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'Slowmotion Tattoo' Is Video Oddly Hypnotizing

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If you're scared of needles, this video might not be for you.

The Paris based tattoo artist Gaëtan Le Gargasson, who goes by GueT Deep on Vimeo, recently posted a slow motion film of him tattooing a Switzerland person named Fabrice.

By it's captivating nature and close up shots alone, the film has quickly caught fire on the internet and surpassed 600,000 views on Vimeo. To check it out yourself watch the video above.

A New Power Rangers Movie Franchise Is In The Works

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The Power Rangers are back! Power Rangers creator Haim Saban and Lionsgate CEO Jon Feltheimer announced May 7 that they would produce a new live action film about Power Rangers.

Saban was also the creator of the 1993 TV show, "Mighty Morphin Power Rangers" and, according to a statement from Lionsgate and Saban Brands, "the new film franchise will re-envision the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers, a group of high school kids who are infused with unique and cool super powers but must harness and use those powers as a team if they have any hope of saving the world."

The news is in keeping with Hollywood's latest trend: rebooting old favorites. Earlier this year, Blumhouse Productions announced it would create a live action film of "Jem and the Holograms," starring "Nashville" actress Aubrey Peeples. The Internet practically blew up when The Hollywood Reporter broke news that "Mrs. Doubtfire 2" was in the works, and evenPeeps candy is getting a movie of its own.

In terms of the "Power Rangers" revamp, no one has been cast. No director has been tapped. No plots have been developed. But it's definitely time to get this stuck in your head forever:

Read All The Working Titles For 'Almost Famous,' Including 'Tangerine' And 'Rock School'

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Naming a movie must be hard. As a writer or director, the script or set has been your baby for days, weeks and months on end. If a creative force is lucky enough to craft a movie that's eyeing years of longevity, like Cameron Crowe's beloved 2000 film "Almost Famous," the pressure is especially strong.

What results from the naming process could be something like "Untitled" -- the working title for Crowe's ode to '70s rock 'n' roll. DreamWorks vetoed that moniker, however, and after running through a catalog of (sometimes terrible) alternatives, Crowe settled on "Almost Famous." Now, he's revealed to Empire the other titles that ran through his head in the brainstorming process:

"My Back Pages"
"Tangerine"
"Coda"
"A Thousand Words"
"Superstar"
"Songs for Beginners"
"Stillwater"
"Rewind to the End"
"My Opening Farewell"
"Original Cover"
"Rock School"
"1,200 Words"
"On the Way Home"
"In Thru the Outdoor"
"Pictures & Pages"
"The Three of Us"
"Words by Heart"
"Words for You"
"Words on Fire"
"Words or Music?"
"Words and Music"

Head over to The Uncool to see the original notebook pages on which Crowe brainstormed titles, just the way William Miller scribbled the movie's opening credits.

Original 'Born To Run' Lyrics On Display At Duke

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RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) — Bruce Springsteen wasn't thinking about Wendy when he wrote a first draft of his 1975 classic "Born to Run." Instead, he's got a gold Chevy 6 on his mind, according to the original lyrics, which make their public debut this week at Duke University.

The 30 lines of lyrics, written in pen on a piece of 8.5.-by-11-inch lined paper, were purchased last December at a Sotheby's auction by Floyd Bradley, a California man whose daughter graduates this weekend from Duke, as does Springsteen's daughter. Bradley, 62, a retired computer software marketer who spent much of his life in London, paid $160,000 plus a commission, bringing the total to $197,000. "It was a lot. I was embarrassed to tell my children," he said. "But they were very supportive after I told them."

He bought them as an investment, he said. "It's a piece of Americana, I think."

The original lyrics, written in 1974, in Long Branch, New Jersey, bear little resemblance to the anthem that Springsteen typically plays each concert with the house lights on and the audience on its feet. But that familiar chorus of "tramps like us/baby we were born to run" is there as is a part that ended up much like the final version: "this town'll rip the bones from your back/it's A suicide trap/your dead unless you get out while your young."

The "everlasting kiss" is there: "I was headin for the place where wild Angels die in An everlasting (or) neverending kiss."

But there's no mention of dying with Wendy during that kiss or of guarding Wendy's dreams and visions. Instead, Springsteen "looked out cross my hood + saw the highway buckle neath the wheels of A gold Chevy 6." The car got a second mention a few lines down: "Baby out there heroes are crushed to death behind the wheels of a gold Chevy 6."

In the margins, he's written words such as "wild angels," ''Stroll on!" and "the rebels."

"Something as iconic as this song, it's going to be important to American history," said Duke University exhibit librarian Meg Brown, who found 25 books about Springsteen, mostly academic, in Duke's collections. "It came in at a time with a lot of change in American history and it made a significant difference."

Bradley's life has intersected with Springsteen's at times. His mother, Carol, lived beside Springsteen's mother, Adele. When the family sold Carol Bradley's house, Springsteen bought it for his mother-in-law. And Bradley met Springsteen once when he took something to Adele Springsteen and she invited him to meet her son, who was visiting.

Carol Bradley also wrote and sang a song titled "The Big 50" for Springsteen's 50th birthday, and Springsteen played the recording of Carol Bradley singing the song at a concert in Philadelphia in 1999.

Bradley's daughter, Melissa, graduates this weekend from Duke as does Jessica Springsteen. He hasn't reached out to Springsteen to set up a meeting, however. "But I might bump into him ..." Bradley said.

The lyrics will be displayed starting Thursday and continuing through Saturday at the Perkins Library. Then the sheet will move to the David M. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library at Perkins from May 12 to June 27.

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Online:

Hours of exhibit, other details here: http://blogs.library.duke.edu/blog/2014/05/01/work-progress-springsteens-born-run/

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Follow Martha Waggoner at http://twitter.com/mjwaggonernc

Paul Simon Makes First Public Appearance Since Arrest

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NEW YORK (AP) — Paul Simon performed a rousing set and accepted an award from New York University in his first public appearance since he and wife Edie Brickell were arrested on disorderly conduct charges.

The 72-year-old performed more than a dozen songs Wednesday night at the Beacon Theatre in New York, where he was honored at the 2014 NYU Steinhardt Vision Award Gala. He played guitar and sang hits such as "50 Ways to Leave Your Lover," ''Late In the Evening" and "You Can Call Me Al." Simon and 48-year-old Brickell became physical with each other during an argument inside a cottage on their New Canaan, Connecticut, property last week. Brickell told police Simon shoved her and she slapped him.

Brickell didn't attend Wednesday's event, which raised $1.1 million for scholarships.

"After my fee of a million is deducted, that's $100,000," Simon said to laughs.

He was energetic and danced onstage, and the crowd stood dancing with him on songs like "Me and Julio Down by the Schoolyard" and "Diamonds on the Soles of Her Shoes" during the 75-minute set.

Simon was honored for his humanitarian work and accomplished music career, which includes 12 Grammy Awards and two inductions into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, as a solo artist and as part of Simon & Garfunkel, among other accolades.

Performance students and alumni from the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development joined him when he sang "Still Crazy After All These Years."

"So, money well spent," Simon said after the performance as the crowd laughed. Tickets were priced at $300 and $200, and only the ground floor of the three-tiered Beacon Theatre was occupied.

NYU has history in Simon's family: His father earned degrees from the university and his son currently attends its Gallatin School of Individualized Study. Simon taught songwriting at the school in the 1970s.

"I cringe to think of how little I knew," he said.

Simon closed his set with "American Tune" and "Graceland."

Simon recently wrapped up a tour with Sting. Brickell and Steve Martin will perform Friday in Eugene, Oregon, on their collaborative tour.

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Online:

http://www.paulsimon.com/us/home

http://steinhardt.nyu.edu/

The 10 Best Areas In The Country To Flip A Home, According to 24/7 Wall St. (PHOTOS)

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As any DIY or home improvement fan knows, flipping a home looks either like the greatest investment in the world or the renovation disaster from hell. But, if you end up heading to one of these cities to tackle the project, you might just find yourself in the former situation.

According to a report from 24/7 Wall St., which compiled the latest data from RealtyTrac to determine the average flipped home price and gross profit and calculate the return on investment for home flipping across the nation (see below for more details), these are the metro areas where it's worth breaking out the sledgehammer.

So if you really want to give Jeff Lewis or Richard C. Davis a run for their money (literally), then hire your contractor, pick up the tool box and take the trip to one of the towns below.





To determine the 10 best cities for home flipping, 24/7 Wall St. reviewed return on investment figures from RealtyTrac. These figures are based on the pre-flip and post-flip average price for homes, where RealtyTrac defines as “any transaction that occurred in the [past] quarter where a previous sale on the same property had occurred within the last six months.” Returns represent gross profit and do not include costs such as repairs and maintenance. RealtyTrac also provided institutional, cash and distressed sales figures as of March, as well as median sales prices and median listing prices as of February. We also reviewed home price data from the Federal Housing Finance Authority (FHFA) and unemployment rates from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).



Have something to say? Check out HuffPost Home on Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and Instagram.

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Are you an architect, designer or blogger and would like to get your work seen on HuffPost Home? Reach out to us at homesubmissions@huffingtonpost.com with the subject line "Project submission." (All PR pitches sent to this address will be ignored.)

Will Ferrell Is Making A Flintstones Movie With Adam McKay

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In more movie reboot news, Will Ferrell and "Anchorman" director Adam McKay will executive produce a new "Flintstones" movie at Warner Bros.

The studio will bring "The Flintstones" back as an animated feature, according to The Hollywood Reporter. Chris Henchy ("The Campaign") has already signed on to write the script.

"The Flintstones" fans will remember that the franchise first ran as a cartoon sitcom from 1960 to 1966, and Steven Spielberg produced a live-action movie in 1994 starring John Goodman, Elizabeth Perkins, Rick Moranis and Rosie O'Donnell. (But let's be real, Halle Berry and Elizabeth Taylor stole the show.) The film made more than $130 million in North America.

Seth MacFarlane famously tried to spearhead a revamped "Flintstones" television show at Fox, but reports claimed the network wasn't wowed by the script and shut down the project back in 2012.

Now it looks like Will Ferrell and his comedy buds will have no trouble getting this one in the works. Time to start campaigning for Ferrell and Christina Applegeate to rekindle their "Anchorman" love and voice Barney and Betty Rubble. Fred Flintstone catchphrase goes here.

Artist Transforms Massive Abandoned Sugar Factory Into Surreal History Museum

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In 1856 the original Domino Sugar Factory was built in Brooklyn, New York, soon to become the largest sugar refinery of its time. Fast forward to today: In the near future, the 30,000-square-foot facility, which stopped production in 2004, will likely be demolished to make way for a shiny crop of new condos, designed to better suit the ever-gentrifying landscape.

It's now, at this uncanny moment in between, that the abandoned factory's storage shed serves as a temple of sorts, a confectionary cathedral posied to rot, housing inside it a 75-foot long, 35-foot high, sparkling white, sugar encrusted sphinx.

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Kara Walker, A Subtlety, 2014. Photography by Jason Wyche, Courtesy Creative Time, 2014



The massive beast arches her back proudly, with ample breasts and rounded rear propped up for all to see. Her shape is sexualized, though you'd be gravely mistaken to think this monumental and otherworldly form could ever be victimized. The handkerchief-sporting sphinx sternly gazes forward, her eye level towering above any prospective viewer's. Despite her piercingly white exterior, the sphinx's facial features reveal an unshakeable resemblance to Kara Walker, the artist who made her.

Walker's piece, is titled in its entirety, "At the behest of Creative Time Kara E. Walker has confected: Kara Walker -- A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant."

Walker describes the ceremonious speaker behind the lengthy designation as "the voice that I tend to assume whenever I'm making work, one that presumes that I have some kind of authority over it." The title's content was inspired by medieval sugar sculptures, called subtleties, which appeared on the dinner tables of kings of modern Europe. If the sphinx is the subtlety in Walker's surreal scenario, we viewers are crumbs of food on the table cloth.

Anyone who steps foot in the Domino Sugar Factory will realize immediately the work is in no way, shape or form subtle. Yet Walker isn't known for subtlety. The New York-based artist primarily works with cut-paper silhouettes that turn the horrors of the antebellum South into a surreal theater of the absurd, ripe with ugly stereotypes, sexual brutality and unending violence. The grisly subject matter is both hyperbolized in its obscenity and minimized in its solemnity, crafting a stomach-jerking recipe that has captivated and infuriated the art world for twenty years.

For "A Subtlety," Walker traded in her two dimensional cut-outs for a three dimensional sugary sweet sculpture that, despite being semi-edible, gives the impression that it could easily consume the measly viewers at her paws. "Creative Time approached me about the project sometime last spring and it was such a beautiful space," Walker explained to HuffPost of her decision to work in sculpture. "It sounded better to have a thing -- a thing in the room that would echo the thingness of the Domino site. It's very cathedral-like, it has a very specific quality to it, which I think is calling out for a thing rather than an action."

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Kara Walker, A Subtlety, 2014. Photography by Jason Wyche, Courtesy Creative Time, 2014



"The process of refining sugar really only serves one purpose and that is to turn sugar from brown to white," she said. "In earlier centuries, people saw sugar as emblematic of this kind of capitalist, democratic impulse, where anybody could potentially come up through the ranks and refine themselves. They'd become pure and desirable -- it's a way of being in the world." Walker explained how for centuries, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, sugar was refined in a bustling space of exploited workers who, perhaps less blatantly, were attempting to refine themselves.

"[The factory] is holding onto its history in a way; it's holding onto its mystery also. The 95-square-foot space that was once churning with activity, buzzing with energy and life and strange odors and steam." The historically and symbolically loaded space holds onto its history, quite literally, in the form of molasses, which is dripping off the installation's walls. "Molasses is one of the by-products of the refining process," Walker explained. "I got really interested in molasses because so much of the interior of the space is filled and covered with it. It's like oil paint in that it never really dries. It keeps moving -- it's stuck, but at the same time it's still fluid and mobile."

It's easy to see -- and smell -- molasses as the memories of the old factory made flesh, stuck in this abandoned space though still not quite congealed. "Molasses is this by-product that is more nutritious than refined sugar, but less desirable. It has, for centuries, been aligned with slavery and servitude. Plantations, characters like Br'er Rabbit, Uncle Remus or Aunt Dinah, these slave caricatures, narratives and tropes often reference molasses. I found that an interesting fold over."

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Kara Walker, A Subtlety, 2014. Photography by Jason Wyche, Courtesy Creative Time, 2014



Walker also references slavery in her colossal creature, a beast both human and not. "It's a reflection on the problem of humanity that has or hasn't been afforded to blacks around the world and African Americans, particularly under slavery, where there was an equation of human and animal." Though allusions run thick throughout Walker's installation, she resists the role of authoritative truth-teller. "I can only provide an unreliable narrator," she said.

Until July 6, the Domino Sugar Factory will ooze its bittersweet history for all to see, the many implications of sugar, the slave trade, industrialization, and gentrification remaining an unsolved riddle that only Walker's sphinx can realize. After this, the building's future remains uncertain, as do the many ghosts who inhabit it. "What I'd really like to see is that a mass of human beings would see the piece and love it so much that they'd want to keep the site and the piece forever and ever in that space," Walker said. "But the definitely sad reality is that, probably, all is lost."

"Once it's changed, once the waterfront becomes a different sort of waterfront than it is today, with condos and different kinds of families and all of the things that are inevitable in a city like this." Imagining the future wave of pristine condominiums ousting the textured, historic space, it's hard not to see another repetition of the same pattern of refinement. "If just a feeling of the presence of this piece, the presence of this building, could remain as kind of an echo, an after effect, that would be amazing."

"At the behest of Creative Time Kara E. Walker has confected: Kara Walker - A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant." will be open from May 10 until July 6, 2014. It is free and open to the public. See more photos, courtesy of Brooklyn Street Art, here.

Over 300 Years Ago, An Artist Created And Documented Every Color You Can Think Of

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Thanks to Pantone, the contemporary authority on all things color, we have a way of documenting the chromatic flow -- all 2,100 hues it's gleaned from the visible ends of the rainbow. But artists have been recording the depths of color for much longer than Pantone's lifespan, mixing and melding pigments to create the violets, turquoises and ambers we ogle in art history books.

colors

One such artist was A. Boogert, a man who created a massive manual on color nearly three centuries before Pantone ever came into being. Back in 1692, he crafted around 800 pages of handwritten and hand-painted pages under the title "Traité des couleurs servant à la peinture à l’eau." Written in Dutch, the treatise was a painstaking trek through the tints and shades of every color you can think of. It was, as This Is Colossal speculates, probably the most informative color guide of its time.

We have Medieval book historian Erik Kwakkel to thank for bringing the book to the internet's attention. Though he notes that someone else is currently conducting a PhD study on the 17th century publication, to be completed in 2015 at the University of Amsterdam. Here's what Kwakkel had to say about the archival gem:

"In the 17th century, an age known as the Golden Age of Dutch Painting, this manual would have hit the right spot. It makes sense, then, that the author explains in the introduction that he wrote the book for educational purposes. Remarkably, because the manual is written by hand and therefore literally one of a kind, it did not get the “reach” among painters -- or attention among modern art historians -- it deserves."


You can see the entire book online here, for those interested in peering deeper into the historical color records. Happy hunting!



All images courtesy of "Traité des couleurs servant à la peinture à l'eau" (1692)

Nicolas Cage Made Another Movie

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"Seeking Justice," "Trespass," "Stolen," "The Frozen Ground" and now "Rage": all movies you probably never heard of that star Nicolas Cage. It's "Rage" that's the newest entry in Cage's oeuvre of anonymous Redbox features, a thriller about a cop whose shady past with Russian mobsters puts his family in jeopardy. Key lines: "Just how deep do you want this to go?" "How deep is hell?" "Rage" is out via on-demand services on June 10, before a theatrical bow on July 11.

This Very NSFW Ode To Female Beauty Will Forever Alter Your Perception Of Body Hair

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Warning: This video is, as the title notes, very NSFW. There will be gratuitous nudity if you click play.

Leave it to the art world to turn the issue of body hair into a hypnotic visual overload of the most opulent variety. In a gorgeous, albeit excessive, short film entitled "Les Fleurs," a nude woman reclines on a surreal bed of blue, as waves of hair suddenly sprout from every nook and cranny of her body.

Les Fleurs on Nowness.com



The video, directed by Saam Farahmand, is the first of a five-part Nowness series called #DefineBeauty, which explores and challenges different conventions of female beauty. "I wanted to find something about women that was almost unanimously disliked," the filmmaker told Nowness.

Accompanied by Minnie Riperton’s song, "Les Fleurs," the short film takes its subject matter very seriously, presenting body hair in its many forms as an almost mythical force of beauty. Of his song choice Farahmand explained: "There was something so affecting about Minnie Riperton’s ability to breathe her gender -- she speaks to female sexuality in a way that seems to exclude male consideration." Indeed, the melodramatic tour of the female form features close-up follicles in full blossom, shunning the notion that a little pit hair can't be glamorous. Whether you see the prominent body hair as revolutionary or, on the body of a conventionally beautiful naked woman, not so much, is up to you.

This video is only one example of an artistic homage to body hair on the feminine form. Check out Ben Hopper's "Natural Beauty" series or Rhiannon Schneiderman's "Lady Manes" for more female fur.

Let us know your thoughts on the NSFW piece in the comments.

Watch The Full Trailer For 'Dawn Of The Planet Of The Apes'

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"Apes together strong." That's one message put forth by Caesar (Andy Serkis) in the full trailer for Fox's "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes," a sequel to 2011's "Rise of the Planet of the Apes." The other: "War has already begun." Sorry, well-meaning human beings played by Jason Clarke and Keri Russell! "Dawn of the Planet of the Apes" is out in theaters on July 11. Clarke, Russell, Serkis and Gary Oldman, as the Captain Ahab of this story, all co-star.

Artist Illustrates 'Goosebumps' From Memory, Makes '90s Kids Everywhere Smile

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There was hardly a human being alive in the '90s -- and at least vaguely literate -- who didn't have a soft spot for the goosebump-inducing tales of Mr. R.L. Stine. His iconic Y.A. series taught us all valuable warnings like "be careful what you wish for" and "piano lessons can be murder," warnings that won't be soon forgotten.

Even as our literary canons expanded in the decades to follow, to include classics of a more respectable variety, "Goosebumps" continued to hold a special place in our nightmares. Just ask Sara Lautman, an illustrator who recreated choice moments of the iconic series entirely from memory.

pumpkin

Lautman's drawings are sure to reawaken your childhood fears of bees, cuckoo clocks, egg monsters from Mars and whatever is dwelling in your basement. "In my memory I was too sophisticated for 'Goosebumps' when they were in their golden age, which must have been something like 1994 to 1996," Lautman confessed to The Huffington Post. "Maybe I only recall the books’ hokiest details because they brought me up for air. Yeah, I was into it. First exposure was '94 for sure, in a Lucky Dip from a fourth grade holiday grab bag."

The illustrations depict the terrifying potential outcomes of different activities perpetuated to infinity. "I was listing all the inane 'Goosebumps' trials I could remember," Lautman explained. "A lot of them were 'Pleasure Island' scenarios -- gluttons’ punishment. Trampoline forever, trick-or-treat forever, super-slide forever, parents gone forever, eat all the donuts in the world forever, and so on." Why, you ask, did she choose to draw solely from her memory of the series? Simply put, "illustrating from memory is the funniest way to do it."

The memory of Stine's elementary school horrors is as terrifying as ever, even if Lautman's version isn't 100% accurate. "I’m taking liberties up the wazoo with these drawings," she said. "Those pumpkin-head people, for example, spoke only in loud hissing tones." We never would have remembered that. Mostly, Lautman's visions remind us of how no book series since has captivated our hearts and turned our stomach quite like "Goosebumps." We have to agree with Lautman's answer when asked if she had a favorite book: "Nnnnn… Well, maybe th... eh. No. Nope. I guess not."

See Lautman's wonderful nostalgia-fest below and let us know which 'Goosebumps' moments you'd like to see in ink below.

Sexist Video Game For Future & Kanye's 'I Won' Turns Women Into Literal Trophies

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When Future and Kanye West released "I Won" back in April, Future said the song was intended to be "uplifting" for women. That warranted a conversation about an intersectional understanding of marriage. The horrifyingly sexist video game that Future released this week as a companion to the song? That really only warrants a conversation about the next available time you can take a shower.

Behold, the 8-bit version of objectification, in which players attempt to acquire a trophy wife, by chucking gold chains at bikini-clad women, turning them into literal trophies:



As Pitchfork notes, Future has created old-school video games for his songs before, previously releasing an arcade iteration of "Move That Dope." Kanye, too, has dabbled in the format: In June of 2013, RPG released "Kanye Quest 3030," a roleplaying game that followed a 2D Kanye who had traveled "through a wormhole" and found himself "in a strange futuristic city."

Given both artists' experience with the medium, it might have been possible that they were trying to make some complex critique of misogyny as an outdated game. Or not, at least based on the actual "I Won" music video.



For his part, Future is soliciting comment on the game via his Twitter account.




Feel free to let him know what you thought.

'Now 50' Poised To Dethrone 'Frozen' Following 13-Week Billboard Reign

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Just when we declared the "Frozen" soundtrack had crossed over from successful to indomitable, along comes an album that's finally able to dethrone the Disney favorite: a compilation of repurposed pop hits.

The 50th edition of "Now That's What I Call Music!" is poised to see its most lucrative debut since "Now 41" arrived in March 2012. If industry forecasters' expectations hold steady, "Now 50" will sell more than 120,000 copies by the end of this week's tracking period on Sunday, likely placing it at No. 1. (The next Billboard chart will be released on Wed., May 14.)

It's a victory for "Now," which has seen each of its albums hit the Top 10. "Now 50" would be the 18th in the series to peak at No. 1. While riding this 13-week reign, "Frozen" flitted in and out of the No. 1 spot, having been dethroned by another "Now" entry -- the 49th one -- following a two-week victory in February.

Of course, there's always a chance the soundtrack will reclaim the top spot in the weeks to come. Bruce Springsteen's "High Hopes" bested "Frozen" in February, but it bounced back the next week. It spent another two weeks at No. 1 after that, until "Now 49," Eric Church's "The Outsiders," Schoolboy Q's "Oxymoron" and Rick Ross' "Mastermind" each staved it off intermittently prior to the album's current eight-week dominance.

We called it in February: The first half of 2014 has been a snoozefest for new music. Perhaps that streak is coming to an end, though: Despite the potential next No. 1 comprising regurgitated songs, a few original albums are on the horizon that could add a refreshing note to the music scene. Michael Jackson's "Xscape," The Black Keys' "Turn Blue," Coldplay's "Ghost Stories" and Mariah Carey's "Me. I Am Mariah ... The Elusive Chanteuse" all arrive this month.

Listen to our playlist of the 50 best songs from "Now That's What I Call Music!"

Smashing Pumpkins Enlist Tommy Lee Of Mötley Crüe To Drum On New Album

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The Smashing Pumpkins are set to release two albums in 2015, "Monuments to an Elegy" and "Day for Night." The former will be the first to make its debut, and frontman/guitarist Billy Corgan stated last week that the album is nearly complete. On Wednesday, Corgan announced that the album's drummer has been found, and it is none other than Tommy Lee of Mötley Crüe.

Posting a picture of Lee and himself in the studio, Corgan gave the following update on The Smashing Pumpkins' website:

Here's a shot from the mission out west. Just finished round 1 of tracking drums with Tommy Lee for the new the Smashing Pumpkins album. Shockla-locka-boom. Yes, that T Lee for all 9 songs of 'Monument To An Elegy.'


Check out the album's tentative tracklist:

Monuments to an Elegy:

1. Being Beige (World’s on Fire)
2. Anti-Hero
3. Tiberius
4. Run to Me
5. One and All
6. Drum and Life
7. Dorian
8. Monuments
9. Anaise

All The Random Cameos In 'Party Monster,' The Michael Alig Movie

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Michael Alig, dubbed the "Club Kid Killer," was a New York nightlife promoter in the early '90s and founder of the Club Kids. In 1997, Alig pleaded guilty to killing his roommate Angel Melendez, cutting up his body, and throwing it in the Hudson River. After serving 17 years in prison for manslaughter, he was released on parole on Monday, May 5.

Even while Alig was locked away, his infamous story was told in various films and television shows. He was the subject of the 1998 documentary "Party Monster: The Shockumentary," he was interviewed for the 2011 doc "Limelight," and he was portrayed by Macaulay Culkin in 2003's "Party Monster," based on James St. James' memoir "Disco Bloodbath." The fictionalized film became a cult favorite for its low-budget campy charm and also featured a handful of cameos by well-known actors, many before their careers took off. We've rounded up all the better-known stars and celebrities who appeared in the film. (Screenshots via Netflix, where you can watch "Party Monster" via Instant Watch.)

Morrissey Gets Attacked On Stage By Fans Who Take Hugging Too Far

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Hugging Morrissey is like a rite of passage for die-hard fans. He's up on stage, doing his Morrissey thing and there's an unwritten rule that fans will rush the stage to hug him. He goes on with his bit, pretending like nothing's happening, but his whole schtick relies on fans understanding that they're then supposed to let go and also be gentle with their idol.

But Morrissey got more than a hug from fans when he started his North American tour Wednesday night, May 7, at San Jose's City National Civic. During the encore, the crowd did the whole hug thing, but some got way too rowdy and threw themselves onto the singer. The fan-made video below shows what basically looks like a body slam. Morrissey left the stage mid-song.



Stereogum pointed out that during the show Morrissey also debuted new tracks from his album, "World Peace Is None Of Your Business." He played the title track, "The Bullfighter Dies" and "Earth Is The Loneliest Planet Of All." Listen to them below.





Artist 'Erases' Vintage Pornography In Stunning (N)SFW Series

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Back in the days of analog pornography, naughty cartoons and graphic photography were produced in tangible form. Copied and mass produced in magazines and other collections, the images were to be seen and disregarded, ogled and tossed aside for another pair of hungry eyes. Little attention was paid to the potential aesthetic beauty of the imagery, save for, perhaps, the wandering mind of the late artist Stephen Irwin.

Irwin was known for his work "erasing" pornography of yore, censoring sexy sights until only bits like limbs and hair remained. Transforming perishable eye candy into gallery-worthy works of art, he pushed the strategies of readymade and appropriation artists to the limits. He was one of the rare few who was intrigued by the minute details of retro porn, not the acts depicted.

porn

Irwin enjoyed slicing up the blissful moments encapsulated in erotica, boiling them down to their most essential elements. From a clenched fist to a mouth agape, he valued the almost unrecognizable aspects of lust. Stripping pornographic found images of the sex they exclusively aim to purvey, he brought an unexpected dose of intimacy to the artworks, replacing obscenity with obscurity in an equally tantalizing manner.

"The real intrigue in Irwin's work lies in what's been added rather than removed," Art F City's Paddy Smith wrote of Irwin's work in The L Magazine. "The artist's handling of the material is so careful and masterful, you almost forgot to consider whose cock is being put where. And like good sex, it is the complete immersion in its execution that creates the most memorable moments in this show."

"Irwin can be seen as something of an appropriation artist who doesn’t restrict himself to merely appropriating, a found-object artist for whom the finding is only half the fun," Invisible Exports gallery wrote in a statement about "Sometimes When We Touch," Irwin's past solo exhibition.

Irwin's talent for radically altering pornography makes it nearly impossible to differentiate between painting, drawing and photography, resulting in dreamy and ephemeral puzzles that keep us intrigued for much longer than a page out of a dirty magazine ever could. See a selection of the Kentucky-born artist's work here and let us know your thoughts on the reinvented renderings in the comments.

9 Artists From 2005 Who We Totally Forgot About

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Among the memorable artists to release chart-topping tracks in 2005 were Kanye West ("Gold Digger"), The Killers ("Mr. Brightside"), Akon and Young Jeezy ("Soul Survivor"), Green Day ("Boulevard of Broken Dreams") and Nickelback ("Photograph"). For other artists, however, 2005 brought mainstream attention that was soon taken away. These acts might have been abandoned with the playlists that once filled our fifth-generation iPods and MobiBLU cubes, but each played an important role in our lives back then. To celebrate the ninth birthday of The Huffington Post, let's take a moment to honor these nine forgotten artists from 2005:

1. Bo Bice


2. D4L


3. The Click Five


4. Chamillionaire


5. Amerie


6. Pretty Ricky


7. Brooke Valentine


8. Mike Jones


9. Crazy Frog
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