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Hollywood's 100 Favorite Films

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Who better to judge the best movies of all time than the people who make them? Studio chiefs, Oscar winners and TV royalty all were surveyed as THR publishes its first definitive entertainment-industry ranking of cinema's most superlative.

Is it wrong to already declare this the No. 1 movie list of all time?

After all, there are other movie lists. Lots and lots of others. So many lists, you couldn't list them all. But this is the first to ask the entertainment industry itself to pick its choices for the best pictures ever made. In May, THR sent an online ballot all over town — to every studio, agency, publicity firm and production house on either side of the 405. Not everybody was initially thrilled to participate.

"I reject the idea," Breaking Bad creator Vince Gilligan told THR. "To me, it's the equivalent of having a party-size bag of Nacho Doritos, then being told to eat only five." In the end, though, he sent in his favorites (one of which is 1961's Yojimbo), as did a total of 2,120 industry members, including Fox chief Jim Gianopulos, Disney's Alan Horn, director Gary Ross, producer Frank Marshall, Warners' Sue Kroll, agent Robert Newman, attorney John Burke, filmmaker John Singleton and many more. These are the results: the greatest movies ever made, according to Hollywood.


5. Pulp Fiction (1994)
Director: Quentin Tarantino
Cast: John Travolta, Uma Thurman, Samuel L. Jackson, Bruce Willis, Ving Rhames
Domestic lifetime gross (adjusted for inflation, 2014): $202,078,200
Famous quote:"If my answers frighten you then you should cease asking scary questions." — Jules

Tarantino got it right, all right. In fact, Miramax's Pulp Fiction might be the most influential movie made during the 1990s, inspiring scads of imitators (nicknamed Tarantinies) and dozens of knockoffs.


4. The Shawshank Redemption (1994)
Director: Frank Darabont
Cast: Tim Robbins, Morgan Freeman
Domestic lifetime gross (adjusted for inflation, 2014): $53,014,600
Famous quote:"Remember Red, hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies." – Andy Dufresne [in letter to Red]

Of all the adaptations of Stephen King stories -- and they are legion because he is the most-adapted living writer -- this is only one of two (along with The Shining) to make the list.


3. Citizen Kane (1941)
Director: Orson Welles
Cast: Orson Welles, Joseph Cotten, Dorothy Comingore, Agnes Moorehead, Ruth Warrick
Domestic lifetime gross (adjusted for inflation, 2014): $2,998,000
Famous quote:"It isn't enough to tell us what a man did. You've got to tell us who he was." — Rawlson

Critics have hailed this for decades as "the greatest American movie ever made," making it an all-too-easy pick for anyone's greatest-movie list. But not all moviegoers, especially younger ones, are enthralled with the story of Charles Foster Kane and his long-lost sled. Among poll respondents in their 20s, for instance, it was only the 26th-favorite film. Among the under-20s, it was 53rd. Among those over 60, though, it was No. 1 or 2.


2. The Wizard of Oz (1939)
Director: Victor Fleming
Cast: Judy Garland, Frank Morgan, Ray Bolger, Bert Lahr, Jack Haley
Domestic lifetime gross (adjusted for inflation, 2014): $32,950,500
Famous quote:"Lions, and tigers, and bears! Oh, my!" — Dorothy

It's the most-watched film of all time, according to the Library of Congress, thanks to regular showings on broadcast television since the mid-1950s (and on cable since the '90s). That's not including sequels and prequels, which Hollywood keeps releasing each decade like swarms of flying monkeys. The most recent, Oz the Great and Powerful, starring James Franco as a hunky young wizard, grossed more than $230 million domestically. That yellow brick road clearly is made of gold.


1. The Godfather (1972)
Director: Francis Ford Coppola
Cast: Marlon Brando, Al Pacino, James Caan, Robert Duvall, Diane Keaton, Talia Shire
Domestic lifetime gross (adjusted for inflation, 2014): $626,025,500
Famous quote:"I'm gonna make him an offer he can't refuse." — Don Corleone

Godfather is 42 years old, meaning anyone who saw it when it came out in 1972 is pushing 60 or older. This suggests its narrative power, extraordinary performances and mythic values register as strongly for younger viewers as they did at the time.

more at the Source

Is Suzanne Somers Joining The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills?

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Rumors have been swirling that Suzanne Somers is in talks to join Real Housewives of Beverly Hills for the upcoming fifth season.

Multiple sources confirm to E! News that Somers will not be joining the cast of RHOBH. She is friends with many of the cast member and may have filmed or is going to film scenes in a social setting, but she is not joining the cast.

A rep for Somers tells there is no truth that the actress is in talks, saying, "We do not have any comment, since no one has contacted Suzanne about these talks."

Somers went on Access Hollywood Live this month and said she isn't interested in joining the cast of the Real Housewives shows, because, "That's not my nature. I don't fight."

She then revealed that she was originally offered a spot at the very beginning of The View, but turned that down, because, "I don't see myself in that [situation], where I am like, screaming for time."

As for RHOBH, filming is already underway for season five, and we know that Lisa, Kyle, Brandi, Kim and Yolanda have all signed on for another season, while Joyce and Carlton will not be returning. Sources tell us that Bravo has sought out other cast members, but so far, none of the empty spots have been filled.





Dina Manzo: "I'll Never Again Do a Reality Show With Family!"


Dina Manzo is back—but not with a vengeance. After leaving The Real Housewives of New Jersey in 2010 amid lots of family drama, the Bravo star is ready for a fresh start in season six. It worked out that estranged sister Caroline Manzo and estranged sister-in-law Jacqueline Laurita are no longer on the show, but Dina insists that she had nothing to do with Jacqueline's exit.

"I didn't get anyone fired," the reality star, 43, shares exclusively in the new issue of Us Weekly. "One of my first questions for the producers when I was invited back was, 'You're not getting rid of anyone because of me, right?' And they said, 'Absolutely not.'"

Things have been chilly between Dina and her family for years. As RHONJ viewers know, her rift with Caroline, Jacqueline, and brother Chris Laurita became a major story line when Caroline blamed costar Teresa Giudice for the falling out. (Both Teresa and Dina have denied that she's at fault.)

"Other than my daughter [Lexi, 18]—we share a bond that nothing can break—I will never do a reality show with family ever again," Dina, who's separated from husband Tommy Manzo, tells Us. "It's just not a healthy environment."










Carole Radziwill accused of fake comments!


Carole Radziwill has been accused of posting fake comments on her Bravo blog by several people, but she has responded to the rumors by claiming they are lies. On Monday, the official Twitter account of Radziwill posted a reply to a fan question about her blog. The star clarified that she believed more than one person was behind the lies.

Radziwill mentioned Aviva Drescher and Rob Shuter in her recent post on Twitter, but Ramona Singer and Sonja Morgan have also allegedly accused her of having fake comments on Bravo. Radziwill claimed Drescher and Shuter have a great deal of free time to create lies about her blog comments. Singer and Morgan allegedly thought it was strange for Radziwill’s blog on Bravo to have multiple positive comments while other blogs were either ignored or attacked by fans.

Bravo has removed all of the comments from the blogs of the Real Housewives of New York cast members, so it is difficult to investigate the allegations. However, Shuter claimed the removal was caused by Bravo discovering the fake comments on Radziwill’s blog and wanting to stop the problem before it escalated.











NeNe to begin guest run in Zumanity!


NeNe Leakes is bringing the drama of her often-controversial TV appearances to a run of 10 Zumanity shows.

It’s part of the 10th anniversary celebrations of the show, and Cirque du Soleil officials have told me that if successful, it will herald other guest stars and new cast and routine changes into its second decade.



NeNe, who appeared as a stripper in the 2003 Cuba Gooding and Beyonce film The Fighting Temptations, starts her guest-hosting role Friday night, but this evening I’ll chat with NeNe after I watch her rehearsals as the erotic Edie, Mistress of Sensuality, in Cirque’s sexy, adult-centric show at New York-New York.



She’s already made it clear that while the show is provocative and risque and several performers go topless, she won’t be getting naked. However, fans will see plenty of skin.



“We’ll be as sexy as we can be,” 46-year-old NeNe told our colleague Susan Stapleton at Las Vegas Magazine. NeNe worked as a stripper when she met husband Gregg Leakes, whom she married in 1997.



NeNe says that while in Las Vegas, she expects to do a lot of shopping and dining at Strip restaurants.



sources: Examiner, LasVegasSun, US, E!

Gary Oldman Tells Jimmy Kimmel: 'I Am an A—Hole, I Should Know Better'

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Gary Oldman gave a public apology for his offensive comments blasting liberal Hollywood, and defending Mel Gibson and Alec Baldwin regarding their controversial remarks about Jews and gays when he appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live! on Wednesday.

"It was an article I did with Playboy and I said some things that were poorly considered. Once I saw it in print, I saw that it was insensitive, pernicious and ill-informed," the British actor admitted to Kimmel when he was a guest on the show. "I am a public figure, I should be an example and inspiration and I am an a—hole. I am 56. I should know better. I extend my apology and my love and best wishes to my fan base."

In a lengthy — and extremely candid — interview for the July/August issue of Playboy promoting Dawn of the Planet of the Apes, the 56-year-old said he believes "political correctness is crap.""Take a f—ing joke. Get over it," he went on to say. "I don't know about Mel. He got drunk and said a few things, but we've all said those things. We're all f—ing hypocrites," Oldman later went on to claim. "The policeman who arrested him has never used the word n—— or that f—ing Jew?" he asked.

In Wednesday's humble response on the show he said: "Words have meaning and they carry weight. And they carry on long after you’ve said them. I don’t condone or excuse the words that I used in any context. I just basically shouldn’t have used them, but I did and I have injured and wounded a great many people," he went on to reveal.

The Dark Knight Rises actor also thanked Kimmel for inviting him onto the ABC late night show and giving him the opportunity to make amends. "I appreciate you having me here and extending your hospitality and to put me in this seat once again," he told the host. "And it gives me the opportunity to say to those people that I, from my heart, I am profoundly, profoundly sorry … especially to the fans as they have been so incredible to me and loyal. They call me Team Oldman. I feel like I let them down."

In his controversial Playboy rant, Oldman had also singled out satirical news programs like The Daily Show With Jon Stewart and Real Time With Bill Maher for getting away with being able to make offensive comments about people and hide "behind comedy and satire."

His expletive-filled interview sparked a sharp response from Jewish leaders, and Oldman wrote an an open letter to the Anti-Defamation League late on Tuesday, saying: "I am deeply remorseful that comments I recently made in the Playboy interview were offensive to many Jewish people."

During the Jimmy Kimmel Live! interview, the late night host broke the ice by saying: "I am struck on the fact that they call you 'Team Oldman.' I am so happy that someone has to apologize on this show and its not me for once," he joked, adding: "I think it is important when someone apologizes to accept their apology. You are a great actor so we can't trust anything you say!"

Oldman explained that "sometimes we are asked to be social and cultural commentators and I am not. I landed both feet in a hornets' nest. It came over in a certain way and for that I am deeply sorry," he concluded.

Kimmel then went on to "make the most awkward transition possible" and ask, "Are you excited about Planet of the Apes?"

source

Arian Foster's alleged Mistress Gives Birth

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The woman claiming NFL star Arian Foster knocked her up and then tried to force her to have an abortion has welcomed a baby boy into the world ... and she claims he looks just like daddy.

Brittany Norwood gave birth to Gatsby Alexander Norwood Foster Monday in Houston.

Brittany tells us, "he's perfect." And she wants to make this clear ... the kid looks "identical to my biological father's baby pictures."


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TMZ Sports broke the story ... Brittany sued Arian for refusing to pay her medical expenses. Brittany claims when he found out she was pregnant he tried to strong-arm her into getting an abortion.

For his part ... Arian hasn't acknowledged he's the father ... and claims to have recordings proving Brittany is lying about the abortion.

Sources close to the Houston Texans star tell us Arian's aware of the birth.


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BACKSTORY ON THIS SCANDAL

Brittany Norwood, the alleged former mistress of Texans’ star running back Arian Foster, has delivered her baby boy.

Norwood claims her child is the result of an affair she had with Foster last year. Monday night, Norwood sent out a message on her Twitter page saying, “I’ve never loved anything so much. My baby boy is here after an excruciating 24 hours of labor.”

According to other tweets from her account, she plans to name the boy Gatsby.

In May 2014, Local 2 reached out to Norwood’s attorney, Doug York, but he would not comment because of a gag order in place by the judge. She filed a paternity lawsuit against Foster and in return he filed a defamation suit against Norwood. Both parties are expected to return to court now that she has given birth.

Fosterhas been with the Texans since 2009. He’s married with two children.


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College student, 21, who says she is having married NFL star Arian Foster's love child is due any day now... as it is revealed he is already paying child support.

Brittany Norwood went public in January with claims that she is pregnant with the Houston Texans running back's baby

Arian Foster, 27, has been married to German-born model and singer Ariana Reinhart since 2011.

Brittany Norwood is suing Foster, 27, to determine paternity of the child and claiming emotional distress.

Norwood went public in January with claims that she got pregnant during an affair last year with Foster and that he and his brother tried to pressure her to have an abortion. He denies those allegations.

Foster has been married to German-born model and singer Romina Reinhart since 2011. They have two children together.

The three-time Pro Bowl running back signed a five-year, $43.5million contract in 2012. He made $5.25million last season.

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Adding: 'Live and learn, I can only hope and pray my son turns out to be the man his mom is.'

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However, a source told KPRC-TV that Foster is already giving financial support to Norwood.
Earlier this month, she tweeted about Chanel designer handbags with the hashtag '#noknockoffs.'

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In another post she wrote: 'Taking my Herve out of the closet so I can admire it. I can't wait to have my body back with my baby boy accessory,' referring to the famous 'bandage' dress by designer Herve Leger.

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She also wrote: 'Baby chino and linen. I love dressing my little baby doll already!'

In April, she tweeted: 'I can't wait to order a Shirley Temple in a few short hours and be like "No please check my I.D." #finafreakinly21.'

Foster himself hasn't commented.

Both Foster and Norwood are due in court for paternity test proceedings once the baby is born.



She sues Arian.


Arian sues her.






[Word is, they met at the Hotel Zaza. Not surprised he met a jumpoff there. She looks like a Jessica Simpson knockoff.]



Source: http://www.tmz.com/2014/06/24/arian-foster-brittany-norwood-birth-abortion-lawsuit-texans/

Source: http://www.click2houston.com/news/woman-claiming-to-carry-arian-fosters-baby-gives-birth/26633956


Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2635927/Brittany-Norwood-woman-having-NFL-star-Arian-Fosters-baby.html#ixzz35iSublvH

Adam Levine says he may be a douchebag, denies having sex with Lindsay Lohan

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While Adam Levine confesses that he’s “maybe” a douchebag, he’s clarified that he did not have “sexual intercourse” with Lindsay Lohan after appearing on her infamous sex list.

Levine recently chatted with Howard Stern who of course asked the singer/actor/TV star/world’s sexiest man alive if he did, in fact, knock boots with Lindsay. “That’s not true. I did not have sexual intercourse with Lindsay Lohan,” he answered.

When Howard pointed out that no one on the list has confirmed that they did the deed Adam said, “That’s because I think we’re being truthful about that very specific thing.”

The Maroon 5 frontman also recently had a lengthy chat with GQ in which he examined all the deeper intricacies of what is or isn’t douchebaggery.

Levine, who’s been called by one site “Lord of the Douche” stated, “Would it be really easy to assume that I was a douchebag? Definitely. One hundred percent. But that doesn’t mean that I am. Or maybe I am, I don’t know.... …. Okay, so I’m gonna get really intricately self-reflective right now and ask myself the hard questions, to find out, once and for all, definitively, whether or not I’m a douchebag.”

After thinking it all over he tells the interviewer, “You don’t have to like me, but I’d prefer it if you did. That’s kind of how I feel. I’m not the easiest person to love right off the bat, you know. If I knew everyone in the world, they would love me. Every single last fu**ing one of them.”

Source

Who, in your opinion, is the biggest douchebag in the entertainment industry?

Gang Related 1x06 "Entre Dos Tierras" Sneak Peeks

Terrific together: Beyonce and Jay Z go live

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How do you top your own recently wrapped, well-received megatour when you're the reigning king and queen of hip-hop and pop, respectively? You join forces for a tour of supernova proportions, demonstrating why no one in the game comes close to that throne.

By 9:30, fans are getting antsy. The stadium has filled enough that the delay is increasingly unfounded. Luckily, a beautiful black-and-white video breaks the silence, sirens ring, and Beyoncé whispers "I need some gangster s---" before seguing into '03 Bonnie and Clyde, the couple's collaboration that samples Tupac classic Me and My Girlfriend. She's clad in a fishnet mask; he's in black sunglasses, a star-speckled shirt, black jacket and thick signature gold chains.

Show me what you got: Among purple lights, smoke, and strobes, the funky horns and infectious downbeat of smash hit Crazy In Love reverberates through the audience. Whatever void or annoyance was apparent at their absence is instantly forgotten as Jay Z flows "show me what you got."


Hands up: Beyoncé exits and Jay Z rolls through a string of fan favorites, including N----- in Paris and Tom Ford. Beyoncé enters again for her place as the sexy background vocalist on Tom Ford. Then, in the blink of an eye, amid a sea of red, a costume change signals it's Bey's show again as she sings, "Who runs the world? Girls." The words of feminist speaker Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie blaze across the screen.

Go, girl: For all the debate about Beyoncé's feminist cred, this show doesn't mince words. Beyoncé unquestionably identifies. Strutting across the stage in a leopard-patterned, long-sleeve leotard, she knows she's flawless and sings so.

Top of their game: Early on, it becomes apparent that this is a totally integrated performance. Sure, it gives Beyoncé time for her phenomenal costume changes, but the coordination is not just remarkable, it's the absolute best way that two of the world's best performers can deliver a show that proves why they're on top together.


Switch up: Vintage videos mix with onscreen party scenes featuring the likes of Diddy, as Jay Z (sporting a fedora) lets the audience rhyme half of Big Pimpin' a cappella. Exit Jay, enter Bey, seated in a glass chair and wearing a full-length sequined bodysuit. Tension builds with chopped beats, only to make way for a grandiose entrance for Jay Z on fan favorite On to the Next One.

On fire: Jay Z segues into Clique as Beyoncé creeps up in hooded leather. A montage of war images, static and beehives precedes a blazing performance of U Don't Know by Jay Z — really, a row of fireballs explodes behind him.

Can't touch this: This show is worth it just for Beyoncé's ensembles. She reappears in a black lace, drop-sleeve number, a la Stevie Nicks, for Haunted, a highlight performance, boasting creamy vocals that contrast with other awesome numbers like the more agro Flawless and triumphant Crazy In Love. Her vocal range is as vast as her fashion choices.


In love with Beyoncé: A very happy chair shares a sensual display for the expected, though no less titillating, Drunk In Love. She's still wearing the black lace. As Jay Z says in the following Public Service Announcement: "Got the hottest chick in the game wearin' my chain."

Taking over: Beyoncé takes over vocal duties for Justin Timberlake on Holy Grail, one of the stronger tunes on the rapper's Magna Carta Holy Grail album. The song is a standout with a sticky trap beat and transitions to a slow body-grooving hook.

No problem: A video with Part II (On the Run) allusions (a bloody Beyoncé in a lineup, cars peeling out, glass shattering) transitions into 99 Problems and then a thumping remix of Beyonce's If I Were a Boy. The magic continues as Beyoncé briefly covers Lauryn Hill's Ex-Factor. Not a surprise, as she's done it before, but still it's no easy feat — she kills it tonally and emotionally.

Here comes the bride: Beyoncé moves to an island stage in the middle of the stadium floor, dressed head to toe in white, including a floor-length bridal veil. She sits while belting out the soulful Resentment. But such seriousness can't last long, and the mini-stage show promptly turns to the upbeat and infectious Love on Top. Beyoncé's star energy hasn't dimmed in two solid hours of nonstop dancing and soaring vocals, the kind that make you wonder how human lungs take that kind of pressure.

Take it home: Against black and white shots of his native Brooklyn, Jay Z kicks off Hard Knock Life to an audience ravenous for more of the rapper. Beyoncé follows by repping her home state in a leather-studded jacket emblazoned TEXAS across the back, worn for the empowering Pretty Hurts.

All together now: The couple move to the mini-stage for Part II of On the Run and then Forever Young. This is the finale, as their late start precluded any encore. The dark stadium twinkles with cellphones and lighters. If this wasn't sweet enough, home videos of daughter Blue Ivy grace the screen. An image of "The Carters" written in the sand comes up, and for a moment, the crowd and the Carters seem to be one big happy family.

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Source and Pic Source

The Weeknd Announces Tour With Schoolboy Q and Jhené Aiko

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Just one night after Abel Tesfaye shared a brand new track, he's announced a few tour dates, including one at the Barclays Center in Brooklyn. The Weeknd's "King of the Fall" tour will feature sets from Schoolboy Q and Jhené Aiko. Find the dates below.
The Weeknd:
09-19 Brooklyn, NY - Barclays Center *#
09-21 Toronto, Ontario - Molson Canadian Amphitheatre *#
10-09 Los Angeles, CA - Hollywood Bowl *#
10-10 San Francisco, CA - Bill Graham Civic Auditorium *#
* with Schoolboy Q
# with Jhené Aiko

source
see y'all in LA

ABC Family: 'Young & Hungry' and 'Mystery Girls' - 1x02 (Promo)

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TV Line: ABC Family's Young & Hungry: Will You Come Back for Seconds?

"In the real world, sleeping with your prospective boss an hour after he proposes to his girlfriend would be a terrible idea. But in TV world, that kind of drunken misstep might just secure the job of your dreams.

That’s essentially the gist of ABC Family’s new comedy Young & Hungry, which premiered Wednesday. Hannah Montana‘s Emily Osment plays Gabi Diamond, a down-on-her-luck food blogger with no job, no money and no clue. So when an opportunity to work as a private chef for tech millionaire Josh Kaminski ($#*! My Dad Says‘ Jonathan Sadowski) arises, she dives right in…to his bed.

You see, Josh initially proposes to his socialite girlfriend, but when she turns him down, he starts commiserating (and more) with Gabi, who cooks the proposal dinner as part of her job application. And because it would apparently be illegal to not hire someone you just slept with — or so Josh says — Gabi gets the job and all is well.

Gabi’s biggest obstacle — aside from her apparent lack of boundaries — comes in the form of Josh’s personal assistant/publicist Elliot (Entourage‘s Rex Lee). Like a sassy guard dog in a bow-tie, Elliot is determined to undermine our young heroine at every turn, mostly because he’s bitter that Josh didn’t hire “hot” celebrity chef Michael Voltaggio. I’m hoping Elliot’s ‘tude will pass over time because, honestly, his disdain for Gabi doesn’t come off quite as funny as it probably should. In fact, it kind of takes a toll on the show’s overall tone.

Fortunately, for every Elliot, there’s a Yolanda (Let’s Stay Together's Kym Whitley), who serves as Gabi’s kitchen-side guardian angel. Actually, that might be a bit of a stretch; she doesn’t actually do anything to help Gabi in her pursuits, but at least she’s always there to lend a high-five when needed."

Mystery Girls (Eh...)



LA Times Review: ABC Family's 'Young & Hungry,''Mystery Girls' are a mixed bag

"Ditsy blonds and the gay men who love/hate them are getting a double-bill revival on ABC Family, which debuts two new comedies Wednesday with mixed to awful results.

Mixed would be "Young & Hungry," a more than occasionally funny show in which Gabi (Emily Osment), an appealing but financially challenged food blogger, becomes personal chef to Josh (Jonathan Sadowski), an appealing but romantically challenged tech-ionaire.

Executive produced by Ashley Tisdale, "Young & Hungry" feels much more Disney Channel than ABC Family. And that's not just because Osment is late of "Hannah Montana."

Osment is an accomplished physical and verbal comedian who is always fun to watch, particularly in a group, and this group is very much up to her standards. Josh's housekeeper, Yolanda (Kym Whitley), clearly graduated with top honors from Miss Pettigrew's School of Domestic Staff and One-Liners, and personal assistant Elliot is played by Rex Lee in a manner even more High Queen than his role on "Entourage." If that's possible.

Still, while there may be sex, Gabi, with her blond hair, can-do attitude and sunny outlook, is very much a Disney heroine who sticks out a bit in ABC Family's darker universe.

As does the jury-rigged setup: Foodie meets tech millionaire in a battle to determine which is trendier! The players are talented if a bit hamstrung by their roles (does every personal assistant now have to be a gay man who squeals?). Perhaps once it settles down from the inevitably overwrought pilot, "Young & Hungry" will give Osment the successful starring role she deserves.

Not so "Mystery Girls," which seems to believe that the reunion of "Beverly Hills, 90210" stars Tori Spelling and Jennie Garth is (a) something huge numbers of the populace has been waiting for and (b) all you really need to launch a television show.

It will surprise no one to learn that Spelling (who had to do something now that her ghastly reality series is over) and Garth also executive produce "Mystery Girls," in which two former stars of a '90s hit show of the same name come together to form an actual detective agency.

In a slightly sunnier version of "art" imitating life, Holly (Spelling) is the ditzier of the two, still living off her long-ago fame via various reality television shows while Charlie (Garth) is dying of boredom in the suburbs. When a young man (Miguel Pinzon) so old-school gay he can only sing the word "fabulous" witnesses a murder, he vows he will only talk to the subjects of his "obsesh," i.e., the Mystery Girls, who are then forced to reunite.

Unfortunately, creator Shepard Boucher ("Men at Work") seems confined by the limitations of his stars, who are clearly not interested in actually exploring the real vagaries of fame. So we have a hollow, laugh-enhanced comedy in which the biggest draw is Tori Spelling proving she will do anything to remain on television. But we knew that already."

Wednesdays
Young and Hungry - 8/7c and 9/10c
Mystery Girls - 8:30/7:30c and 9:30/10:30c

Source: 1 | 2 | 3 | 4

I'll give episode 2 a go on 'Young and Hungry', 'Mystery Girls' - nope.

Anthony Stewart Head Still Wants to Do a Buffy Spinoff About Giles—Can This Please Happen?

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If Anthony Stewart Head has his way, you haven't seen the last of Buffy the Vampire Slayer's Rupert Giles.

Head, who played Buffy Summers' (Sarah Michelle Gellar) Watcher and mentor on the beloved Buffy the Vampire Slayer, had been at the center of a Ripper spinoff of sorts for years now that would follow Giles being, well, pretty flippin' badass. But sadly, nothing ever came together. Yet Head hasn't given up hope of reuniting with Joss Whedon for the project.




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"You know what? I would do it. I would do anything to work with Joss again. He's a wonderful storyteller, a great director, and a lovely man,"Head told Vulture when asked about a Giles spinoff still coming together. "I would love to, you know? Whether it's Ripper or something else..."

Head currently stars in Syfy's Dominion and everybody knows what Whedon is up to: Avengers: Age of Ultron.

Talk of a Giles-centric spinoff isn't anything new. The project was originally set for BBC with a 2008 premiere, but never came to fruition. The story would follow Giles, who was known as Ripper in his youth, after "he's cut adrift from Buffy and the rest of them,"Head told Vulture.

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"What he becomes. It's a beautiful, beautiful ghost story, and it's extremely haunting, as you would expect of Joss. It's unlike anything that I've ever read before. And if Joss is still game, then I am!"

In Dark Horse's Buffy the Vampire Slayer comic book series, Giles was killed off, but later resurrected with the help of Angel and Faith. However, it didn't got exactly as everybody hoped. Giles was brought back with his mind intact, but in the body of a preteen. Talk about a role reversal!

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Let's take a moment and remember how awesome Giles was on Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

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[ BTVS FOREVER. BUFFY POST, YALL!!! ]


buffy-friends




Source: http://www.eonline.com/news/553815/anthony-stewart-head-still-wants-to-do-a-buffy-spinoff-about-giles-can-this-please-happen

Netflix's Original Content VP on Development Plans, Pilots, Late-Night and Rival HBO (Q&A)

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"Orange Is the New Black" actress Taylor Schilling, Netflix Vice President of Original Content Cindy Holland, and Author Piper Kerman attend the show's New York premiere in 2013.

Cindy Holland, Netflix's head of original content, recently gave a rare interview to The Hollywood Reporter to discuss how her small team helps new series come to fruition.

Holland, who oversees 16 employees and a growing portion of Netflix's $3 billion programming budget, "has been tasked with building the company's original series business, which began in 2011 with a $100 million, 26-episode bet on 'House of Cards,'" according to THR.


After an "Arrested Development" revival and the critically acclaimed "Orange Is the New Black" followed, Holland hasn't looked back.

Once Holland's team helps Netflix choose and purchase a show, the exec says it's "a balancing act" trying to help guide production while also granting plenty of creative freedom. Holland explains to THR:

"We view our job as helping support the creators to fulfill their vision, not ours. We view ourselves as the objective outsider. Sometimes in a writers room the mood will shift a certain way, and we'll start to remind people: 'Hey, early on you talked about wanting to explore this dynamic or these characters. Are you still intending to do that?' It's about being supportive and helping to point out things that from the outset the storytellers have expressed a desire to do."


As for advice Holland gives show creators, she says:


"We'll talk to them very early on about how series are consumed on Netflix. I think you can take the time to really develop characters and storylines, and you can go on some pretty interesting tangents and not be too concerned because the viewer will be right back with you in that story in the next hour to two hours. Jenji has commented that with Orange, it gives her the freedom to not have to service all of these characters in every episode, which would be daunting. Another thing we've learned is that if a viewer is going to watch, on average, 2 ½ episodes a night, if you're using similar source music or a lot of music, it can get repetitive."

Holland explains that next up on Netflix's agenda is broadening its comedy content.

"Comedies of varying types are an area of extreme interest to us," Holland revealed. "We're just starting in the comedy space outside of 'Arrested,' and comedies have a more territory-by-territory appeal. So we're doing some experimentation in comedy to see what kind of tailoring we might need to do for different markets."

One person Netflix is hoping will translate? Chelsea Handler, who just signed a deal for a stand-up special in October, followed by four "docucomedies" in 2015 and a talk show in 2016.

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Netflix's Original Content VP on Development Plans, Pilots, Late-Night and Rival HBO (Q&A)

cindy_holland_a_l


In a rare interview, Cindy Holland talks to THR about Netflix viewer habits, why men watch "Orange Is the New Black" with women, which genres she wants to tackle and what factors would lead to a show's cancellation.

A version of this story first appeared in the June 27 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine.

As viewers began bingeing on Orange Is the New Black's second season June 6, Netflix's head of original content, Cindy Holland, was pursuing her other passion: cycling. Holland, 45, was riding about 85 miles a day from San Francisco to Los Angeles as part of AIDS/LifeCycle, which raised a record $15 million for groups including the L.A. LGBT Center, an organization near and dear to the Nebraska native.

Seated in her Beverly Hills office a few days later, the 12-year Netflix veteran likened the ride, which she has done seven times, to the process of building the streaming company to 48 million subscribers worldwide.

"It seems unachievable, but it's really about planning and believing you can do it," she says. During recent years, Holland, a straight shooter who oversees 16 employees and a growing portion of Netflix's $3 billion programming budget, has been tasked with building the company's original series business, which began in early 2011 with a $100 million, 26-episode bet on House of Cards. A revival of Arrested Development, the horror-themed Hemlock Grove and Jenji Kohan's prison dramedy Orange followed.

Now, the Stanford alum, who began her career in feature development at Spring Creek Productions, is readying her next batch of originals from creators including the Wachowskis (Sense8) and Friends co-creator Marta Kauffman (Grace and Frankie). During a rare interview with THR, she opened up about Netflix viewer habits, the company's development plans and why men watch Orange with women.

CEO Reed Hastings said Hemlock Grove lured more viewers at launch than House of Cards. In choosing shows, how do you balance between "prestige" and bottom-line success?


It's a balancing act. Creating great series that our subscribers love is job No. 1; the two guiding metrics for us are subscriber reach and how many total hours are viewed. But we're very happy when series get reviewed well and become cultural phenomenons the way House of Cards and Orange Is the New Black have.

There was talk early on about Netflix's lack of notes, but Jenji Kohan has been among the showrunners to refute that. When do you step in?


We view our job as helping support the creators to fulfill their vision, not ours. We view ourselves as the objective outsider. Sometimes in a writers room the mood will shift a certain way, and we'll start to remind people: "Hey, early on you talked about wanting to explore this dynamic or these characters. Are you still intending to do that?" It's about being supportive and helping to point out things that from the outset the storytellers have expressed a desire to do.

Your audience is consuming programming in a different way. What advice do you give show creators?


We'll talk to them very early on about how series are consumed on Netflix. I think you can take the time to really develop characters and storylines, and you can go on some pretty interesting tangents and not be too concerned because the viewer will be right back with you in that story in the next hour to two hours. Jenji has commented that with Orange, it gives her the freedom to not have to service all of these characters in every episode, which would be daunting. Another thing we've learned is that if a viewer is going to watch, on average, 2 ½ episodes a night, if you're using similar source music or a lot of music, it can get repetitive.


To date, you have committed to the straight-to-series model. Will you continue, or have you come to realize the pilot process might have benefits?


Our straight-to-series strategy was born out of a few things: one being necessity because I was a dep­artment of one when we licensed House of Cards; two, out of wanting to show our commitment to being serious about this business; and three, when we had the opportunity as outsiders coming into a new business to take a look at what the best practices are at different networks, we were able to try on what works for us and what doesn't. We talked early on about not wanting to develop projects and not wanting to sink money into pilots because even if it's less perfect than you might want it to be, at least you have a full season that you can put in front of your subscribers and there will be people who will enjoy it. I expect that we'll mostly continue that.

When would you not?


We've been licensing series from third parties; as we start to get into developing and owning some of our own series, I expect that we'll spend a little bit of money on development. But we, as a group, want to keep a firm mantra of only putting things into the pipeline that we believe we'll actually make. I don't anticipate that we will spend money on pilots; it doesn't seem like an efficient thing for us to do.

It makes complete sense for networks to do it when you're talking about maximizing eyeballs for an hour's worth of time on a given day -- there, you need to have a full bench that you can draw from. For us, it's quite a different proposition.

But my understanding is you already are developing by having creators write pilot scripts and provide you with potential series bibles -- yes?


A very small amount.

How important will ownership be to Netflix, and what do you foresee as the ratio of licensed versus owned content?


I don't have a sense for what the ratio will be. Historically we've been entirely licensed, and we'll probably have a large percentage that will continue to be licensed. Our desire to own is less about maximizing profit for the total enterprise because our business model is about subscriptions, not profits from TV shows; our desire to own really will come more from our desire to control an increasing number of international territories and windows within territories.

As you've expanded globally, how has your thinking changed about original programming, for stories and casting?


We've always had an eye toward how a series might play in various international territories. House of Cards we knew would play quite well in the U.S. and probably English-speaking territories but didn't anticipate that it would overindex in Latin America, for example.

On the other hand, you have David Fincher, Kevin Spacey and Robin Wright. In terms of programming specifically for territories, we have Narcos from Jose Padilha, one of the most famous directors in Brazil. It stars Wagner Moura, and it's set in Latin America, and we anticipate that we will have a sizable following there.

Sense8, which the Wachowskis are creating for us, has many international locations, many of which are territories in which we're operating -- mostly by coincidence. And we have Marco Polo, which is a historical epic that is known globally. So we do think carefully about all of our territories, not just the U.S.


You're pushing into comedy, too, which doesn't always translate as well globally. Concerning?


That's right. We're just starting in the comedy space outside of Arrested, and comedies have a more territory-by-territory appeal. So we're doing some experimentation in comedy to see what kind of tailoring we might need to do for different markets. Our goal is to license series that capture the rights for our all territories in which we operate or expect to shortly, and the goal is to have them all work reasonably well in all of our territories.


You have yet to cancel a show. What would warrant that?


They can't all last forever! If the creative team decides they don't want to go on, that's one factor. And if the investment required outweighs the subscribers and the viewing hours we predict for the series, that would be another.

Which genres would you still like to try?

Comedies of varying types are an area of extreme interest to us. We haven't seen the perfect Western project yet, either. Although Hemlock covers horror and supernatural to some extent, there are several subgenres within those categories that we haven't reached into yet and would look to explore if the right project came along.

You've been reticent to share ratings data, but tell us what has surprised you about the Orange Is the New Black audience?

We anticipated that the audience would tilt slightly female; we're pleasantly surprised that it only has barely tipped female -- although what we're learning through some surveying is that men will often watch with women more often than watch alone. The success of Orange also proves there can be quite passionate and large audiences for content that on the surface isn't mainstream at all.

At one point last year you had said that OITNB is the biggest show on your service. Is that still true?


That's right.

Jenji has been vocal about HBO and Showtime passing on Orange. Knowing what you know about your viewers, what attracted you to the show?


We had hadWeeds on the service for a number of years, and so we knew we had a fan base of a certain size that would at least follow Jenji and check out any new show that she'd do. And we knew that there were a number of series like Grey's Anatomy that give you confidence that shows with a primarily female cast can do well [on Netflix].

But there's nothing quite like Orange. And then when Jenji came in, she was very insistent on it being an hourlong show so that you would have the time to explore these characters and not just present them in situations. We didn't have a strong opinion on length, so my recollection is that we asked the question, "Do you think this is a half-hour or an hour?" because tonally it's so different. She felt very strongly it was an hour, and that was the conversation in its entirety.


How much crossover is there in your different shows? Are the House of Cards viewers also watching Orange?

There's some overlap but surprisingly little. We have several series that have been pretty successful, and when that happens there's a natural overlap. But as a general rule, the audience who watches House of Cards does not watch Hemlock Grove — and yet again, is not the audience that watches Arrested Development. We hope to reach the entire subscriber base with at least one original series by the time we're done.


Netflix is rumored to be interested in Chelsea Handler. Is late night a genre you are pursuing?


I don't think any genres are off-limits to us. We have a large subscriber base that consumes a wide variety of content and we don't have any preconceived notions about what will or won't work on the service. We've been very focused on highly serialized hours and half-hours, and that will continue to be true, but I wouldn't close the door on any kind of experimentation.

You have the viewer base and the money to experiment with things like awards shows, live events and sports. Any appeal?

I think on-demand will always be the key focus for us, so anything that requires aggregating a live audience at one point in time is better suited for network television and linear television. But anything that can be viewed and enjoyed in an on-demand way could ultimately be something we think about.

Whom do you consider your competition?

It depends on the segment of our business, what time period and what territory we're in. The media likes to make a lot of HBO, and we're very flattered because we respect the business that they've built and continue to run -- it's a global brand with powerful, important content. From a narrow original-series perspective, it's the best of premium and broadcast television. We're hearing the same pitches and being presented with some of the same material.

What's the project that got away?

True Detective is certainly a project that we had read and loved but HBO snapped it up. I'm a big fan of Fargo, too, and would have loved to have seen that at Netflix. We have the series first-run in some of our international territories.

Would you have done Fargo as a limited series?

I wouldn't close the door on a limited series for the right thing; and certainly with our roots in film, Fargo wouldn't be a stretch for us at all.

Where are you with a second season of Arrested Development? Will there be one?


We would happy to launch another season of Arrested Development when Mitch [Hurwitz] is ready to make one.

Now you're working on a Wet Hot American Summer revival. How do you think about what makes sense to revive? And what else is on the wish list?

Revival projects aren't an important part of our original series strategy. It's an opportunistic thing. With Arrested Development, Ted [Sarandos] was a big fan and knew that there had been a movie project in the works for a long time, so he campaigned very hard to bring that revival to Netflix. We have the data on what might be attractive to us from a viewership standpoint, and there may be occasions when we go seek something out, but it's pretty opportunistic and not particularly planned.

What's the biggest misconception that people have about what you're doing?


There's the perception that my team isn't creatively involved in the series at all. On the one hand, we have a very light touch; we try to provide a supportive environment, and we hire our showrunners and directors with the same mindset that we use when we hire employees. Our culture is about freedom and responsibility, and we believe that people do their best work when you give them both. But on the other hand, I'd like to acknowledge the amazing hard work my team does. So, that's always a bittersweet comment that we hear.

At this time last year, that team was significantly smaller than it is now, no?


We've roughly doubled the size of the team from a pretty small base. But we're anticipating more than doubling the number of seasons that will be released, so we're trying to scale up quickly in order to be able to have a large and growing pipeline of projects.

If you're not working, where would we find you?


I spend most of my free time on my bicycle. It's a good way to clear your head; and if there's a hill, I want to climb it. And I'm a big sports fan. I'm a big college football fan. I was raised in Nebraska, so I'm a Cornhuskers fan; and then I went to school at Stanford, so I'm a Cardinal fan. And I'm a big baseball fan, too. My teams are the Dodgers, the Brewers, the Yankees and the Red Sox. Yes, I believe anything's possible. I'm a peacemaker. (Laughs.)



Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/how-involved-netflix-is-in-production-of-shows-2014-6#ixzz35inQYN4X
Source 2: http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/netflixs-original-content-vp-development-712293

Life After Beth: Aubrey Plaza searches for love, brains, Dane DeHaan

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Life After Beth follows Zach (Dane DeHaan), a teen who is heartbroken when his girlfriend (Aubrey Plaza) unexpectedly dies. When her parents, Maury (John C. Reilly) and Geenie (Molly Shannon), resurrect Beth using the Old Testament, Zach gets a second chance to do and say everything he wished he had while she was still alive.

If you picked up on the fact that this is a “zombie movie”, you probably know what’s coming next.

Zach discovers that Beth has come back to life, and they are able to pick up their relationship where it had been cut short — with a few small changes. Namely, Beth is now a zombie, and she has to do zombie things, like eat people.

It’s a funny take on a familiar concept, but even just watching the trailer, you get the sense that there’s more going on here than a cute set-up.

Not only do the performances look great — John C. Reilly and Molly Shannon stand out as Beth’s parents — there’s an opportunity for some clever relationship commentary as Zach begins to drift from the recently resurrected Beth.

The film also stars Anna Kendrick, Cheryl Hines and Paul Reiser.

Watch the trailer at the Source

Who WON The Challenge: Free Agents??

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Season 25: Episode 12




WINNERS:

BANANAS


LAUREL

Second Place:

JOHNNY


NANY

Third Place:

ZACH


DEVYN



Even though Bananas had to actually work for it this season, I still wish someone else would have made it to the finals and won. We all knew Queen Laurel had it in the bag, even though Nany almost had her beat.



Source: My TV

Bcoop Goes Incognito

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Bradley Cooper goes completely incognito in his motorcycle gear and helmet while heading to the gym on Sunday (June 22) in Santa Monica, Calif.

The 39-year-old actor was seen the week before wearing the same outfit while heading to his workout session.

There’s only a matter of weeks until Bradley‘s upcoming movie Guardians of the Galaxy hits theaters and we can’t wait to see it! Make sure to see it on August 1.
















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mods I didn't realize these were a few days old? I'm not online every day

Cam’ron Previews Nicki Minaj Collaboration

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Cam’ron has bagged Nicki Minaj for a new song. After collaborating on “I Am Your Leader” off Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded, the New York rappers come together for Killa Cam’s 1st of the Month series, which will be comprised of 6 EPs and mini-movies to be released at the beginning of each month.

Cam shared a teaser of Nicki’s verse in an Instagram video. A similar song called “So Bad” featuring Yummy Bingham was released in 2012.

“Ay yo Cam, I’m the baddest bitch / You was actin’ mad happy when you bagged this bitch,” raps Nicki.

In addition to the Young Money MC, the EPs will feature Lil Wayne, Wiz Khalifa, and more. The first installment (sans Nicki) arrives July 1 on iTunes.


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Shia LaBeouf brags of his "millions" and calls cop "f-g" during fingerprinting after "Cabaret" bust

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Actor Shia LaBeouf was hauled off in handcuffs for acting like an aggressive jerk at a Broadway play — and then put in a face mask at a Manhattan police precinct when he wouldn’t stop spitting, sources told The Post.

The actor was busted at about 9:30 p.m. during a performance of “Cabaret” at Studio 54 in Midtown.

Sources said that the “Nymphomaniac” actor was annoying other theater goers by slapping random people on the behind and on the back of the head. He was also smoking.

When cops approached him, he tried to quickly walk away, but fell, so he was taken off in handcuffs as a crowed of shocked patrons looked on.

At the Midtown North precinct he got belligerent with officers, telling cops who were about to remove his hand cuffs: “F–k you. I’ll f- -k you up,” sources said.

Cops decided to not take the cuffs off and he started spitting, prompting officers to put him in a face mask.


While being fingerprinted LaBeouf told one cop “I have millions and millions of dollars and attorneys and I’m going to ruin your career.” He then used a homophobic epithet at the officer doing the fingerprinting, calling him a “fag.”

He’s been charged with criminal trespass, harassment and disorderly conduct, according to law enforcement sources.

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What His Tinder Photo Says About Him, According to Whitney Cummings

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Comedian Wendy Cummings appeared on Conan this week to chat about one of her favorite apps—Tinder. First, she cleared things up for the slightly confused host about how exactly the dating app works. "It's JUST off the photograph??" he asked Cummings. Yes, indeed. You decide 'yes' or 'no' on someone based solely on their appearance, she explained. "It's like OkCupid but for sociopaths," she said. [Tweet this!]

She then offered up a helpful analysis of the most common types of Tinder photos she sees. The reoccuring photo of the guy sitting in his car with a seatbelt on? "To me, all that says is your wife is in the house and this is all the time you have to take your photo. What is the rush? They're so sketchy," she joked.

And those shirtless pics aren't fooling anyone. "If you show a photo of how diesel and ripped you are, all that does is tell me you're unemployed," she concludes.



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Derek Hough almost gets up close and personal with some girl's crotch and meets Tony the Tiger

Dat Impact: Forget Porn, It's All About USA and Germany

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USA vs Germany World Cup Match -- Porn Site Traffic Dips, Except For ...

A giant porn company suffered a seismic loss in business when the U.S. World Cup team triumphantly lost to Germany Thursday ... with a notable gay exception.

The folks over at Bang Bros -- who run sites like Bang Bus, AssParade and TugJobs -- tell TMZ their network of sites took a 33% hit during the big match
.

But for some reason ... its gay site, Gay Pawn, saw a rise in traffic ... to the tune of 23%.

Theories in the office:

-- It was a great 2-screen experience
-- The hot soccer players got people hot
-- Someone else controlled the TV set
-- The soccer players got the "curious" more curious
-- All that talk of headers ...

Not that there's anything wrong with any of our theories.


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anyone know if Matt Besler is single? question for my friend.

This season's hottest trend in fashion is 'hipster sexism'

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American Apparel has finally ousted their creepy, sexually harassing founder and CEO of 25 years, Dov Charney. The ex-CEO has been sued multiple times for sexual harassment by former employees of the company, and was also known for his bizarre practice of making just about everything about his sexuality:

"The 45-year-old, who has described himself as 'a dirty guy,' strolled his factory floor wearing only his underpants and has been accused of using adverts that verge on pornography—including one featuring himself and two women captioned: 'in bed with the boss.' There have been allegations of homophobic remarks. One lawsuit claimed he had called one employee a 'wannabe Jew' and then tried to strangle him. It was notoriously alleged that he had had oral sex with an employee while conducting an interview with a journalist."

Meanwhile, in another corner of the fashion world, photographer Terry Richardson is facing criticism for coercing models into performing sexual acts in front of the camera (or elsewhere). Other models who have worked with Richardson claim that everything they did with him was fully consensual—even enjoyable—but presenting these alongside stories of clear misconduct obfuscates the point: some people can be okay with things that other people are not okay with, and if you expect everyone to do those things regardless of their comfort level, you’re violating boundaries.

These allegations have led some to wonder if fashion has a misogyny problem. I think that’s the wrong question to be asking. The right question is, does our society have a misogyny problem, and do these industries and communities take significant steps to prevent it from seeping into their spaces? The answers are, respectively, yes and no.

It doesn’t surprise me at all when CEOs of major clothing retailers or famous celebrity photographers turn out to be harassing, intimidating, assaulting, or abusing women, because the same thing happens everywhere else: politics, tech companies, sports, even science journalism. It happens everywhere a few select people are given excessive power and social capital, and those people are usually (but not always) men.

What the fashion industry does have, however, is a trend of “hipster sexism,” which can be defined roughly as people who hold nominally liberal views on things “pretending” to be sexist “ironically,” because sexism is totally over and so now it’s funny. The New Republic's Eleanor Margolis writes of Charney and Richardson:

"The two men are emblematic of a hipster veneer that’s so often used to cover up the mistreatment of women… With their 1970s porn star aesthetic seems to come this notion that they’re only subjugating women ironically: we’ll carry on buying clothes from people who look like the result of Ron Jeremy humping a copy of Vice. Misogyny is OK, as long as it pastiches a bygone era of kitsch female subjugation; as long as it’s retro. These bizarre double standards are only serving to blur the lines...between sexism and chicness."

Margolis doesn’t note the fact that the hipster sexism in fashion also has a racist corollary, which Racialicious' Thea Kim discusses at length. If you’ve stepped inside an Urban Outfitters or attended a music festival lately, you’re probably familiar with the trappings of hipster racism—that unmistakable “look at me I’m so over racism” chic that affluent young white folks are presumably going for when they wear blackface to a Halloween party or don a Native headdress to a concert.
Why do “ironic”/”hipster” sexism and racism hold such appeal for slightly left-leaning, “fashionable” young people? There’s an optimistic possibility and a cynical one. The optimistic one is that it allows people to perpetuate the comforting idea that inequality is now so passe that pretending at it is hilariously ludicrous. The cynical one is that it allows people to safely express the actual sexist and racist beliefs that they still hold while maintaining plausible deniability: ”No, you don’t understand, I was wearing that blackface ironically!”

Regardless, sexism and racism aren’t over; it’s only some of their most visible and iconic components that have mostly disappeared from our society. When a dude jokes “ironically” about hitting women, he might think that nowadays domestic violence is Very Rare and taken Very Seriously and the police will immediately come and arrest the offending man (perhaps even on a false accusation, which are now “common”). I, on the other hand, might think that many of my female friends are survivors of domestic violence, psychological abuse, or sexual assault, and few of them were taken very seriously at all when they tried to do something about it. So I won’t see anything “ironically” sexist about the joke. To me, it’ll just be plain ol’ boring sexism.

Much of hipster bigotry rests on the assumption that the person wearing the shirt or making the joke is a Really Good Person who would never actually believe such horrible things, so isn’t it hilarious that they’d pretend they do, ha-ha? But making this assumption requires knowing the person quite well, and given how pervasive sexism and racism still are, assuming that a random dude (or a random CEO of a fashion company, per se) is Totally Not Sexist Or Racist isn’t really a reasonable assumption to make.

Ironic bigotry can work sometimes, among small groups of friends. The popular party game Cards Against Humanity is premised on this type of humor; players make horrible card combinations that are meant to make fun of bigotry rather than its targets. But many people justifiably dislike the game because they don’t necessarily trust everyone they play with to be laughing for the right reasons, and the game’s own creator has recently acknowledged that some of the cards went too far.

It appears that many women who have worked with Charney and Richardson found them actually, not just “ironically,” creepy. And hipster sexism and racism in fashion and elsewhere itself can mask actual sexist and racist beliefs, even if they’re not completely conscious. In a world where both evidence and personal experience shows that sexism and racism are still common, harmful, and largely ignored, you’ll excuse me if I can’t laugh at the joke.
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