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Check Out This T-Rex Made Entirely Of Balloons Before It Goes Extinct

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Sure, you’re never going to meet a real T-Rex. We can’t argue with that. But don’t get all deflated about it. World Balloon Modeling champion Mark Verge has you covered.


In the latest installment of “The Coolest Thing I’ve Ever Made,” Verge describes his passion for building larger-than-life balloon sculptures, including his very impressive Balloon T-Rex. The enormous dinosaur is designed with incredible attention to detail, from the teeth and ribs to its long tail.


Requiring over 1,400 balloons and hundreds of hours to construct, Verge needs to work quickly. It won’t be long before this T-Rex deflates to extinction.


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'P***y Pipes' Bring Us Hope In This Dark And Hostile World (NSFW)

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Warning: This article contains a NSFW, uncensored image of a pussy (pipe). 



In this dark and hostile world, sometimes a girl just wants to unwind, get high, and not stick a phallic wand in her mouth in the process. 


“So much of weed culture is so dudely!” artist Caitlin Rose Sweet told The Huffington Post. Since 2013, Sweet has managed an Etsy store called Community Magic, providing beautifully messy ceramic goods to femmes, queers and, yes, stoner babes. One of her most popular sellers is the “pussy pipe.”


It all began when one of Sweet’s friends requested a pipe molded in the image of their mutual friend’s vagina. To a person familiar with the queer, punk social scene, that demand was nothing out of the ordinary.


“She has a legendary, amazing pussy with these frilly lips,” Sweet mused. 


After creating the original pussy pipe, Sweet posted an image of it to Instagram, and the requests came rolling in. “There is a clear need for pussy pipes in the world!” the artist said. 



Sweet now sells the ceramic goods online for $60, customizable to resemble the vag of your choice. Just don’t expect any Platonic pussies; the artist values fleshy imperfection as a mode of resistance against the immaculate images that too often constitute a feminine ideal.


“I feel like my pussy pipes are different because I am not making polite, neat, tidy pussies,” Sweet said. “I make pink, messy pussies that are all unique and different.”


Sweet added that, although it’s exciting to see women’s bodies celebrated and exhibited in the world of art, it is limiting to reduce feminism to images of boobs and vaginas, which are suddenly quite in fashion. “My work is about celebrating bodies, not just pussies,” Sweet said. “The feminist struggle is way beyond cisgender women’s bodies.”


Although Sweet is well aware she can’t quite smash the patriarchy with a simple yonic piece, she is honored to help women soothe their bodies and minds after a long day of patriarchy-smashing. “It’s all about body autonomy, self-care and finding pleasure in a shitty, hostile world,” Sweet said. “I am making tools for bad girls, feminists, witches and queers to self-actualize and practice self-care.”


And, if she happens to be disrupting a long history of phallic pipes in the process, so be it!


As Sweet put it: “So many femmes, women and queers have been like, ‘Yes! Something I want to put in my mouth!’”

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18 Times Black People Broke The Internet In 2016

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Black people, yet again, had a remarkable influence on the internet this year. 


From taking stances for social justice to creating viral challenges that kept us entertained, black social media users proved just how influential their power is. They raised awareness about police brutality with #BlackLivesMatter, provided education on mental health issues with #YouGoodMan and gave us some much-needed laughter with memes galore. 


Relive some of the good that came out of 2016 with these 18 times black people won the internet.


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Here’s A Weird Olsen Twin Thing You Didn’t Know Existed

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Tourists taking a trip to New York have been visiting the city’s iconic museum gift shops all month, buying presents they hope will convince friends back home that they’re the sophisticated one in their group. The true meaning of December has always been gifting a loved one a Van Gogh finger puppet and annoyingly informing anyone who will listen that the painter’s last name is actually pronounced more like “vun hawk” (with optional hawk screech).


But this year, tourists and New Yorkers alike have a brand new museum shop at which to spend their earnings. They can now shop at a museum gift shop that sells art, kimonos and lunch boxes featuring the famous likenesses of Mary-Kate and Ashley Olsen. 



Earlier in 2016, Brooklyn comedians Viviana Olen and Matt Harkins opened a museum exhibit dedicated to the Olsen twins. Now they’re expanding that idea into the holiday shopping season.


The Olsen twin exhibit had paintings and other forms of artwork that celebrated the greatness of the mysterious duo most known for “Full House,” movies about first kisses, and most recently their fashion brand, The Row.


The gift shop is located in Olen and Harkins’ actual Williamsburg apartment, which also houses fan art inspired by the Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan figure skating scandal, an exhibit that began in 2015.


At the moment, the museum gift shop is essentially a bunch of boxes in their apartment. “Oh, my god, it’s so bad,” Olen told The Huffington Post over the phone, before both she and Harkins said there are “boxes everywhere.”


After crowdfunding their original Olsen and Kerrigan-Harding projects, the duo claims they haven’t been making money on their apartment museum. They hope this gift shop will make their art ventures sustainable and allow for future projects, even setting up their venture as an LLC.


As with the previous exhibit, the Olsen twins are not actually involved.  



The best item in this gift shop is arguably a kimono, featuring art by Natasha Winter-Best, that originally appeared in the museum exhibit. Olen expressed that putting on the kimono is a transformative moment.


“It is a spiritual experience and we hope that we can convey that,” said Olen.


Of course, without the Olsen twins’ involvement, the duo has to be a bit blurry about whether it’s actually the famous sisters on their museum’s products.


Technically, Winter-Best’s work is considered a “witchy fashion twins” kimono. A lunchbox, featuring art by Randy Glance, is labelled “psychedelic fashion twins hiding from dinosaurs.”


“We haven’t heard anything from lawyers,” said Harkins while Olen laughed. “Hopefully we never will.”



Besides hopefully funding their next art exhibit ― which they are keeping a secret for now ― Olen and Harkins are donating 10% of sales from prints in the shop to a featured charity every month. The first charity is GEMS, which provides help and services for sexually exploited women.


Since the “Olsen twin” gift shop as well as the Tonya Harding and Nancy Kerrigan exhibit are both located in their apartment, Olen and Harding do not publicly share the location for easy visiting. That said, you can still contact them on their website if you’d like to stop by for a tour. 

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The Anti-2016 Christmas Song You Didn't Know You Needed

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All Carla Valderrama wants for Christmas is a socially conscious society, and she knows she’s not alone.


In tribute to this truly hellish year, the Latina comedian and actress took the classic holiday song “White Christmas” and re-wrote it to reflect what this country really needs right now: a Woke Christmas.


“Every year I put [’White Christmas’] on blast all day,” Valderrama told The Huffington Post. “This year I didn’t want that. I didn’t want a ‘White Christmas.’ I wanted something to remind people that there is more than one reality to life in this country. I wanted a ‘Woke Christmas’.”


The parody has lyrics that touch upon Black Lives Matter, Donald Trump’s racist rhetoric, North Carolina’s bathroom bill, the Dakota Access Pipeline protests, Brock Turner’s lenient sentence, Hollywood whitewashing and a lot more. And it certainly is quite a depressing, if not accurate, summary of 2016. 


“I was sick and tired of being sick and tired of all the racial and social injustices that were happening,” she said. “Usually I can’t wait for Christmas and all the music but this year it seemed so phony. I decided to write a Christmas song that addressed all of the things that I and others were feeling.”


Sleigh, Carla. Sleigh.

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Colin Kaepernick's White Parents Say They're 'Very Proud' Of Him

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Colin Kaepernick’s parents are finally speaking publicly about their son’s national anthem protest.


Teresa and Rick Kaepernick, both white, spoke highly of their son’s decision and condemned the criticism he has received in the past months in a statement to The Undefeated on Friday.


“Colin is carrying a heavy load and following a difficult path that he truly believes in. He is putting his entire future and possibly his life on the line for those beliefs,” they said in the statement. “As his parents, it pains us to read articles and tweets saying that his family does not support him; this could not be further from the truth. We want people to know that we are very proud of our son and admire his strength and courage in kneeling for the rights of others.”


The couple, who adopted Colin at 5 weeks old, admitted that, initially, they were “surprised as anyone” at Colin’s decision. But after Colin began receiving racist backlash — in the media, on Twitter and at his parent’s home — they said they gained a better understanding of America’s racial climate.


“We were truly shocked at the amount of racist hatred out there! Until this had occurred, we had naively believed that the racial atmosphere in this country was far better than it actually is. Prayer and talks with our son gave us a much better understanding of the reason for his protest and how we should view it.”


Teresa and Rick told The Undefeated that they were hesitant about speaking out and gaining public attention. But after three months of Colin’s protest, they wanted to clear up any falsehoods that they didn’t support their son.


Since he began his protest, a few NFL executives, a police union, a former presidential candidate and many others have criticized Colin for his protest. Colin’s parents said the critics “do not understand his point.”


To read their full interview, head over to The Undefeated.

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'The Bachelor' Will Find Nick V.'s 'Scandal'-Loving Dolphin Wife

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Just over three months since the dramatic announcement that 36-year-old Wisconsin native Nick Viall would be the next “Bachelor,” the franchise’s flagship show has wrapped and the cast of new bachelorettes has been announced


Of course, Nick’s journey started long before that August reveal, when he played the role of runner-up ― and villain ― on Andi Dorfman’s season of “The Bachelorette,” and then as runner-up on Kaitlyn Bristowe’s season, where he played less a villain than a contestant divisive for his mere presence. Then, on “Bachelor in Paradise,” he had a summer romance with Jen Saviano, only to break up with her during the finale. But at last, it seems, he’s convinced enough of Bachelor Nation that he deserves a shot at love, reality TV-style.


So what sort of woman does ABC think Nick will fall in love with? Could it be a a spunky brunette? Hmmm ...



So, yes, it’s no surprise that the majority of ladies vying for Nick’s affection happen to have brown hair. But some other strong trends also jumped out as we surveyed the group of 30 (30!!) women assembled to win Nick’s sensitive yet manly heart:


1. They love dolphins.


Much like his last on-camera girlfriend, Saviano, who notably described dolphins as the only other mammals to have sex for pleasure, many of Nick’s future girlfriends are crazy about these sea-dwelling creatures, whether because they “rescue lost sailors” or are “cute.” Some of his lady suitors want to train dolphins, others want to be them, others just like them.


2. They’re under 28.


Nick, remember, is 36. More than half the women on his season are under 28. There are more 23-year-old women on this season of “The Bachelor” than there are women over 30. 


3. They think Olivia Pope is a boss lady.


These are women who enjoy suspenseful drama with a strong female lead! Best enjoyed with a large glass of wine, curled up on the couch on a Thursday night. (Shonda... are you making a guest appearance this season?)


4. They have an affinity for tattoos — specifically hearts and butterflies.


Apparently Nick likes some “edge,” because these ladies are all inked up ― whether it’s Christian references, butterflies, a heart-shaped grenade, or more cryptic inscriptions. See, wifeys can have tattoos!


5. They don’t seem to be the most avid of readers. 


Favorite books and authors cited included a few standouts: Steve Harvey, author of Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man; Nicholas Sparks; The Five Love Languages (”Bachelor” required reading); and “I need to read more books.”


6. They aren’t all white!


Ending on a hopeful note, at least nine of the 30 women on “The Bachelor” this season appear to be women of color, including several black women. Even the most diverse of the last few seasons, Sean Lowe’s, only included six women of color out of 26 contestants, still a lower percentage than Nick’s upcoming season. It’s not much, but we’ll take even baby steps towards progress at this point.


All this is to say: ABC, our first black Bachelorette had better be coming next season. We’re waiting.


For more on Nick V.’s bachelorette roster and the upcoming season, check out HuffPost’s “Here to Make Friends” podcast below:





 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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Dad Transforms Daughter Into Astronaut With Awesome Onesie Alterations

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A dad made some creative changes to his baby daughter’s sleepwear, and the result is adorably badass.


When Ben Brucker’s 4-month-old daughter Maya started having trouble sleeping, he and his wife Emily bought her Baby Merlin’s Magic SleepSuit to help improve her naps and overnight sleep.



“It’s extraordinarily puffy and funny looking, and it already looked pretty ridiculous,” Ben told The Huffington Post. “Emily and I referred to it as her space suit. When she’d go down for a nap, we’d tell her she’s going to the moon.”


This joke gave Ben a fun idea for a way to surprise Emily and Maya: Transform the baby’s sleep suit into an actual space suit ... sort of.



To bring the joke to life, the dad ordered some NASA patches from Amazon. His mother, who was in town for a visit, helped him sew the patches on the sleep suit. The process only took a couple of hours.


Ben said her help was invaluable, as he couldn’t sew them on himself while watching Maya alone. 



The dad shared photos of the space suit on Reddit, where he received lots of positive responses from space fans. 


But Ben only cared about one person’s feedback: his wife. 


Ben and Emily are graphic designers and art directors, and while he’s been on paternity leave for a few weeks, she’s back at work now. “She’s been a bit stressed, and we are extremely sleep deprived, so I did this entirely to make her laugh,” the dad explained.



“I wanted to turn something that was stressing us out into something that makes us smile,” he added.


Emily’s reaction did not disappoint. Ben said she loved the alterations. He even filmed her reaction and shared it on YouTube. 





“It was fun surprising her, and sharing a moment of much needed absurdity and laughter during a very stressful and exhausting week,” the dad said. 


Maya also seemed to like her new space suit, but only time will tell how much it affects her future interests. 


“I would be very proud if she ends up working for NASA, but I hope she becomes herself, whoever she is, and does something that makes her happy,” Ben said.



Ben told HuffPost he hopes Maya’s space suit makes people smile. 


“Taking care of a 4-month-old is difficult and hectic, especially when you’re not getting any sleep,” he said. “But you gotta try to have fun in any way you can. As they say, blink and you’ll miss it.”



H/T Today

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28 Sacred Spaces That Capture The Stunning Beauty Of Religious Architecture

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It’s hard to pin down exactly what makes a space feel sacred. But walk through the hallowed passages of a majestic temple or kneel at the foot of an ancient tomb, and you may feel the sacred to be an almost palpable force. 


For the past 38 years, Faith & Form magazine and the Interfaith Forum on Religion, Art and Architecture have hosted an annual awards program for architects and artists around the world who evoke this sacred feel in works of religious architecture and design.


For artists and architects, the task of evoking the divine through structures and shapes is a difficult one, said Michael J. Crosbie, editor-in-chief of Faith & Form.


“They have to provide space for a liturgical action, the collection of a congregation in a place to worship, and for people to be in communion through the expression of faith,” Crosbie told The Huffington Post.


On top of that, religious architecture typically reflects the traditions and forms of a particular faith and distinguishes itself in some way from the other buildings that surround it, he noted.


“The architecture of the sacred must transcend the everyday, in some way,” Crosbie said. “It must take us out of ourselves, make us part of something greater, must refresh the congregation in its belief and in its faith, and connect us to each other, and to something beyond all of us.”


Evoking this sense of transcendence is the architect’s “greatest challenge,” he added. “There isn’t a formula or a set of rules to follow about how it can be achieved.”


This year’s winners for the International Awards Program for Religious Art & Architecture capture the sacred in diverse ways. A panel of five independent judges ― comprised of architects, artists and religious leaders ― selected the winners, which feature a mixture art, architecture, unbuilt projects and student work. They are all either new projects or renovations of existing works, and roughly half were designed or created for sites outside of North America.


The award winners receive recognition of their work in the Faith & Form magazine and will also be honored at an awards presentation ceremony in May at the annual convention of the American Institute of Architects, Crosbie said.


View the 28 winners of the 2016 Faith & Form/IFRAA Religious Art and Architecture Award below:


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18 Feminist Bright Spots In The Hellscape Of 2016

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Let us begin with the obvious. For many women, 2016 was a deflating nightmare of epic proportions.


It was singular in terms of shittiness, really. One of the top news stories was the unearthing of decade-old footage of Donald Trump boasting that he likes to grab women by the pussy ― and he went on to be elected as America’s 45th president. The glass ceiling stands. Reproductive rights are under attack. It’s... not great.


But! Last year was also filled with some pretty solid moments for women in the worlds of sports, entertainment and yes, politics and reproductive rights. We swear.


In the spirit of kicking off 2017 on a more positive note, we rounded up 18 of the brightest spots for women from the last year. Onwards and (hopefully?!) upwards.


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Broadway's Telly Leung Wants His Latest Work To Spur Social Change

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When he auditioned for “In Transit,” actor-singer Telly Leung saw the show as a simple, but heartfelt, “love letter” to New York.


Billed as Broadway’s first-ever a cappella musical, the show follows 11 frazzled Manhattanites whose disparate lives intersect on the city’s subway system. In it, Leung stars as Steven, whose fiancée Trent (Justin Guarini) is struggling to tell his born-again Christian mother about the mixed race couple’s relationship before their wedding. (Watch the trailer for “In Transit” above.) 


Given musical theater’s recent embrace of queer themes in “Fun Home” and “Hedwig and the Angry Inch,” among other shows, Steven and Trent’s storyline seems conventional enough, especially as it is one of many character arcs in the ensemble piece. One day before “In Transit” began previews on Nov. 10, however, the future of LGBTQ rights was thrust into uncertainty following Donald Trump’s surprise accession to the U.S. presidency. Suddenly, Leung said, the show’s all-inclusive message was given a renewed sense of purpose.



“The whole show is about people who are trying to get somewhere and feeling a bit stuck, a bit helpless. New Yorkers are driven and we’re always trying to get somewhere,” the 36-year-old “Glee” veteran told The Huffington Post before “In Transit” opened on Broadway Dec. 11. “It’s frustrating when we don’t get there.”


But it isn’t just the queer aspect of “In Transit” that gives the musical, which was written by Kristen Anderson-Lopez, James-Allen Ford, Russ Kaplan and Sara Wordsworth, a sense of urgency in Leung’s eyes. Seeing the show’s diverse cast – which includes Margo Seibert, James Snyder, Erin Mackey and Nicholas Ward – work “in harmony together, visually and audibly,” is “something that we all really need at this time in our country,” he said.



Interestingly, “In Transit” debuts at a time when one of Leung’s earlier projects is getting a new life. “Allegiance,” which follows a Japanese-American family thrown into an internment camp when the U.S. enters World War II, will be shown Tuesday on 600 movie screens across the country.


That musical, which also starred Tony winner Lea Salonga and “Star Trek” icon George Takei, enjoyed a successful out-of-town run in San Diego, California. Despite Takei’s outspoken passion for the project, the show received mixed reviews when it hit Broadway in November 2015, and closed in February after 111 performances.



Given the nation’s political climate, Leung hopes the film version of “Allegiance” is received differently. The show, he said, can now been seen as an important reminder to those now grappling with Trump’s divisive rhetoric on minority groups. 


“It was always in the artistic vision of our producers to create a Broadway show that not only seeks to entertain, but educate and bring about some social change, too,” he said. “This story needs to live on, and there are lessons to be learned.”


Collectively, both “In Transit” and “Allegiance” are important reminders that “art doesn’t exist in a vacuum at times like this,” Leung said. “That message is more important now than ever.”


Telly Leung stars in “In Transit,” now playing at the Circle in the Square Theater in New York. Head here for more information. 

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2017 SAG Awards Give 'Captain Fantastic,' Emily Blunt And Millie Bobby Brown Surprise Nominations

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This is the week awards season comes into focus.


The Screen Actors Guild unveiled the shortlist for its annual film and television prizes on Wednesday, two days after the Hollywood Foreign Press Association announced the Golden Globe nominations. Both awards are considered bellwethers for the 2017 Oscar race that began in earnest around Labor Day.


Always one show to offer a few curveballs, the SAG Awards nominated Emily Blunt, whose “Girl on the Train” performance seemed to make her an Oscar also-ran after the movie garnered middling reviews. Blunt and “Florence Foster Jenkins” star Meryl Streep nabbed nods that pundits expected would go to Annette Bening (”20th Century Women”), Isabelle Huppet (”Elle”) or Ruth Negga (”Loving”). SAG also devoted a spot in its top film category to “Captain Fantastic,” which beat out awards-season favorites like “Hacksaw Ridge,” “Hell or High Water,” “La La Land,” “Lion” and “Jackie.” 


Now is the moment you can start prepping your ballots at home. SAG has the highest membership overlap with the Academy’s acting branch, so these awards can be significant indicators of how the Oscars’ acting categories will shake out. One caveat: SAG uses a nominating committee, so its finalists are a mere sample of the Academy’s tastes. There’s still plenty of wiggle room in the Oscar roster, which will be announced on Jan. 24. (Oh, and congrats on your nominations, too, TV folks! Look at Millie Bobby Brown go!)


Sophia Bush and Common announced the nominees during a live-stream in Los Angeles. See the full list below. The SAG Awards air Jan. 29. 


FILM





OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A CAST IN A MOTION PICTURE


“Captain Fantastic”
”Fences”
”Hidden Figures”
”Manchester by the Sea”
”Moonlight”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A FEMALE ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE


Amy Adams, “Arrival”
Emily Blunt, “The Girl on the Train”
Natalie Portman, “Jackie”
Emma Stone, “La La Land”
Meryl Streep, “Florence Foster Jenkins”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A MALE ACTOR IN A LEADING ROLE


Casey Affleck, “Manchester by the Sea”
Andrew Garfield, “Hacksaw Ridge”
Ryan Gosling, “La La Land”
Viggo Mortensen, “Captain Fantastic”
Denzel Washington, “Fences”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A FEMALE ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE


Viola Davis, “Fences”
Naomie Harris, “Moonlight”
Nicole Kidman, “Lion”
Octavia Spencer, “Hidden Figures”
Michelle Williams, “Manchester by the Sea”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A MALE ACTOR IN A SUPPORTING ROLE


Mahershala Ali, “Moonlight”
Jeff Bridges, “Hell or High Water”
Hugh Grant, “Florence Foster Jenkins”
Lucas Hedges, “Manchester by the Sea”
Dev Patel, “Lion”


OUTSTANDING ACTION PERFORMANCE BY STUNT ENSEMBLE IN A MOTION PICTURE


“Captain America: Civil War”
”Doctor Strange”
”Hacksaw Ridge”
”Jason Bourne”
”Nocturnal Animals”
 


TELEVISION




OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY AN ENSEMBLE IN A COMEDY SERIES



“The Big Bang Theory”
”Black-ish”
”Modern Family”
”Orange Is the New Black”
”Veep”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY AN ENSEMBLE IN A DRAMA SERIES


“The Crown”
”Downton Abbey”
”Game of Thrones”
”Stranger Things”
”Westworld”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A FEMALE ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES


Uzo Aduba, “Orange Is the New Black”
Jane Fonda, “Grace and Frankie”
Ellie Kemper, “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”
Julia Louis-Dreyfus, “Veep”
Lily Tomlin, “Grace and Frankie”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A MALE ACTOR IN A COMEDY SERIES


Anthony Anderson, “Black-ish”
Tituss Burgess, “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt”
Ty Burrell, “Modern Family”
William H. Macy, “Shameless”
Jeffrey Tambor, “Transparent”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A FEMALE ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES


Millie Bobby Brown, “Stranger Things”
Claire Foy, “The Crown”
Thandie Newton, “Westworld”
Winona Ryder, “Stranger Things”
Robin Wright, “House of Cards”



OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A MALE ACTOR IN A DRAMA SERIES


Sterling K. Brown, “This Is Us”
Peter Dinklage, “Game of Thrones”
John Lithgow, “The Crown”
Rami Malek, “Mr. Robot”
Kevin Spacey, “House of Cards”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A FEMALE ACTOR IN A TELEVISION MOVIE OR LIMITED SERIES


Bryce Dallas Howard, “Black Mirror”
Felicity Huffman, “American Crime”
Audra McDonald, “Lady Day Emerson’s Bar and Grill”
Sarah Paulson, “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”
Kerry Washington, “Confirmation”


OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE BY A MALE ACTOR IN A TELEVISION MOVIE OR LIMITED SERIES


Riz Ahmed, “The Night Of”
Sterling K. Brown, “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”
Bryan Cranston, “All the Way”
John Turturro, “The Night Of”
Courtney B. Vance, “The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story”


OUTSTANDING ACTION PERFORMANCE BY STUNT ENSEMBLE IN A TELEVISION SERIES 


“Game of Thrones”
”Daredevil”
”Luke Cage”
”The Walking Dead”
”Westworld”





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Bernie Sanders' New Book Takes Corporate Media To Task

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During a rousing speech delivered to supporters in New York City Tuesday night, Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) had a few words for the media establishment.


“Over 90 percent of media coverage [during the 2016 presidential race] was not about the issues that impact your lives,” he said, citing “a variety of studies.”


Instead, he continued, the stories “were about Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton. They were about political gossip. They were about polls. They were about fundraising. They were about stupid things that people said 20 years ago. What we must demand of a media is that they start covering the issues that impact our lives. Not just the candidates’ lives.”


Sanders was in town to promote his new book, Our Revolution, named for the political action group that grew out of the senator’s progressive platform. Speaking to a crowd of seated audience members in Manhattan’s Cooper Union, he took what he called “corporate media” to task for its failure to cover the 2016 presidential campaign season in “a serious way.” During the speech, Sanders echoed sentiments outlined in the last chapter of his book, a section titled “Corporate Media and the Threat to Our Democracy.” 


“If media does not accept its responsibility to talk about the reality facing the American people [...] that is a real threat to the future of American democracy,” he told his supporters Tuesday night.



Mr. Trump does not have a mandate to carry out his extremist ideas and we should not forget that for a second.
Senator Bernie Sanders


In his book, published on Nov. 15 by Thomas Dunne Books, he cites an early experience with “the nature of the media’s political coverage,” recounting the time Vermont news outlets focused their attention on a candidate for state representative who skied around the state to meet voters, downplaying the actual issues affecting voters. “If corporate media won’t change,” Sanders writes in the final pages of his book, “start new media.”


The issues that impact our lives, Sanders reiterated throughout his hourlong talk, include access to healthcare and higher education, the disappearance of the middle class, criminal justice reform, immigration reform, and climate change. He urged his followers to pay attention to these concerns, going so far as to point out three subjects on which American citizens should refuse to compromise: bigotry, democracy and climate change. 


Sanders was introduced on Tuesday night by the actor and activist Harry Belafonte, who described the election of Donald Trump as “weird.” Belafonte was in turn introduced by Strand Bookstore owner Nancy Bass Wyden, who praised Sanders’ “action-oriented ideas for progressives who want to reclaim power in America.” Strand hosted the event at Cooper Union.


The Huffington Post streamed the entire speech live on Facebook Tuesday night. You can watch the event, and read more excerpts from Sanders’ talk, below.





On Donald Trump:


“In terms of the popular vote, Mr. Trump lost that to Secretary Clinton by almost three million votes. [...] Mr. Trump does not have a mandate to carry out his extremist ideas and we should not forget that for a second.”


On the progressive agenda:


“On virtually every major issue impacting the American people, it turns out that a significant majority of the American people support the progressive agenda. I want all of you to know [...] that you’re not heroes and heroines fighting some great uphill struggle out on the vanguard. What your views are, by and large, represent where the American people are on issue after issue.”


On voter suppression:


“What you have in Republican states all over this country is you have Republican governors who are too cowardly to participate in free and fair and open elections. They are working overtime to deny poor people, old people, young people, people of color the right to vote. Massive levels of voter suppression.”


On Trump’s cabinet nominations:


“Mr. Trump nominated for Secretary of State the head of ExxonMobil. He appointed or nominated as head of the Environmental Protection Agency someone who does not even believe in the reality of climate change. And on this issue, as on many other issues, what we have got to do as a nation is [...] we have got to bring millions and millions of people together to tell Mr. Trump that we’re not going back to bigotry, that we’re going to protect American democracy, and that we are going to transform our energy system, whether ExxonMobil likes it or not.”


On why Hillary Clinton and Democratic congressmen lost:


“There are a lot of reasons why, but I’ll tell you what I think a key reason is ― is that the Democrats failed to understand that, while it is true, absolutely, that we are better off today economically than we were eight years ago when Bush left office, no debate about that, there’s another truth. And that truth is that there are millions and millions of people, often in rural areas, in inner cities, who are hurting today very, very badly. They are in real pain. This is a pain that you don’t see on television. [...] The word poverty comes out of the mouths of very few elected officials.”


On the future of the Democratic Party:


“I think we need a fundamental transformation of the Democratic Party. I am not here tonight to, you know, knock people [...] but I think it is very clear that the current approach ― the current way the Democratic Party has done business simply has failed and we need a very new direction.”

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Style Blogger Opens Up About Miscarriage In Gut-Wrenching Essay

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A popular figure in the style world is breaking the silence around pregnancy loss. On Dec. 6, Man Repeller founder Leandra Medine opened up about her recent miscarriage in an essay titled, “The Baby I Lost, the Person I’m Finding.”


Medine revealed that she suffered a miscarriage in November at 14 weeks into her first pregnancy. “It is pain I don’t wish upon Hitler’s most devout follower,” she wrote. “It felt impossible to deal with emotionally, but even harder to try and suppress, which I so wanted to. “


As Medine was coping with her loss, several close friends announced that they were pregnant, which worsened her grief. Describing her feelings in the aftermath, she wrote:



“It’s only been 11 days. I felt it instantaneously: I had gone from pregnant to regular again in a cruel, brutal flash. The second beating heart was no longer there, the bouncing had conclusively been terminated. But I don’t want to be a regular person. I want to be pregnant. I’ll take the vomiting and the fatigue and the severe mood swings — I swear I’ll work on the nastiness — just please, give me a baby.


Most mornings I wake up and wish I was still sleeping. I tried so hard to figure out why this happened to me, what I did to deserve it, whether I had made some unwitting deal with my deity that I would see professional success but personally, was destined to years of suffering. I take it back. Am I being punished? Tested? I don’t know.”



Medine said she didn’t want to write this essay for sympathy but instead to share her sense of hope. The previous day, she wrote, she felt hopeful and renewed for the first time since her miscarriage.


That morning, the blogger gave her husband a warm hug, to show him how much she appreciated his support in the midst of their loss. “I thanked him for collecting my bones when I couldn’t stand up straight, for watching 26 episodes of ‘Friends’ next to me, even with a splitting migraine on Thanksgiving day,” she wrote. “For letting me say terrible, terrible things to myself. For allowing me to indulge that harsh voice in my head ― for understanding that this voice is just trying to protect me. Even though it doesn’t quite know how.”


Reflecting on those “terrible” things she said to herself, Medine emphasized the importance of self-love. After thanking her husband, she said she looked into the mirror and apologized to her body for her self-loathing words. 


“I thanked my body for recovering,” she wrote. “I told us that it’s okay to be sad. That we would get through this, that we’re strong.” Ultimately, she told her body, “I love you.” 



Medine shared an email she sent her Man Repeller team after her miscarriage. In the note, she asked her colleagues to write down things they admire about themselves and things they’re grateful for ― an exercise to promote the kind of self-love she struggled to feel.


The journey has been difficult for the blogger, and it’s not quite over. “Honestly, though, I’m still pretty broken,” Medine wrote. Although in some moments she feels strong, she said that at other times she feels too weak to leave the house or do anything other than hug her knees to her chest and close her eyes. 


“But I’m also confident that with time — the greatest healer we know and have — the weak moments will get smaller and shorter,” she concluded. “That when I say we’ll have our baby, no matter what it takes, I’ll genuinely believe it.”


 After Medine published her essay, many readers thanked her for opening up about her loss and emphasized the value in sharing these stories.


















Read Medine’s full gut-wrenching essay on Man Repeller.

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Michael Fassbender Shreds Jimmy Fallon In Air Guitar Battle

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This is why they call him Michael Fass-Fender. (And if they don’t, they should).


It was all aboard the “Crazy Train” for “Assassin’s Creed” star Michael Fassbender’s air guitar battle with Jimmy Fallon. To be honest, Fallon came out with a bit of a lackluster performance with Thin Lizzy’s “The Boys Are Back in Town.” 


C’mon, man. This is “The Tonight Show!”


No worries. Fassbender kills it with just the faces he makes during Ozzy Osbourne’s “Crazy Train.”


The “Forget Air Guitar, I’m Going To Bust Ghosts” face:





(Just don’t cross the streams, dude.) 


The “Why Didn’t I Stretch Before This? Whatevs, I’m Killin’ It” face:





 


And, of course, the “Wait, Let Me Show You What A Bobblehead Does” face:





You’re the real Guitar Hero. Keep shredding, Fass-Fender!


“The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon” airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on NBC. 

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Why Photographer Nydia Blas Only Makes Images Of Women Of Color

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There is a distinct kind of intimacy that binds close female relationships ― whether between sisters, lovers, or friends. There’s a warmth that reveals itself through a lexicon of gestures tender and unspoken ― a hand-hold, a back massage, or a bedtime cuddle. 


When photographer Nydia Blas began mentoring young women in 2013, she was moved by the physical manifestations of their feelings toward one another, revealed in small yet tangible signals. She decided to capture them on film. 


“I was inspired by their friendships,” Blas explained to The Huffington Post, “the way they supported each other, cared for each other, and celebrated their differences. I wanted this work to explore that. In the images, there is a physical closeness that often takes place between pairs, whether it be an embrace or leaning on one another.”



These young women became the subjects of Blas’ series “The Girls Who Spun Gold,” a celebration of girls in all their sloppiness, softness and strength. The photos, romanticized and surreal, mirror the intensity with which many young women experience life, when a song or a kiss can provoke immense personal transformation. 


In one photo, four women and a baby play in an idyllic field, their sharply executed poses resembling a Renaissance tableau. In another, a woman blows billowing clouds of smoke into another’s mouth, the relatively standard action resulting in an otherworldly display of swirling haze.


In a third, one woman massages the face of another with her feet, a slight exaggeration of the physical rapport with which women convene. “I was trying find ways to communicate feelings of trust and tenderness in this act that I personally find a bit grotesque,” Blas said. “For me, that is an important element in this sort of secret language between women.”



Blas cited poet and activist Audre Lorde’s concept of “the erotic” as central to her image-making process. While eroticism is often associated with physicality and sexuality, Lorde traces the word back to its Greek root eros, “the personification of love in all its aspects ― born of Chaos, and personifying creative power and harmony.” Lorde’s eroticism does not merely connote sexual appetite, but rather a profoundly feminine, spiritual knowledge based in the power of unexpressed feelings. 


“When I speak of the erotic,” Lorde writes in Sister Outsider, “then, I speak of it as an assertion of the lifeforce of women; of that creative energy empowered, the knowledge and use of which we are now reclaiming in our language, our history, our dancing, our loving, our work, our lives.”


The eroticism Lorde speaks of, the kind that seeps from Blas’ images, is not just the electricity sparked between lovers, but between mother and daughter, between a group of best friends. It’s the feeling of intimacy without sex, love without condition, laughter without words. 



Blas was exposed to photos communicating this precious way of women being together since she was a kid. “The homes I grew up in were filled with images of my family and ancestors, which worked to instill this sense of greatness within me,” she said.


“I saw reflections of myself, and people who looked like me when they were babies, as graduates. I viewed them as hard workers, and as caring, strong, healthy, individuals. Beautiful black women, children, and men of varying shades, from dark-skinned to very light.”


Although her home was covered in images of familiar loved ones, as Blas grew up and became interested in the history of photography, she realized how uncommon visual representations of black women truly were. This realization continues to shape Blas’ chosen subject matter. 


“I feel as though there is a need for women of color to make images of women of color where we can literally see ourselves,” she said. “This is why I have I chosen to currently make images of only women of color.”



Blas is well aware of the ugly and discriminatory relationship between photography and people of color. She cited J.T. Zealy’s 19th-century portraits of black bodies, made to scientifically “prove” the superiority of the white race by comparing the physical attributes of black and white people.


Yet, according to Blas, the photos’ original intention has since been subverted. “While these subjects did not have control of if/how they were photographed, their ability to look back is mighty powerful indeed,” Blas said. “A returned gaze is a form of resistance; it is an opportunity to validate and articulate the subject’s experience.”


In utterly different circumstances, Blas affirms the power of human connection through photography, maintaining the tradition of changing minds and hearts through the simple act of seeing. 



Ultimately, Blas’ photos revel in the complexity often denied to young women ― especially women of color who are still regularly stereotyped in the limited portrayals they receive. The artist depicts her subjects as warriors, mothers, sirens and saints, each photo more of a mythical meditation than a snapshot of a specific individual. 


Her empathy might stem from the fact that Blas herself became a mother at the age of 18, and is now raising an 11-year-old daughter. When asked if motherhood had shaped her perspective as a photographer, Blas responded: “I think being a mother in a way is my work. It runs through all of my work.”


Fierce and soft, eager and unsure, Blas’ young subjects exist in a dreamlike world almost like our own. Honey drips from pregnant bellies and girls are free to gaze at their own bodies with wonder instead of shame. Friends huddle close to one another and communicate sans words, in a language only women understand. 


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Handwritten J.K. Rowling Book Snags $470,000 At Auction

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An extremely rare copy of Harry Potter–adjacent book The Tales of Beedle the Bard, handwritten by series author J.K. Rowling herself, sold Tuesday in England for a whopping £370,000 (about $470,000).


If you’re a Potterfile, then you know the significance of the book in the series — and you also know how incredibly cool it is to have a book handwritten by Rowling herself. 



A brief recap for Muggles: After Dumbledore’s death, the Hogwarts headmaster bequeathed a first edition of the popular wizarding children’s tales to Hermione Granger in Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows. On the page where the important “Tale of The Three Brothers” began was the mark of the Deathly Hallows — three items that, if used together, could make a wizard a “master of death.”



The bejeweled brown leather book was owned by the publisher who first signed Rowling, Barry Cunningham, and was one of only six copies she had given to people “most closely involved in the Harry Potter books.” Each book is written in Rowling’s hand and includes original illustrations as well.



The inscription on this one-of-a-kind work says: “To Barry, the man who thought an overlong novel about a boy wizard in glasses might just sell… THANK YOU.”.


Some of the proceeds of the book will go to Rowling’s charity, Lumos

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Andrew Lloyd Webber Told A Weird Story About How He Almost Discovered Rihanna, But Didn't

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Andrew Lloyd Webber just pulled the ultimate hipster move: He claims he knew about Rihanna before anyone else.


During a Tuesday segment on “Good Morning Britain,” the composer known for “Cats” and “Phantom of the Opera” said he spotted Rihanna singing “with a sort of karaoke band” while visiting Barbados years ago.


“She was singing there — this must have been about 12 years ago. I remember talking to Nigel Wright, who’s my music guy, and we were having a drink,” Webber recalled. “We thought, ‘She’s very, very good.’”


Attempting to explain why he ― an influential figure in the music industry ― did not approach her, Webber compared Rihanna to mere chattel. He worried that, should he deign to introduce her to other industry professionals overseas, he might find her less impressive in that setting ― like “a picture” or other souvenir that disappoints once you’ve brought it home from vacation.


“Then what do we do?” Webber said, deaf to the colonial undertones in his casual commentary. 


When co-host Piers Morgan asked Webber if he ever thinks about how much money he missed out on by not acting on his impulse, the composer said, “It’s not a story I’m proud of.” 


While it’s not uncommon to hear a producer or manager speak about “discovering” an artist, Webber and Morgan were strikingly oblivious to their words as they described a woman of color from an island nation as a pure commodity. 


Of course, the resident bad gal is doing just fine without either of them. Aside from all her No. 1 hits and awards, she’s a fashion icon and a burgeoning actress.


Guess the joke’s on you, Sir Webber.

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19 Nonfiction Books From 2016 That Will Expand Your Mind

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While we do love our fiction at HuffPost Arts & Culture, 2016 ushered in ample nonfiction work that’s just as worthy of your time and eyeballs.


What many need after a drawn-out and frightening election season are resources to unplug and reconnect to our humanity. The sprawling category of “nonfiction” works in the universe could fit the bill for anyone’s particular reading needs, with authors providing insight and elucidation to the true world around us. In a time when the fleeting pace of newsfeeds and the viruslike spread of fake news dominates headlines, it can be a relief to reflect on and learn from a static, thorough object like a book.


If you’re looking to sink deep into a life story, or simply allow your mind to open up to an experience that’s unlike your own, consider these 19 selections from HuffPost writers.



Writing contributed by Claire Fallon, Maddie Crum, Priscilla Frank, Katherine Brooks and Jillian Capewell.

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Striking Photos Of The Ballet Program Bringing Strength To One Of Africa’s Biggest Slums

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Fredrik Lerneryd spent the last year and a half photographing a group of ballet dancers in the Kibera neighborhood of Nairobi, Kenya, one of the largest urban slums in Africa


Dressed in bright blue and purple leotards, their arms and legs craning out as they stretch, Lerneryd’s subjects stand out beautifully against their stark surroundings ― monochrome walls and floors without any adornments. The Swedish photojournalist felt drawn to these dancers not because they are famous, or even professionals. The ballerinas (and ballerinos) in his photos are young students who study dance for fun. 


They do so through a program run by U.K.-based charity Anno’s Africa, which provides alternative arts education to over 800 children in Kenya. Taught by Mike Wamaya, who previously worked throughout Europe as a dancer, Anno’s ballet classes focus on both the physical and mental well-being of the 40 or so students who take part, promoting the confidence-building necessary to carry these kids into adulthood.



“I came in contact with the dancers while I was working on another story,” Lerneryd explained to The Huffington Post, “and I felt really moved [by] what I saw.”


His ongoing series, filled with images of floating bodies and expressive faces, focuses less on the rigorous craft of ballet and more on the visible determination of the people practicing it. A few of his photos also provide perspective on the realities of informal settlements in Nairobi, a city that is home to more than 2.5 million people in approximately 200 slum areas.


Lerneryd recounted how a local classroom would transform into a ballet studio each week after school ― students and teachers would remove the benches and chairs, he said, sweep the floors and turn the plain rooms into spaces for art. “After my first visit I just knew that I wanted to come back and follow their progress and see how they evolved,” he told HuffPost.



Over the course of more than a year, Lerneryd observed how the confidence of the dancers grew as they mastered movement after movement. “The fact that they feel and see how much they can do if someone gives them the chance, [it] improves their self-esteem and makes them stronger in their daily life,” Lerneryd added.


According to Lerneryd, four of the dancers from the ballet program in Kibera recently moved to a boarding school outside of the slum. They are now training at a ballet studio in Karen, an upper-class suburb in Nairobi. This December, they are taking part in a production of “The Nutcracker” at the National Theatre in Nairobi.


“The change in their life and just how far they have made it in just one year is really impressive,” Lerneryd concluded. 


You can see more of the photographer’s work on Instagram. Below is a selection of Lerneryd’s series, including shots of the students performing in “The Nutcracker.”



For more information on the ballet programs helping to shape the lives of students in informal settlements across the world, check out our past coverage.

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