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Bob Carey Shares The Story Behind The Pink Tutu That Won Our Hearts

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For Bob Carey, staying optimistic after his wife's breast cancer diagnosis was as simple as putting tu and tu together.

Carey began taking pictures of himself in a pink tutu -- and only a pink tutu -- in various whimsical locations and sharing them with his wife, Linda. The resulting work, now referred to as "The Tutu Project," helped lift both his and Linda's spirits and immediately went viral on the Internet in 2012.

In a video released on YouTube last week, the couple reflected on the project, their relationship and the idea of "keeping everything light and not so serious" despite a difficult diagnosis.

"The project really is no longer about Bob and I but all those who have been touched by cancer," Linda told The Huffington Post earlier this year.

The photos have since been compiled in a book, Ballerina, with all proceeds going directly to breast cancer organizations.

Ultimately, says Linda in the video, "It's just a good story about love."

WATCH the video, above.
PHOTOS from the project, below:

20th Annual Screen Actors Guild Awards Nominees List

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Nominees for the 20th annual Screen Actors Guild Awards announced Wednesday:

MOVIES: Actor: Bruce Dern, "Nebraska"; Chiwetel Ejiofor, "12 Years a Slave"; Tom Hanks, "Captain Phillips"; Matthew McConaughey, "Dallas Buyers Club"; Forest Whitaker, "Lee Daniels' The Butler."

Actress: Cate Blanchett, "Blue Jasmine"; Sandra Bullock, "Gravity"; Judi Dench "Philomena"; Meryl Streep, "August: Osage County"; Emma Thompson, "Saving Mr. Banks."

Supporting actor: Barkhad Abdi, "Captain Phillips"; Daniel Bruhl, "Rush"; Michael Fassbender, "12 Years a Slave"; James Gandolfini, "Enough Said"; Jared Leto, "Dallas Buyers Club."

Supporting actress: Jennifer Lawrence, "American Hustle"; Lupita Nyong'o, "12 Years a Slave"; Julia Roberts, "August: Osage County"; June Squibb, "Nebraska"; Oprah Winfrey, "Lee Daniels' The Butler."

Cast: "12 Years a Slave," ''American Hustle," ''August: Osage County," ''Dallas Buyers Club," ''Lee Daniels' The Butler."

Stunt ensemble: "All is Lost," ''Fast & Furious 6," ''Lone Survivor," ''Rush," ''The Wolverine."

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TELEVISION:

Actor in a movie or miniseries: Matt Damon, "Behind the Candelabra"; Michael Douglas, "Behind the Candelabra"; Jeremy Irons, "The Hollow Crown"; Rob Lowe, "Killing Kennedy"; Al Pacino, "Phil Spector."

Actress in a movie or miniseries: Angela Bassett, "Betty & Coretta"; Helena Bonham Carter, "Burton and Taylor"; Holly Hunter, "Top of the Lake"; Helen Mirren, "Phil Spector"; Elisabeth Moss, "Top of the Lake."

Actor in a drama series: Steve Buscemi, "Boardwalk Empire"; Bryan Cranston, "Breaking Bad"; Jeff Daniels, "The Newsroom"; Peter Dinklage, "Game of Thrones"; Kevin Spacey, "House of Cards."

Actress in a drama series: Claire Danes, "Homeland"; Anna Gunn, "Breaking Bad"; Jessica Lange, "American Horror Story: Coven"; Maggie Smith, "Downton Abbey"; Kerry Washington, "Scandal."

Actor in a comedy series: Alec Baldwin, "30 Rock"; Jason Bateman, "Arrested Development"; Ty Burrell, "Modern Family"; Don Cheadle, "House of Lies"; Jim Parsons, "The Big Bang Theory."

Actress in a comedy series: Mayim Bialik, "The Big Bang Theory"; Julie Bowen, "Modern Family"; Edie Falco, "Nurse Jackie"; Tina Fey, "30 Rock"; Julia Louis-Dreyfus, "Veep."

Drama series cast: "Boardwalk Empire," ''Breaking Bad," ''Downton Abbey," ''Game of Thrones," ''Homeland."

Comedy series cast: "30 Rock," ''Arrested Development," ''The Big Bang Theory," ''Modern Family," ''Veep."

Stunt ensemble: "Boardwalk Empire," ''Breaking Bad," ''Game of Thrones," ''Homeland," ''The Walking Dead."

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Lifetime Achievement: Rita Moreno.

Prince William And Kate Middleton Watch 'Downton Abbey'

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We were always "Downton Abbey" fans, but now that the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are watching it, it's officially the coolest show on TV.

While chatting with Andy Cohen, Allen Leech -- who plays Tom Branson -- revealed that the royal couple can't get enough of the Masterpiece series.

"I was actually at an event last week with Prince William, now the Duke of Cambridge, so yeah -- I met him last week, shook his hand," Leech said, according to Us. "He actually said, 'I’m a big fan of the show -- only now that my wife’s had a baby.'"

Sure, William. Blame it on the baby.

Season 4 of "Downton Abbey" will premiere on Jan. 5 on PBS. And if you're in New York this week, make sure to stop by the "Downton Abbey" tea truck for free tea and biscuits.

'Harry Potter'-Themed Stilettos Exist (And We Want Them)

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Who knew Harry Potter-themed wedding shoes could be so... sexy?

Reddit user akasha446 posted these delightful pics on Tuesday with the caption, "Harry Potter shoes for my wedding."




According to the post, the shoes were hand painted by the bride's sister-in-law for the Big Day. As to who wore what? The bride got to rock the black Harry Potter and Hogwarts stilettos, while the bridesmaids each wore a pair representing the four houses: Gryffindor, Ravenclaw, Hufflepuff, and Slytherin.

Luckily, he who shall not be named never RSVP'd.



Artist's 'Library Laboratory' Gives Old Books New Life As Planters

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What happens to old, discarded books, rotting away at thrift shops and recycling centers? The lucky ones end up in the hands of Sherri Green, who gives them new life.

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The Ypsilanti, Mich. artist has been making collages out of the old books she scavenged for several years, but started her new project, the Library Laboratory, when she was moving to a smaller apartment.

An avid gardener, she was trying to find ways to keep plants without an entire yard, when she read that everyday objects can be turned into planters, including books.

"When I found out I could plant in anything, that I could dig a hole in books, I thought it was perfect," Green told The Huffington Post. "The juxtaposition of alive and dilapidated is something undeniably beautiful to me."

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Green plants succulents in waterproofed "holes" in books, and uses them to bring a little bit of clandestine gardening indoors, she said. She has also begun selling them, along with other kinds of reinterpreted books.

The artist, who is also a waitress and sign painter at Trader Joe's, brings her makeshift potting shed to craft fairs, where she adds finishes touches to new planters -- and watches startled shoppers stop in their tracks when they notice what's different about the books on her shelves. She'll be at DIYpsi this weekend, an annual indie art fair in her town that she organizes.

Green looks for interesting cover designs and remnants of the past in the pages. She speaks lovingly about the books she finds:

"You can see the evidence of someone from 1953's math notes or French translations -- I don't know the right words to say what that does to me, seeing that evidence of real life in the past, the marks of an older time on something that was not meant to be saved," she said.

"The thought of them going into the trash is heartbreaking to me," she continued. "There's so much history passed [through them]. It's a way to showcase it and bring these back into the world in a functional way."

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Green's books are easy to care for -- the ones she sent to important women in her life for Mother's Day have survived, and if a plant were ever to die, another can easily be replanted. She plans to have a store on her website in the near future, but is currently taking orders by email.

Gulf Oil Spill Play From 'Laramie Project' Writer Examines Human Impacts (VIDEO)

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From Mother Nature Network's John Platt:

Families. Fishermen. Town officials. Cleanup workers. These are just a few of the people and communities devastated by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill of 2010. Their stories will be dramatized next year in a new play called "Spill," written by Leigh Fondakowski in collaboration with visual artist Reeva Wortel. The production aims to answer the question, "What is the true human and environmental cost of oil?"

"Spill" — like Fondakowski's earlier play and HBO movie, "The Laramie Project" — is based on interviews with dozens of people living in and around the area affected by the Deepwater Horizon disaster. The words of 30 real-life people will be incorporated directly into the production. President Barack Obama also plays a part, with words taken from his public statements during the crisis. Fondakowski told the New York Times that the interviews revealed stories that were not presented in the news. "The human story on the ground in Louisiana was much more profound than what I saw on TV," she said.

Artist Wortel traveled to Louisiana with Fondakowski, and her paintings of the interview subjects have been incorporated into the play.

"Spill" has been in the works since 2011, when the writer and artist raised more than $50,000 to conduct the interviews and complete the portraits. As Fondakowski wrote at the time, "The BP oil spill was one battle in an environmental war that is raging along the Gulf Coast. Our play and installation will give a human face and voice to this story and shed light on the issues of oil dependency and climate change that affect us all."

More than just a portrait of the explosion, "Spill" explores how oil has affected people in Louisiana for decades, serving to provide jobs and bring them out of poverty but also impacting their lifestyles in unexpected ways.

The play received some early workshops and staged readings in 2012, including performances at Wesleyan University, which commissioned the play. You can see Fondakowski talk about it, along with a few lines from the play, in this video:



The fully realized version of "Spill" will premier next March in Baton Rouge at Louisiana State University's Swine Palace theater. Performances will run March 12 through March 30. Tickets are on sale now.

Harvey And Bob Weinstein Sue Warner Bros. Over 'Hobbit' Profits

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NEW YORK (AP) — Harvey and Bob Weinstein have sued Warner Bros.' New Line Cinema claiming they're owned a share of the profits from the second and third "Hobbit" films.

In a suit filed Wednesday in New York, the Weinsteins say their 1998 sale of the rights to J.R.R. Tolkien's "The Hobbit" and "The Lord of the Rings" trilogy to New Line applies to all subsequent "Hobbit" films. Warner Bros. elected to split "The Hobbit" into three films, the second of which opens in theaters Friday. Warner Bros. responded with a statement calling Weinstein's sale of "The Hobbit" rights "one of the great blunders in movie history." The studio says the Weinsteins and Miramax agreed to be paid only for the first film based on "The Hobbit," and it says "that's all they're owed."

'Santa The Hutt' Window Display Is Ho Ho Ho My God! (PHOTO, VIDEO)

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"Santa The Hutt" is a hit. The grotesque Santa sculpture, named for the gelatinous "Star Wars" character, has been the subject of much chatter since San Francisco clothier Betabrand made him its holiday window display.

More than 1,000 families have posed with the work for a photo-op, Betabrand founder Chris Lindland told The Huffington Post. Lindland said he wanted to poke fun at the season's overindulgence.

"In the end, not even Santa Claus could resist the orgy of holiday excess!" the company wrote in a statement about the display. "For centuries the paragon of virtue, Kris Kringle has now transmogrified into a vile Yuletide leviathan known as Santa The Hutt."

(Story continues below image.)
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The sculptor, Cianna Valley, wrote to curious viewers on her Instagram that "he's just supposed to be gross."

But not everyone is feeling jolly about it. One writer for SF Weekly accused the retailer of a "miscarriage of mirth": "Yes, Virginia, there is a fat Santa joke on Valencia Street. And it doesn't bring good cheer."

For the complete "background" on Santa The Hutt, here are the details as sent to HuffPost:

In the end, not even Santa Claus could resist the orgy of holiday excess! For centuries the paragon of virtue, Kris Kringle has now transmogrified into a vile Yuletide leviathan known as Santa The Hutt.

After gorging himself on fruitcake and fortified wine, this slovenly mass of groaning, velvet-ensconsed blubber has relocated to the floor of the Betabrand company store in San Francisco. He now begrudgingly poses for holiday photos with Betabrand customers — if only because he's too obese to move.

Here are a few fun facts about Santa The Hutt:

--Now requires 24 reindeer to pull his sleigh.
--Sweats eggnog.
--Crushed three elves to death yesterday.
--Doesn't care if you're naughty or nice; just wants to know if you'll run across the street and get him cigarettes and a sack of chimichangas.

Santa The Hutt will be appearing at Betabrand throughout the holiday season. If you get to meet him or — God forbid — sit on his vast, undulating lap, we recommend that you thoroughly disinfect afterward. Penicillin is also suggested.



This DIY Cover Of TLC's 'Waterfalls' Will Change The Way You Look At A Typewriter

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What do you get when you combine a classic 1990s R&B hit, a water jug, a typewriter and 10 extremely talented individuals? This mind-blowing cover of TLC's "Waterfalls" and a lovely reminder not to go chasing them.

The video, produced by Jane Liu, proves you don't need to be a member of an iconic girl group in matching outfits to bring a beat to life. But you do need a kazoo!

Check out the beyond perfect cover above, which we found on Jezebel.

'Home Birth Dads' 2014 Calendar Raises Awareness In A Hilarious Way

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This isn't your traditional charity item.

For their 2014 calendar, Inner Birth, a Wisconsin midwife practice decided to put dads in the spotlight, er birthing tub.

The idea -- using men to recreate priceless pregnancy and birth scenes -- actually started out as a joke, midwife Kimberly McGuinness-Rook told HuffPost via e-mail. But after talking about it and brainstorming, she and her colleagues realized they were onto something. "All of the dads we work with are such supportive partners and passionate fathers. There wasn't a doubt in my mind that we couldn't get enough volunteers to pull this off," she says.

When his wife approached him to model, Aaron Richmond was was a little apprehensive. But only for a second. He wanted to help raise awareness about home birth and infant mortality, he told HuffPost. As the self-described "bald one, in the birthing tub," he says that the whole process enabled him to relate to his wife's pregnancy experience.

"Seeing myself with a huge belly was bizarre and reminded me of how my wife must have felt being in a body she didn't feel was her own," he said. "The moms are the real heroes."

Inner Birth's calendar was shot by photographer Katie Hall and self-published, using Lulu. Ten percent of the profits will be donated to Greater Racine Collaborative for Healthy Birth Outcomes, an organization devoted to reducing the African American infant mortality rate in Racine, WI.

Looks like walking a mile in someone else's' shoes -- or belly -- does go a long way, and this time, it was relatively painless.

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The calendar is available for purchase at LuLu.com

Artists Turn Berlin Apartment Complex Into 22,000-Square-Meter Mural (PHOTOS)

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We're endlessly surprised by just how powerful perspective can be. Where most people saw a row of apartments, the artists of French creative collective CitéCréation saw a canvas -- and three years later, one of the world's largest murals was born.

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The 22,000-square-meter artwork adorns the walls of the Wohngenossenschaft Soldaritaet Coop apartment complex in Berlin. Its nature and wildlife theme was inspired by a local zoo, according to the Daily Mail.

"The gray concrete transforms into a forest," CitéCréation's website says of the mural, "populated with lush green trees and colorful birds, as if by magic to break the monolithic and oppressive urban landscape of the suburbs."

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The CitéCréation collective consists of 80 mural painters and has produced more than 600 giant works of art, including others in Berlin. Their mission is to add an element of magic to otherwise drab urban settings.

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This particular mural, which was completed in August, is being considered for the Guinness World Record for the largest mural on an inhabited building on the planet.

Not a bad way to spruce up the neighborhood, we think.

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Artist Turns 12 Ex-Lovers Into One Awesome Shoe Collection (NSFW)

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Well this is one way to walk all over your exes: use them as inspiration for a shoe collection.

Artist Sebastian Errazuriz did just that, unveiling his newest works -- "12 shoes for 12 lovers" -- at a pop-up art show in Miami Beach.

ice queen sophie

Each pair in the exhibit is named for one of Errazuriz's former flames, from "Ice Queen Sophie" to "Heart Breaker Laura" to the "Gold Digger Alice," and all personify each woman through Errazuriz's eyes.

gold digger shoe

To add one more emotional layer, Errazuriz wrote small yet-detailed paragraphs about the sexual history of each relationship (note they are NSFW) and how it inevitably ended.

Check them out here:


George W. Bush Sends Encouraging Note To Alabama Kicker

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In a gesture from one "43" to another, former President George W. Bush sent a note of encouragement to the University of Alabama's Cade Foster, #43 on the third-ranked football team.

Foster missed two field goals and had a third blocked in the team's loss to Auburn University last month.

Bush sent Foster, a fellow Texan, a handwritten note after the loss. The kicker shared a photo of the letter on his Twitter and Instagram accounts:




"Dear Cade (#43), Life has its setbacks. I know! However you will be a stronger human with time. I wish you all the best- Sincerely- another 43 George Bush," the note says.

Taye Diggs And Idina Menzel Separate After 10 Years Of Marriage

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Taye Diggs and Idina Menzel have called it quits after 10 years of marriage, People confirms.

"Idina Menzel and Taye Diggs have jointly decided to separate at this time," reps for the couple tell People. "Their primary focus and concern is for their son. We ask that you respect their privacy during this time."

The pair, who met while co-starring in the original Broadway production of "Rent" in the mid 1990s, tied the knot on Jan. 2003. They welcomed their son, Walker, in 2009.

Diggs and Menzel, both 42, have been open about their marriage, with Menzel telling People earlier this year, "We work at it. I'm not going to glamorize it or glorify it -- we go through tough times like everybody else, but we love each other very much. We try not to be away from each other for more than two weeks at a time, and we try to find new ways to communicate."

Diggs also spoke about their relationship, admitting to Good Housekeeping that the best thing about being married is "having your best friend by your side constantly [and] knowing that someone has your back."

Genki Sudo's World Order Returns With 'Last Dance' Music Video

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World Order blew us away back in October with their music video for "Welcome To Tokyo." Combining sharp suits, smooth music and a slow-motion style completely their own, this Japanese band created in 2009 by former mixed martial artist, Genki Sudo, had us mesmerized and cheering for more.

Well, it's time for the encore!

Get ready to cheer all over again with this brand-new music video from World Order titled "Last Dance." Released in advance of their 2014 world tour, it only has us hoping the song title is metaphorical, because we can't wait for their next one already.

Keeping Things In Perspective: Navid Baraty's 'Intersection' Photos Show NYC From High Above

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As Gothamist highlighted Wednesday, the MTA has chosen to feature the "vertigo-inducing" photographs of Navid Baraty on the walls of the Bowling Green subway station.

The exhibit, entitled "Intersection," uses images Baraty captured from the ledges of New York City's tall buildings and skyscrapers.


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"Anyone who’s walked around a city looking up at the grandeur of the towering buildings knows how small you can feel amid such giants," Baraty told HuffPost in an email.


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"I wanted to instead look down from those dizzying heights and capture a surreal and altered perspective on the familiar chaotic but rhythmic life below."


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"While there’s undeniable beauty in abstracting architecture into angles and reflections, I was attracted even more by the unique character of each city that could still be perceived from far above."


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"Life in a city can often be relentless, with endless demands and deadlines, pressures and expectations."


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"This can create a sort of tunnel vision that prevents us from experiencing the wonder of the city as a dynamic and living thing."


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"I’d like people to take away a new perspective on the broader life and motion of a city, and most importantly, the context of their role within it."


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The Bowling Green exhibit will be on display through 2014. For more of Baraty's work, head over to his website, and be sure to follow him on Facebook and Twitter.


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All photos courtesy of Navid Baraty.

Molten Aluminum Turns Ant Colonies Into Art (VIDEO)

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Fire ants get a bad rap--and for good reason. The pesky little brutes are notorious for their biting, stinging ways--and, as millions of Americans discover each year, their stings can be extremely painful, even deadly. And then there's the bugs' economic cost: in the U.S. alone, fire ants cost us about $1 billion a year.

Given all the harm fire ants cause, you'd never guess that they're also capable of great art. At least they are with a little help from an artist with a bucket of molten aluminum and access to one of their giant mounds.

Check out the video above to see the result of the ant-artist collaboration. As you'll see, it's quite beautiful--though the artist has been stung by critics who call the process beastly.

“I disabled comments because I'm sick of your bickering,” the artist wrote in the video's description on YouTube. “Also, I couldn't get YouTube to stop sending me an email every time someone posted ‘What if I poured aluminum in your house’ for the 100th time.”

Extravagant Price Tags On Official Portraits Inspire Bill To Cut Cost To Just $20,000

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WASHINGTON -- Sens. Jeanne Shaheen (D-N.H.) and Tom Coburn (R-Okla.) are pairing up to push proposed legislation to "rein in excessive spending" on oil paintings of government officials.

The bill, introduced Thursday, would limit the amount of taxpayer money that agencies can spend on official portraits to $20,000 a piece. If an official wants more spent on his or her image, the official can use "other funds" -- which is government speak for "pay for it yourself." The bill would also restrict such portraits to those officials in the order of succession for the presidency, but that includes just about every Cabinet-level official.

The bill follows a March 2013 report from ABC News that found the Obama administration had spent $400,000 on oil portraits of Cabinet members in 2011 and 2012. That followed a November 2012 report in The Washington Times that individual paintings were costing the government tens of thousands of dollars. A portrait of former Air Force Secretary Michael Donley cost $41,200, while the portrait of first-term Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Lisa Jackson cost nearly $40,000. (Neither of those positions are in the line of succession.)

This past March, around the time the sequester cuts were taking effect, the Department of Defense issued a notice that it was commissioning a portrait of departing Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta, for which the department paid $31,200.

Expensive oil paintings are not a misstep made only by the Obama administration. A Washington Post story from 2008 found that the individual price tag for portraits of some Bush administration officials was nearing $50,000.

“At a time when vital services and programs are facing cuts, we need to be looking at every way we can stop excessive spending practices in Washington," Shaheen said in a statement. Coburn called the current spending "lavish," noting that government officials "spend more on paintings of themselves than some Americans make in a year."

If Cell Phone Radiation Were Visible, The World Would Look Like This

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What would the world look like if you could see cell phone radiation?

Artist Nickolay Lamm has tried to answer that question.

In July, Lamm released a series of illustrations imagining a Washington, D.C., where Wi-Fi was visible, bathing famous sites in a rainbow of colors. On Wednesday, he finished a sequel of sorts -- a series of pictures of U.S. cities and landmarks, this time with cell phone radiation visible as a hazy, multicolored, strangely geometric overlay.

Lamm worked with two professors of electrical and computer engineering -- Danilo Erricolo at the University of Illinois at Chicago and Fran Harackiewicz at Southern Illinois University in Carbondale -- to get his illustrations right. (The pictures can be seen with more technical explanation at MyVoucherCodes.com.)

In an email to The Huffington Post, Lamm explained what was going on with each picture.

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Here, a "hexagonal grid of cellular base-station sites" covers the city of Chicago. Base stations, more commonly called cell phone towers, sit at the corner of each hexagonal "cell" in Chicago's huge network. The picture also shows "antenna signal extending beyond the original cells" that provides coverage over part of Lake Michigan.

An earlier article in The Atlantic Cities explained that cell phone networks across the country are made up of multiple hexagonal areas, each of which is called a cell. The hexagonal grid is efficient: Each cell tower sits at the intersection of three cells and each of the three directional antennas on top of the tower covers a 120-degree slice of the landscape.

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Lamm's rendering of the Department of Commerce headquarters in Washington focuses on the tridirectional nature of radiation emanating from a single cell phone tower. The different colors represent the radiation's different frequencies, which allow mobile users to make calls without experiencing interference.

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This illustration of the New York skyline shows how cellular base stations on top of buildings provide much of the coverage in the crowded city.

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Here's how a long-distance cell tower radiates over the Hollywood Hills.

For good and ill, finding places where cell phones don't reach is becoming increasing difficult. In 2012, the World Bank announced that mobile signals reached three-quarters of the people on earth, and that number is only getting bigger. Radio Quiet Zone, anyone?

'From Broadway With Love' Unites Actors With Newtown Community (VIDEO)

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“How can I help?”

The question was on nearly everyone’s mind last December after learning of the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut. But while most people were thinking about how to answer, one Broadway producer was taking action.

39-year-old Van Dean, who lives in Stamford, Connecticut, doesn't exactly give off the impression of a big Broadway producer. However, when he talks about the work he’s done in Newtown, you can’t help but feel his cordiality and tenderness for the community.

In a phone interview, Dean recounted the days after the shooting, and described how Newtown based composer and lyricist, Brett Boles, contacted him and posed the idea of holding a benefit concert. The only problem was that emotions were still high, and residents were only beginning to comprehend what had occurred.

“The town had been through enough funerals and memorials,” Dean told me. “We wanted to not only honor the children but honor the community as well.”

With this in mind, he posted a message on Facebook asking friends for help. In less than an hour, over a hundred actors, musicians, and friends volunteered—and in subsequent weeks, that number grew to 700.

The initial concept for From Broadway With Love had several Broadway names performing at a local high school, but the seating couldn’t hold nearly enough and was so close to Sandy Hook that Dean was afraid it would seem like the benefit was intruding on the community rather than inviting its attendance. He ultimately decided on the Palace Theater in nearby Waterbury, where a hundred Broadway stars would perform alongside 300 students from the town.

Over a dozen producers joined Dean and Boles to coordinate the event in just a month and a half. The team organized the venue, talent, transportation, lighting, and more—most of which was donated. A production that should have cost upwards of two million dollars was achieved for only seventy thousand. And while there were an uncountable number of moving pieces, no one ever doubted that the show would come together.

Michael Unger, who directed From Broadway With Love told me, “I’d never seen anything like it. We didn’t have a week of tech [rehearsals]. We had hours.”

On January 28, first responders and the families directly affected by the tragedy were provided tickets at no cost and treated to performances by Tony Award winners Brian Stokes Mitchell, Stephen Schwartz, Michael Cerveris, and Marc Shaiman as well as actors Richard Kind, Linda Eder, cast members from Sesame Street and more. But the performances from Sandy Hook Elementary School students and other Newton based groups were some of the show’s more special moments.

Not every moment in the concert was explained to the people in attendance—instead some were meant as tiny nods to the community. For example, a number of young girls from Newtown were learning songs from the musical Hairspray. Two of the girls were killed in the shooting on December 14th. So during From Broadway With Love, Nikki Blonksy, who played the lead role in the film adaptation of the musical, appeared onstage with the other girls, without any explanation or backstory.

The proceeds from the event were donated to the “Newtown-Sandy Hook Community Foundation." However, it was never about the money. “It was to help the community and to show our support. The money we raised was a drop in the bucket, but for people that attended.” One victim’s family told producers that it was the first time they had seen their daughter dance since she lost her older sister.

The benefit concert was filmed so that Newtown could watch when they were comfortable—on their own terms—and an hour-long version of the show was eventually broadcast throughout the tri-state area on certain PBS stations in late July.

But Dean wasn’t done. “We didn’t want to do one thing then leave,” he said. “We didn’t want to focus on this tragedy until the next tragedy happens. This wasn’t a one-time thing.”

Shortly after From Broadway With Love, Dean met up with Dr. Michael Baroody, a local plastic surgeon, who had started a non-profit based in Newtown called the 12.14 Foundation. Dr. Baroody personally knows a number of the families affected by the shooting at Sandy Hook and plans to build a performing arts center as a living memorial for those that were lost, but after speaking with Dean, they knew they couldn’t wait years for the building to be completed. They needed a project for the children to do that summer.

They asked Unger to helm the production, who thought it would be appropriate for the town to do Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty’s Seussical: The Musical—a show that follows Horton the elephant as he tries to save a small, endangered community that lives on a speck of dust. To quote Unger, it’s “about hope and joy – and even though horrible things happen in the world, hope and joy are a necessary part of moving on.” The director felt the students would relate and could express how they felt through acting, and Ahrens jumped at the offer to rewrite lyrics to better fit the children.

For the students that wanted to be involved but didn’t want to appear on stage, the producers assigned “apprenticeships,” so they could work alongside professional sound designers and stagehands. And to make sure the most students could get the opportunity to be onstage, Unger double cast the major roles. With over a hundred thousand dollars worth of costumes, props, and set pieces being donated, everyone that was a part of Seussical: The Musical saw what it’s like to be involved with a professional show. And to top it off, they had the opportunity to perform alongside Broadway actor John Tartaglia, who starred as The Cat In The Hat.

When I reached out Unger and asked him about his experience directing the students, he sent me a letter that he had given Lynn Ahrens and Stephen Flaherty. It read:

“The high school performer who was playing Horton during this rehearsal was delivering the material as if he were reading it rather than writing it – he was not LIVING in the role and, therefore, transported neither him nor us. I told him that his promise to this dust speck, this time, had to be an ABSOLUTE commitment – that he had failed them before but that he had now learned his lesson. He was given a rare second chance.

“I explained that if you don’t connect to your character in a natural way, you sometimes have to use your own history as your character’s history. I told this particular actor that the dust speck and the Whos ARE Newtown. The world failed to protect Newtown one day and it is our duty to those who were lost and should be our promise to all those around us that we will never let Newtown down again. I said to him, ‘Protect that dust speck as if you were protecting your hometown. Because it is, and you are.’”


According to Unger, what followed was one of the purest acting moments he’d ever seen. “I decided to be a theater director because I wanted to change people,” he told me on the phone. “But change them in a third party way, you know. I never thought I could change people at their core. I knew it could be done, but I never saw its effect firsthand. I was humbled by it. It changed me.”

For the Newtown children, Seussical: The Musical was life changing, but for their parents, it was a return to form. One parent, whose two sons were at Sandy Hook, told me being a part of the show gave their smiles back.

What better way to help?

See the full conversation with Van Dean, Michael Unger and Richard Kind about "From Broadway With Love" on HuffPost Live HERE.
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