to the magazine about touring, making music and the potential for future projects. 


For his new album, Cohen will likely forgo touring to stay with his family and friends. Throughout his career, Cohen toured to earn money to support his two kids and their mother in addition to himself. 


“There was never an option of cutting it out,” he said. “Now it’s a habit. And there’s the element of time, which is powerful, with its incentive to finish up. Now I haven’t gotten near finishing up. I’ve finished up a few things. I don’t know how many other things I’ll be able to get to, because at this particular stage I experience deep fatigue.... There are times when I just have to lie down.” 


These days, he admitted, he “can’t play anymore, and my back goes fast. Spiritual things, baruch Hashem [thank God] have fallen into place, for which I am deeply grateful.”


Among his “unfinished” materials are unpublished poems that need arranging and lyrics that need to be recorded. But Cohen is aware he might not get around to finishing them, and he’s OK with it. 


“I am a tidy kind of guy. I like to tie up the strings if I can. If I can’t, also, that’s OK.” he said. “But my natural thrust is to finish things that I’ve begun.”


“I don’t think I’ll be able to finish those songs. Maybe, who knows?” he continued. “And maybe I’ll get a second wind, I don’t know. But I don’t dare attach myself to a spiritual strategy. I don’t dare do that. I’ve got some work to do. Take care of business. I am ready to die. I hope it’s not too uncomfortable. That’s about it for me.”


Cohen has spoken about death in the past, notably in his music, which uses the topic as a recurring theme, but also in the touching letter he penned to former muse Marianne Ihlen, who died after a battle with leukemia this summer.


In the letter, he wrote, “I am so close behind you, that if you stretch out your hand, I think you can reach mine.”


To read more from Cohen’s interview, head over to The New Yorker. His album, “You Want It Darker,” will be released Oct. 21. 

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Casting Older Actresses Against Type: An Appreciation

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mid


You can be highbrow. You can be lowbrow. But can you ever just be brow? Welcome to Middlebrow, a weekly examination of pop culture.


A pop culture fan’s greatest pleasure is the unbridled joy of seeing an actor or actress surface in an expected role. Often that’s the draw: funnyman Robin Williams playing a twisted stalker in “One Hour Photo,” perennial hero Henry Fonda slipping on villain’s shoes in “Once Upon a Time in the West,” period-piece thespian Kate Winslet doing the quirky-bohemian routine in “Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind,” sitcom dad Bryan Cranston going dark on “Breaking Bad.” Sometimes, like with Tom Cruise in “Tropic Thunder” or Cameron Diaz in “Being John Malkovich,” these performances seem flung from an alternate Hollywood where celebrities’ personas don’t dictate the roles they attain. 


This year, we’ve seen a handful of undervalued actresses shine in parts that cut against their typical currency. Better yet, they’ve all survived the Hollywood faux pas of turning 40. Some, like Ally Sheedy in “Little Sister,” are far removed from the Meryl Streeps, Angela Bassetts and Laura Derns of the world ― actresses who’ve remained sought-after for a variety of types. Others, like Molly Shannon in “Other People” and Winona Ryder on “Stranger Things,” have managed to hold onto the acclaim of their younger days ― they just don’t often land roles that restore that glory. And others still, like Kate Beckinsale in “Love & Friendship” and Sally Field in “Hello, My Name is Doris,” have entered a comedic realm that they haven’t visited to any great success in years. 


(I regret not having an actress of color to cite. Lend your suggestions in the comments. For a male example, try Craig Robinson in “Morris From America.”)



First thing’s first: For studios, this is a prudent economic choice. Box-office receipts are shown to increase in years with more female-centered releases. “Hello, My Name Is Doris” and “Love & Friendship” ― the two aforementioned titles to have completed their theatrical runs ― surpassed financial expectations. They are, respectively, 2016’s fourth- and fifth-highest-grossing independent movies to date.


Whereas “Other People” lets us see Shannon’s dramatic side, “Love & Friendship” reminds us that Beckinsale has comedic chops ― something lost in the glammed-up action roles that have populated her résumé since 2003. Before the “Underworld” movies (four and counting), silly “Van Helsing” and the joyless “Total Recall” reboot, Beckinsale played Hero in “Much Ado About Nothing,” a Studio 54 regular in “Last Days of Disco” and the romantic lead in “Serendipity.” The tart “Love & Friendship,” a Jane Austen adaptation, is aligned with that trajectory, casting Beckinsale as a vain Regency widow seeking a husband to ensure her wealth. She hurls snotty one-liners at everyone who crosses her path. It’s one of 2016’s most delightful movies, partly because it makes us wish Beckinsale were handed award-worthy roles like this every year. 



With Shannon and Sheedy, it’s as simple as this: It’s lovely to see the actresses’ visibility rise in their 50s. Both have worked steadily, but you probably wouldn’t recognize most items on Sheedy’s filmography, and Shannon’s paychecks stem from guest stints on television (”Getting On,” “The Spoils of Babylon”) and supporting gigs in underperforming films (”Me and Earl and the Dying Girl”). 


Last year, when Kristen Wiig starred in “Welcome to Me” and “The Diary of a Teenage Girl,” she brought to dramatic spheres the same bodily zaniness that made her a “Saturday Night Live” star. In “Other People,” Shannon, a fellow “SNL” veteran, extracts a soulfulness that’s often undervalued when laughing at the armpit-smelling Mary Katherine Gallagher and the leg-kicking Sally O’Malley. Playing a mother slowly dying of cancer, Shannon’s character grieves quietly, attempting to keep up with the life that’s fading before her eyes. We laugh through the tears specifically because we are familiar with Shannon ― we know her mannerisms, her sensibilities, the glee she has brought us for years. That’s why casting her in this genre-bending role has such impact. (See also: Shannon on HBO’s “Divorce.”) 


Rounding out their ‘80s origins, Ryder and Sheedy are cast in work that implicitly comments on their careers. Their earliest roles were teen misfits. In “Stranger Things” and “Little Sister,” respectively, they play misfit mothers of kids with off-center adolescences. When we see Sheedy anxiously smoke a bowl at the start of “Little Sister,” it’s almost like peeking in on Allison, the “basket case” from “The Breakfast Club,” 31 years later. And when Ryder is ripping her house to shreds and talking to blinking Christmas lights in hopes of finding her lost son, it’s like “Heathers” heroine Veronica Sawyer has vowed to fight the preppy enemy far into adulthood. 



Whether or not anyone caught these films and shows specifically because of the actresses involved, there’s no denying the power of spending time with beloved stars who aren’t likely to headline a summer blockbuster anytime soon. (They probably aren’t even interested, bless their hearts.) It’s almost ― almost ― a corrective for the thankless roles that turn too many A-listers into men’s background players (Amy Adams in “Batman v Superman,” Laura Linney in “Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles,” Amy Ryan in “The Infiltrator”). 


Even beyond that, unconventional casting creates a special bond between the character and the audience, because celebrity culture renders it nearly impossible to engage with mainstream art without assigning value to the faces we watch onscreen. Sally Field is especially wacky in “Hello, My Name is Doris” precisely because it’s so far afield of her recent austere work in “Lincoln” and the TV show “Brothers & Sisters.” 


This phenomenon reveals a truth that Hollywood sometimes ignores: Most actors have range, and certain actors are not chosen to display that range throughout their careers. When they do, we see it as a revelation. We applaud directors for “taking a chance,” and understandably so: The economy of popular culture dictates that art’s gatekeepers not risk their bottom line in favor of risky casting. But what if it were no longer considered risky?


To use a dude example, what if we acknowledge that goofy John C. Reilly is also a bona fide serious guy who has proven himself in umpteen dramas? What if someone casts Tracee Ellis Ross in, I don’t know, a Zora Neale Hurston biopic? Seeing performers move between genres and resist their pre-packaged marketability is what postmodern pop culture is all about: the knowledge that we bring ourselves to the entertainment we consume, and in engaging with that entertainment in unexpected ways, we become more engrossed. We challenge the mandates that prompted our surprise to begin with. In the end, everyone ― especially undervalued actresses ― becomes richer.


Follow Matt Jacobs on Twitter: @tarantallegra

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J.K. Rowling Says The 'Fantastic Beasts' Series Will Probably Be Five Movies

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The magic lives on! And on and on and on, apparently. 


At a fan preview of next month’s “Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” on Thursday, J.K. Rowling said she is “pretty sure” there will be five movies in the new “Harry Potter” prequel series. Rowling has already finished the script for the second installment, which is slated to open in 2018. It, too, will revolve around zoologist Newt Scamander (Eddie Redmayne), but will move from New York to another large city. Rowling did not confirm whether the next three films will feature Newt. 


Headquartered in London and streamed in major cities across the globe, Thursday’s preview, which I caught in New York, showcased the opening scene of “Fantastic Beasts” and an action-packed montage of footage. Put simply, it feels very much like a “Harry Potter” movie, which is nice. (David Yates, who directed the final four “Potter” installments, also made “Fantastic Beasts” and will helm its sequel.)


The movie opens with a series of Daily Prophet headlines that announce the wizarding world’s recent history: The year is 1926, and non-magical folk (called “No-Maj,” instead of “Muggles,” in America) are persecuting witches and wizards. The ownership of beasts has been outlawed, proving problematic for Newt, who is traveling with a cute creature that looks like some kind of cross between a platypus and a squirrel. (Maybe other “Harry Potter” fans will recognize the little delight. I could never remember my bowtruckles from my pygmy puffs.) To make matters worse, Grindelwald, the dangerous master of Dark Magic, has fled, leaving the community in chaos. 


Yates said that Dumbledore will show up in “Fantastic Beasts,” sharing a scene with Newt and Percival Graves (Colin Farrell), the head of the Department of Magical Law Enforcement. Grindelwald will also appear, so maybe we can get a nice little love scene between the two wizards, considering we now know that Dumbledore fell in love with Grindelwald


After the event ended, Rowling, who recently co-wrote the play “Harry Potter and the Cursed Child,” responded to fan reactions on Twitter. For anyone not convinced that, in the midst of Hollywood’s bloated franchise infatuation, we need five of these whoppers, here’s Rowling’s response:






”Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them” opens in theaters Nov. 18.

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The Type Of House You Should Never Buy

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The massive, gaudy houses lining the streets of America’s upscale suburbs began to look like the epitome of bad taste and poor judgement once the foreclosure crisis hit. The writer behind the blog “McMansion Hell” tells why they’ll eventually be gone for good.


Kate Wagner, a 22-year-old getting her master’s degree in architectural acoustics at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, has been researching consumer trends in architecture since she was in high school. Her background knowledge has given her ammunition for “McMansion Hell,” which she started writing this summer. At first, she wrote for a few friends to let off steam about the houses she despises, but the blog quickly gained followers. 


“There’s literally nothing that would convince me to live in a McMansion,” Wagner said. “I would rather donate it to a fire department to use for controlled burns.”


Wagner marks up real estate listing photos like a merciless English teacher. Her snarky but informative explanations of the problems with McMansions make architecture criticism accessible for people who aren’t experts.



There’s no hard-and-fast definition of a McMansion, but Wagner has a long list of criteria. McMansions are oversized ― more than 3,000 square feet, with five or more bedrooms and a garage for three or more cars ― and typically too large for the size of their lot.


“One of the defining factors of the McMansion is this concept of waste and the proliferation of excess and … pushing this illusion of wealth,” Wagner said.


They’re also identified by poor craftsmanship, often covered in trendy but cheap materials like faux stonework. And they’re usually a jumble of styles from different periods, with out-of place columns and turrets, fake balconies, and windows that are a mix of shapes and sizes.  



Some of the houses’ design flaws might not be obvious to most buyers, but that’s what Wagner is here for.


She breaks down the architecture principles that make houses look tacky, schooling readers on elements like “secondary masses” and “quoins.”



Wagner has invented irreverent terms to describe McMansion features, like “Palladian window bunker hell” and “roofline soup”: “when the roofline of the house is so chaotic and illogical, one is immediately sent into a spiraling descent of cringe.” 



She doesn’t limit her scorn to exteriors.



McMansions, first built in the 1980s, grew in size each decade leading up to the financial crisis. Then, people who’d sometimes spent millions on their personal palaces were left with homes worth only a fraction of what they’d paid, and often going into foreclosure. Neighborhoods full of McMansions emptied out, attracted squatters and, in at least a few cases, were cheap enough that groups of college students could rent them.


“After the recession, I think people took poorly to the houses because they [became] physical representations of the financial crisis,”  Wagner said. “And they’re not recovering from that well, especially the older ones.” 


Still, homeowners crave more space, and houses built last year were bigger than ever. With a median size of almost 2,500 square feet, the average home is 10 percent larger than at the height of the bubble a decade ago.


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That’s partially because developers have catered to wealthy homebuyers rather than building smaller, more affordable houses as middle-class families struggled to re-enter the housing market. There’s also more profit to be made on luxury homes.


New houses may soon shrink, however. Homes built last quarter were actually a little smaller than those built in the last couple years.


And while older McMansions are still more expensive than most homes, the gap between their prices and the rest of the housing market is narrowing in most major metro areas, according to Bloomberg, making them questionable investments. 



Wagner does more than ridicule tacky design. She argues that McMansions should be reviled because they’re bad for the environment, from the extra energy required for heat and electricity in such a large space, to the emissions from the production of construction materials.


In her ideal world, McMansions would eventually disappear as people traded sprawling suburbia for sustainability ― dense, walkable and diverse neighborhoods.


“People are starting to see that it’s a waste of money to build super trendy, huge houses,” Wagner said. “Hopefully, the blog will continue that discussion.”


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Kate Abbey-Lambertz covers sustainable cities, housing and inequality. Tips? Feedback? Send an email or follow her on Twitter.   


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Did The Internet Improve Our Sex Lives, Or Make Them Worse?

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Chances are, you or someone you know has been on an online date. At this point in our collective chronology of courtship, it’s as ubiquitous as dowries once were. But these new rituals are more freeing than the conventions they’ve replaced — right?


Maybe you grabbed a drink after mutually right-swiping on Tinder, impressed by a profile absent of skydiving shots. Maybe the lack of personal information shrouded the exchange in mystery, granting it an air of romantic spontaneity, even though the action, if interpreted literally, is nothing but a connection through glass. 


Maybe you prefer the ostensibly more old-fashioned approach touted by OkCupid, where mutual interests are considered a precursor to mutual attraction. Often ― if mine and my friends’ experiences are representative of anything broader ― the two don’t correlate. Three or four chaste dinner meet-ups with punk fans and sci-fi obsessives whose passions waned in the face of in-person communication was enough to turn me off to the whole endeavor, before meeting my now-partner for drinks we’d arranged when my account was still active. That we met online felt like a stroke of incredible luck, as if we’d laid eyes on each other from across a crowded room.


Emily Witt, author of Future Sex, a thorough, fresh look at how romantic and sexual relationships have changed in the past two decades or so, had a similar experience with OkCupid. She made a profile after an upsetting end to a partnership she’d been invested in, hoping to quickly move on to another monogamous commitment. But, she found that her encounters with men who sounded fun on paper were tepid in person.


She suspected that this had to do with the misconception that chemistry and practical compatibility were entangled. Witt had no problem with hookups initiated in person ― with men she knew little about. But when the stakes were raised, and a relationship was on the table, things changed. Eventually, she set a sort of challenge for herself: committing to celibacy until she could find a relationship like the one she had before.


It wasn’t that non-monogamy repelled her on principle; it just didn’t align with how she identified. Although friend-of-friend hook-ups and online dates left her cold, she wasn’t ready to dabble in alternatives, either. A momentary STD scare made her bristle at the thought of active experimentation, which seemed counter to her desire for commitment, anyway. Still, she was curious, for reasons both personal and journalistic, about how much sex and romance have changed in our age of apps.


Certainly, the internet put to bed the idea that some kinds of sex ― gay sex, trans sex, group sex, BDSM ― were taboo, while only a very vanilla, borderline-Puritanical variety abided. “On Google, all words were created equal, as all ways of choosing to live one’s life were equal,” Witt writes. “Google blurred the distinction between normal and abnormal.”



It’s tempting to argue that this brave new world of sexuality — ushered in by the ambivalence of search engines, the proliferation of online porn and the anonymity granted by chat rooms and dating sites — can only be a good thing.



One of the virtues of Witt’s writing is that she avoids making value judgments. It’s tempting to argue that this brave new world of sexuality ― ushered in by the ambivalence of search engines, the proliferation of online porn, and the anonymity granted by chat rooms and dating sites ― can only be a good thing for our sexually repressed society. But Witt’s approach to it all remains open yet skeptical. She admits to entering into different worlds of sexual experimentation as a voyeur, at least initially. Her aim is to discover who, if anyone, our 21st-century sexual explorations leave behind.


“Sexual freedom had now extended to people who never wanted to shake off the old institutions, except to the extent of showing solidarity with friends who did it,” she writes in the book’s opening chapter. “I had not sought so much choice for myself, and when I found myself with total sexual freedom, I was unhappy.”


Throughout the book, Witt compares herself to women who’ve found happiness in unconventional sexual situations: a friend who has a business-like process for selecting one-night stands, a performer who not only consents to, but finds pleasure in, strangers’ degrading remarks and actions. Witt approaches these women with what’s best described as awe. She appreciates their ability to identify and prioritize their own physical needs, taboo and otherwise, but she can’t imagine doing the same herself.  


The writing of the book landed her in San Francisco, where free love flourished in the ‘60s, and where its embers burn on. Instead of communes, those committed to non-commitment can be found today in organizations with the sheen and pep of startups. A focus on consent, self-empowerment, health and cleanliness reign over OneTaste, a group founded on a belief in the power of Orgasmic Meditation (OM), a practice that’s less vague than it sounds. OM involves a partner stimulating a woman’s clitoris methodically, for 15 minutes, in a comfortable environment where she’s encouraged to free herself of commitment-related expectation, making the act a physical, rather than an emotional, transaction. After an orientation and several interviews, Witt tried the practice herself and found herself feeling empty, the way she did after more regrettable hookups.


But she questioned the value of OM before that, when a man with alcohol on his breath stared at her unrelentingly during morning icebreaker activities, violating the comfortable space. She took issue with OneTaste’s rhetoric, too. One class leader asserted that women “love to fuck,” casting off misconceptions that the purpose of sex is male pleasure. But, this declaration didn’t feel right to Witt, either; it equated women’s desire for sexual expression with an invitation for any man to partake in it.



Any woman who’s been catcalled — that is, most women who live in or have visited walkable cities — will tell you that this problem predates internet-era dating, but the ease of stranger-to-stranger communication in the internet era makes it that much more prevalent.



Any woman who’s been catcalled ― that is, most women who live in or have visited walkable cities ― will tell you that this problem predates internet-era dating. But the ease of stranger-to-stranger communication in the internet era makes it that much more prevalent. If a woman expresses her sexuality, it’s because she wants any man who’s interested in engaging with her sexually, or so this line of thinking goes. But, as Witt saliently argues, “I liked to have more control about who I could be sexual with.”


How, then, can women exercise control over their bodies while opening themselves to sexual exploration? The internet, often characterized as seedy when it comes to sex, is one place to start, Witt writes.


Witt outlines the feminist opposition to porn and performance, which she says is frustratingly limited. Women who enjoy porn, the feminist argument goes, are adhering to patriarchal visions of pleasure, not discovering what’s genuinely pleasurable for themselves.


But, in her first deep forays into sites like PornHub, Witt feels liberated in spite of herself. She takes issues with the degrading categories ― why “MILF” instead of “woman > 30”? ― but finds the plethora of pleasures comforting. Someone, she concludes, will always want to have sex with her, despite what the dominant narrative about “aging women” will have you believe. On porn sites, “puffy nipples” is a desirable search term, along with “chubby,” “aged,” “big clit,” “small tits,” and “9 months pregnant.” The aspects of womanhood that are hidden on glossy magazines and advertisements are celebrated here. For Witt, this realization was a step towards shaking off sexual expectations, a move towards discovering her own personal preferences.


So, participating in porn and other modes of virtual sex as a consumer or voyeur could have “real-world” benefits, even for women. The problem arises when we fail to to acknowledge that many of these online communities have the potential to perpetuate oppressive power structures rather than challenging them. In order for there to be performances to view and consume, there must be performers ― professional porn stars, and their more amateur counterparts, cam girls. Witt talks to several of these women in Future Sex, and the consensus among them is that their line of work is pleasurable, a way of making a living that provides them an escape from convention or unhealthy familial relationships.


Witt wisely doesn’t suggest that these women are somehow deluded or disempowered. Instead, she tries to better understand the source of their pleasure. She visits a live shoot for a series run by an organization called Kink, during which a performer who goes by Penny Pax submits to being touched and hit by audience members before she reaches orgasm on camera, helped along by a pair of dominants who tie her up. The video series includes a debriefing with Pax, who says after the shoot, “I had a great time, it was amazing.”


Hoping for further insight, Witt signs up for a live webcam site, Chaturbate, and browses through popular channels, which include one belonging to “Edith,” a celibate 19-year-old who talks about Camus as often as she flashes her breasts to viewers, who return the favor with purchases from an Amazon wish list and small monetary tokens.


A cover story for The New York Observer argues that camming ― sex work that most often involves male viewers paying typically female cam girls for virtual sex acts ― could free up its socially isolated customers to better communicate in the “real world.” The alluring argument is that, because both parties are consenting to sex as a low-stakes transaction, the relationship could function as a sort of trial run for a “real” relationship, wherein both parties are equals. 


The article glosses over the obvious fact that the cam girl-customer relationship involves an exchange of capital, reinforcing the long-existing power dynamic wherein a woman’s value is tied up in her body, a man’s in his money. Which isn’t to say such a relationship should be chastised; it just isn’t as revolutionary as the author of this article suggests. 



Already, the hulking power structures from the world of physical, in-person sex have taken root, making virtual sex as tricky for women to navigate as its mystical predecessors.



Witt acknowledges this in Future Sex. While browsing, she notices that most of the female Chaturbate channels involved an exhibition of personality ― “cutting out paper hearts for Valentine’s Day or listening to the songs of Miley Cyrus” ― whereas the men who hosted channels “invariably positioned themselves in a black computer chair at a desk in ghastly desk-lamp illumination, dick in hand, making the usual motions.”


Even in this supposedly free environment, men could have virtual sex in a straightforwardly bodily manner, while women were expected to provide more of an experience. And, as Witt bluntly puts it, “the performers on Chaturbate had economic as well as sexual motivation.” Many of the women she interviewed used the site as a form of meager income while they lived at home, caring for sick relatives, putting off college, which they hoped was on the horizon.


Ultimately, Witt found that browsing mainstream porn and the fringes of cam sites could help women experiment without the risk of disease, violence or unwanted pregnancy. But for those providing the material ― even those who perform to express themselves rather than out of necessity ― there were still risks. One woman confided to Witt that a former classmate spotted her on Chaturbate, and told everyone else in her social circle, which resulted in an all-around negative experience. “The worry that the encounter would be recorded or that its data would be hacked punctured the serenity of the dream,” Witt wrote.


It seems, then, that the internet once promised sexual parity, an open, anonymous frontier where experimentation could run wild, with relatively few risks. But already, the hulking power structures from the world of physical, in-person sex have taken root, making virtual sex as tricky for women to navigate as its mystical predecessors.


Future Sex is out now from Farrar, Strauss and Giroux.

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