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Your Best Picture Winner

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The 2013 Academy Award for Best Picture was awarded to Hollywood's favorite film: "Argo." Oscar looked good in Ben Affleck's hand, especially as the star was notably snubbed in the Best Directing category.

Other films nominated for Best Picture included "Lincoln" (an early contender that fell out of favor after being swept by "Argo" in pre-Oscars award shows), "Life of Pi," "Silver Linings Playbook," "Zero Dark Thirty," "Django Unchained," "Beasts of the Southern Wild," "Amour" and "Les Miserables."

Jack Nicholson and Michelle Obama presented the award.

"I know what you're thinking: the three sexiest producers alive," producer Grant Heslov said as he stood next to co-producers Affleck and George Clooney.

That "Argo" won is historic, as it becomes only the fourth film in the 85-year history of the Academy Awards to win Best Picture without a nomination in the Best Director category.

Affleck previously won an Academy Award for Best Original Screenplay in 1997 for "Goodwill Hunting." "Argo's" win caps a stellar comeback for the filmmaker, who was once thought to have ruined his career in movies like "Gigli."

Last year, "The Artist" won Best Picture.

Members of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences vote to select Oscar nominees and winners, which makes the Oscars differ from the Golden Globes, which are voted on by the Hollywood Foreign Press. Guild awards (Screen Actors Guild, Writers Guild, Directors Guild) are awarded by members of a particular profession.

Seth MacFarlane helmed this year's Oscar telecast, which took place at Hollywood's Dolby Theatre and included a number of charming set pieces. A tribute to James Bond, a "Chicago" reunion, a "Les Miserables" medley, performances by Adele and Barbra Streisand and even Ted all made it into the busy evening.

More information about winners, performances and more can be found in the live blog below the following gallery.


PHOTOS: Michelle Obama Hops From The Governors' Dinner To... The Oscars

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Michelle Obama is one busy lady. On Sunday evening, the first lady got all dolled up for the 2013 Governors' Dinner, a black tie event that involved political speeches, talk of the sequester and dinner table conversation with Governor Chris Christie.

For the occasion, Mrs. Obama was dressed to the nines in Naeem Khan, choosing a strapless silver design that perfectly complemented her blunt bangs. Then, after sitting through POTUS' speeches and lots of political glad-handing... she went to the Oscars.

Well, sort of. Jack Nicholson came on stage at the 2013 Oscars to present the award for Best Picture. But he quickly turned things over to FLOTUS, who was paged in to Los Angeles' Dolby Theatre. Standing at the White House in her glittery Naeem Khan gown, Michelle was the one who awarded the Best Picture prize to "Argo."

Because really, the Oscars wouldn't have been complete without an appearance by Michelle Obama's bangs.

Check out Michelle Obama's glam look from the annual Governors' Dinner... and the Oscars.

PHOTOS:

michelle obama governors dinner

michelle obama governors dinner

Michelle is used to rubbing shoulders with the glitterati:

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Big Winners At The Academy Awards

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The 2013 Academy Awards took place on Sunday night and "Argo,""Lincoln," and "Life of Pi" ended the night winning awards.

"Lincoln" was up for the most awards this year, with 11 nominations, including Best Picture, Best Actor, Best Supporting Actor, and Best Supporting Actress. The Steven Spielberg film won a total of two awards, Best Actor for Daniel Day-Lewis.

The first Academy Awards show was held on May 16, 1929. With tickets costing $5, the awards celebrated the films of 1927 and 1928. Silent film "Wings" won the Best Picture award, while Emil Jannings took Best Actor, and Janet Gaynor nabbed Best Actress.

The 2013 Academy Awards were hosted by Seth MacFarlane at Hollywood's Dolby Theatre. The awards show took place on Feb. 24 and included performances by Barbra Streisand and Adele.

More information about winners and performances can be found in the live blog below.

The 2013 Oscars As Told Through GIFs

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Need to make sense of the Oscars? We've got you covered. From the WHOA to the EEK to the OH NO!, we've rounded up the night's brightest highlights. Because nobody should be the odd man out at the water cooler.

Seth MacFarlane opened the night with a Tommy Lee Jones joke (remember Mr Grumpy Cat?). "The quest to make Tommy Lee Jones laugh starts now," quipped the host. So --

tommy lee jones gifs

Jennifer Lawrence, who frequently talks about her breasts, was very much game for MacFarlane's hilariously inappropriate "Boob Song":

Jen lawrence gifs

John Travolta had us hoping for another Jodi Foster moment, but alas...

John Travolta gifs

The cast of Les Mis took the stage and belted their hearts out. Yes, even Russell Crowe. He had an ear piece in and everything.

Les Mis gif

The award for Best Sound Editing was a tie between a man and his clone:

sound edit gifs

KStew limped her way to the mic to present the award for Best Production Design alongside an upright, uptight Daniel Radcliffe:

Kristen stewart gifs

Bridget Jones Renee Zellweger had a hard time keeping her eyes open or her posture together, for that matter.

renee zellweger gifs

Adele's got this.

Adele gifs

Jen Lawrence, madame graceful, fell on her way to get the award for Best Actress

Jennifer Lawrence gifs

FLOTUS, quite possibly the only woman to one-up Meryl Streep, surprised the world and presented the award for Best Picture:

ARGO gifs

GIFs brilliantly created by our friends over at AOL: Omar Baksh / Dianna McDougall [AOL]

Oscars Say Goodnight In Style

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The 85th annual Academy Awards ended with a bang -- and not the announcement that "Argo" had won Best Picture.

As revealed on Wednesday night, the Oscars finale included a song and dance number featuring Seth MacFarlane and Kristen Chenoweth. (Because nothing says "Hollywood's biggest night" like a television star and Broadway icon.)

"We just want to say, 'Here's to the losers,'" MacFarlane said as he and Chenoweth launched into an ode to those who did not go home with Oscars. Lyrics were along the lines of: "You have all Tom Cruise's talent, and you're equally as tall — Here's to the losers, God bless them all."

MacFarlane and Chenoweth closed out the telecast, which ended just past midnight on the East Coast.

“After the Best Picture award has been given, Seth and Kristin will perform a special number and we think it will be a 'can't miss' moment,” producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron said in a press release announcing the Oscars finale.

The 2013 Academy Awards were filled with memorable musical moments, from Adele to Barbra Streisand to the cast of "Les Miserables" to Shirley Bassey. Zadan and Meron -- who produced the 2002 film "Chicago," which won Best Picture 10 years ago -- had said in pre-show interviews that they wanted to celebrate music as well as movies.

The added production value to the broadcast caused many fans to wonder whether the show would be one of the longest ever, but that didn't bother Meron.

"The truth of the matter is, you can see a 90-minute movie and it can feel like four hours, or you can see a three-hour movie where the pacing is great and it will fly by and you'll want to see it again," he told TheWrap. "It really has to do with content."

For more on the Oscars' 2013 ceremony, including a full list of Academy Awards winners, check out the live blog below.

OOPS: Jennifer Lawrence Falls At The Oscars

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Poor Jennifer Lawrence. She may have undeniable talent, but she might not always have grace.

Lawrence fell when walking to the stage to accept the Oscar for Best Actress on Sunday night. The "Silver Linings Playbook" actress took a tumble on her voluminous Dior gown when she attempted to walk up the stairs at the Dolby Theatre.

SCROLL FOR PHOTO

Once on stage, Lawrence brushed off the fumble and joked that the audience was only applauding to ease her embarrassment.

"You guys are just standing up because I fell and you feel bad," she said. "That was embarrassing."


Created with Gifboom

Prior to the awards show, Lawrence revealed that she was quite nervous about the big night. "My biggest fear is speaking publicly," she told the Washington Post earlier in the evening. "I’m so nervous about presenting, I’m trying not to think about what I would say if I won."

Unfortunately, this isn't the first time this awards season Lawrence has fallen.

While in London at a dinner before the 66th British Academy Film Awards, Lawrence tripped on a curb and lost her shoe while trying to maneuver through a crowd, Us Weekly reported.

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jennifer lawrence falls oscars

WATCH: Jennifer Hudson Gives Jaw-Dropping Oscars Performance

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Jennifer Hudson might not have been nominated for an Academy Award in 2013, but her "Dreamgirls" performance was one of the most memorable moments of the night.

Hudson took to the stage to sing the "Dreamgirls" hit, "And I Am Telling You I'm Not Going," as part of a tribute to Broadway musicals on Sunday night.

The Academy confirmed the Broadway tribute in a statement on Feb. 20, saying: "We are pleased to have been able to amass so much talent to create the celebration of musicals of the last decade that we envisioned. We are thrilled that so many talented actors have agreed to bring our vision to life."

The tribute included performances by Catherine Zeta Jones for "Chicago" and the cast of "Les Miserables."

The "Dreamgirls" actress -- who won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in 2007 for the role of Effie White -- brought down the house with her powerful vocals on Sunday night.

Back in 2007, Hudson was shocked to be on the Oscars stage for the very first time. "I have to just take this moment," the former "American Idol" contestant said while accepting her first Oscar. "I cannot believe this. Look at what God can do. I didn't think I was going to win."

Now a seasoned performer, Hudson had some advice for first-time Oscar nominee, 9-year-old Quvenzhane Wallis, who she stopped on the red carpet.

“There are not many in her position,” Hudson told MTV News about the youngest nominee. “All I can say is just stay humble, and live in every bit of this moment, and get used to having Academy Award winner ahead of your name.”

Who Won?

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Ben Affleck, Anne Hathaway, Daniel Day-Lewis, Jennifer Lawrence, Jessica Chastain, Bradley Cooper and more stars celebrated Hollywood's biggest night on Feb. 24 at the Oscars. (An Academy Awards winners list for 2013 can be found below.)

Hosted by Seth MacFarlane ("Ted"), the 85th annual Academy Awards included a wide array of box office hits. For the first time ever, the Best Picture category included six films with grosses over $100 million, including "Argo," "Django Unchained," "Les Miserables," "Life of Pi," "Lincoln" and "Silver Linings Playbook." "Zero Dark Thirty," another Best Picture nominee, was in striking distance of nine figures as well. (The other Best Picture nominees, "Amour" and "Beasts of the Southern Wild," were limited releases.)

The history making didn't end there. The Oscars 2013 ceremony also included opportunities for Day-Lewis and Affleck to enter the record books. Day-Lewis, nominated for "Lincoln," won his third Best Actor Oscar, an Academy Awards record. Affleck, meanwhile, became only the fourth director in the 85-year history of the Academy Awards to see his film win Best Picture without a subsequent nomination for Best Director. (The last time this happened was at the 1990 ceremony when "Driving Miss Daisy" won.)

Going into the Oscars 2013 ceremony, all signs pointed to an "Argo" Best Picture win. Affleck's rolled through awards season, winning awards from the Golden Globes, Screen Actors Guild, Producers Guild of America, Directors Guild of America, Writers Guild of America and BAFTA.

Steven Spielberg's "Lincoln" led all films with 12 nominations. Ang Lee's "Life of Pi" was next with 11 nominations.

For more the full Academy Awards winners list for 2013, check out the live blog below.


Oops

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The 85th annual Academy Awards took a moment Sunday evening to honor a number of late Hollywood greats. The memoriam nodded to an extraordinary group, including Nora Ephron and Richard Zanuck. However, one actor was noticeably absent from the list.

Andy Griffith, who died on July 3, 2012 at the age of 86, wasn't included as a part of the televised memoriam.

Griffith is perhaps best known for his television show, "The Andy Griffith Show." He also starred in "Matlock," recorded a Grammy-winning album, and appeared in multiple films.

The 2013 Academy Awards were hosted by Seth MacFarlane at Hollywood's Dolby Theater.

Everything That Happened At The Oscars

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LOS ANGELES — Just as Oscar host Seth MacFarlane set his sights on a variety of targets with a mixture of hits and misses, the motion picture academy spread the gold around to a varied slate of films. "Argo" won best picture as expected, along with two other prizes. But "Life of Pi" won the most awards with four, including a surprise win for director Ang Lee.

"Les Miserables" also won three Academy Awards, while "Django Unchained" and "Skyfall" each took two.

Among the winners were the front-runners throughout this lengthy awards season: best actor Daniel Day-Lewis for his deeply immersed portrayal of Abraham Lincoln in Steven Spielberg's epic "Lincoln," best actress Jennifer Lawrence as a troubled young widow in "Silver Linings Playbook" and supporting actress Anne Hathaway as the doomed prostitute Fantine in the musical "Les Miserables." Christoph Waltz was a bit of a surprise for supporting actor as a charismatic bounty hunter in Quentin Tarantino's "Django Unchained," an award he'd won just three years ago for Tarantino's "Inglorious Basterds."

The 22-year-old Lawrence, who got to show her lighter side in the oddball romance "Silver Linings Playbook" following serious roles in "Winter's Bone" and "The Hunger Games," gamely laughed at herself as she tripped on the stairs en route to the stage in her poufy, pale pink Dior Haute Couture gown. Backstage in the press room, when a reporter asked what she was thinking, she responded: "A bad word that I can't say that starts with `F.'" Keeping journalists in hysterics, she explained, "I'm sorry. I did a shot before I ... sorry."

That's the kind of raunchiness MacFarlane himself seemed to be aiming for as host while also balancing the more traditional demands of the job. There was a ton of singing and dancing during the three-and-half-hour broadcast – no surprise from the musically minded creator of the animated series "Family Guy" – including a poignant performance from Barbra Streisand of "The Way We Were," written by the late Marvin Hamlisch, during the memorial montage. But MacFarlane also tried to keep the humor edgy with shots at Mel Gibson, George Clooney, Chris Brown and Rihanna.

An extended bit in which William Shatner came back from the future as his "Star Trek" character, Capt. James T. Kirk, had its moments while a joke about the drama "Flight" being restaged entirely with sock puppets was a scream. A John Wilkes Booth gag in reference to "Lincoln" was a bit of a groaner, perhaps intentionally, while MacFarlane relied on his alter ego, the cuddly teddy bear from his directorial debut "Ted," to make a crack about a post-Oscar orgy at Jack Nicholson's house. (MacFarlane already has indicated he's one-and-done with Academy Awards hosting.)

But it was Day-Lewis who came up with the kind of pop-culture riffing that's MacFarlane's specialty. In accepting his record third best-actor award from presenter Meryl Streep, he deadpanned that before they'd swapped roles, he originally was set to play Margaret Thatcher "and Meryl was Steven's first choice for `Lincoln,' and I'd like to see that version."

Besides best picture, "Argo" won for Chris Terrio's adapted screenplay and for William Goldenberg's film editing. Affleck famously (and strangely) wasn't included in the best-director category for his thrilling and surprisingly funny depiction of a daring rescue during the 1979 Iranian hostage crisis. But as a producer on the film alongside George Clooney and Grant Heslov, he got to take home the top prize of the night.

"I never thought I'd be back here, and I am because of so many of you in this academy," said Affleck, who shared a screenplay Oscar with pal Matt Damon 15 years earlier for their breakout film "Good Will Hunting."

Among the wisdom he's acquired since then: "You can't hold grudges – it's hard but you can't hold grudges."

Lee, who previously won best director in 2006 for "Brokeback Mountain" (which also didn't win best picture), was typically low-key and self-deprecating in victory. His "Life of Pi" is a fable set in glorious 3-D, but Spielberg looked like the favorite for "Lincoln." The film also won for its cinematography, original score and visual effects.

"Thank you, movie god," the Taiwanese director said on stage. Later, he thanked his agents and said: "I have to do that," with a little shrug and a smile.

"Les Miserables" also won for sound mixing and makeup and hairstyling. The other Oscar for "Django Unchained" came for Tarantino's original screenplay. Asked about his international appeal backstage, Tarantino was enthusiastic as usual in saying: "I'm an American, and a filmmaker, but I make movies for the planet Earth."

Speaking of global hits, the James Bond action thriller "Skyfall" won for its original song by the unstoppable Adele (with Paul Epworth). It also tied for sound editing with "Zero Dark Thirty," the only win of the night for Kathryn Bigelow's detailed saga about the hunt for Osama bin Laden.

Among the other winners, "Searching for Sugar Man," about a forgotten musician's rediscovery, took the prize for best documentary feature. Pixar's fairy tale "Brave" won best animated feature.

One of the biggest moments of the night came at the end, as First Lady Michelle Obama announced the winner of the best picture prize. Backstage, Affleck described how surreal it was when he heard her say the word: "Argo."

"I was sort of hallucinating when that was happening," he explained. "In the course of a hallucination it doesn't seem that odd: `Oh look, a purple elephant. Oh look, Michelle Obama.'"

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Contact AP Movie Critic Christy Lemire through Twitter: http://twitter.com/christylemire

PHOTOS: 10 Best Things Said Backstage At The Oscars

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This year's Academy Awards may have been full of zingers and inappropriate Seth MacFarlane jokes, but some of the best banter took place backstage in the interview room where all the winners were harassed by a sea of reporters.

Questions ranged from the boring ("How does it feel to be a winner?") to the completely off-topic ("Are you able to attend this teeny-tiny press event in Timbuktu next week?") to the provocative ("Did you like the Boob song?") to the very direct ("Are you impressed with yourself?")

With the winners riding a wave of excitement, shock and alcohol, the very best things said at the Oscars were most likely not aired on television. Herewith are the top quotes of the night from behind the scenes:

An 'Avengers' Reunion!

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Just like the superheroes they played in the movie, Mark Ruffalo, Chris Evans, Robert Downey Jr., Jeremy Renner and Samuel L. Jackson all huddled together back stage to get a plan together and of course joke around.

Downey suggested the stars of "The Avengers" bow as they headed onstage to make Oscar presentations. Or perhaps curtsy.

When a show worker asked Jackson to stand still so he could be wired with a microphone, the actor faced a backstage wall and pretended he was being frisked by police.

To pass the time, the superheroes watched Melissa McCarthy and Paul Rudd from a backstage monitor.

Suddenly Ruffalo asked, "Did we miss our cue?"

"You want to go out there with them?" asked Jackson.

After presenting two awards, the actors returned backstage, where Downey quipped, "Avengers disassemble."

_ Sandy Coehn – http://www.twitter.com/apsandy

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EDITOR'S NOTE – Show Bits brings you the 85th annual Academy Awards in Los Angeles through the eyes of Associated Press journalists. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item.

So, How Were The Oscars?

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NEW YORK — He ruffled feathers. He maybe even turned some viewers off.

But it's likely no one turned off Seth MacFarlane.

Best-known until recently as the bad-boy creator and character voice behind "Family Guy" and last summer's hit film "Ted," MacFarlane seized the camera Sunday as host of ABC's Oscarcast and proved to its vast audience that he's a ridiculously versatile entertainer, a guy who can be as charming as he is famously irreverent, even polarizing.

Here's a guy who could toss off a joke Bob Hope might have delivered decades ago ("It's Sunday. Everybody's dressed up. This is like church – only with more people praying"), then carry off a deliberate groaner like his wisecrack that, while, an actor like Daniel Day-Lewis really captured Abraham Lincoln in his Oscar-winning performance, "I would argue that the actor who really got inside Abraham Lincoln's head was John Wilkes Booth."

Viewers could have gotten fair warning of what to expect from MacFarlane last fall when he hosted "Saturday Night Live" with skill.

But this Oscars hosting gig was the Main Event, and he earned a large measure of credit for keeping the show in satisfying equilibrium.

This was an elegant affair, including a surprise appearance by first lady Michelle Obama, live from the White House, who announced the best picture.

The lovely stage setting glowed and shimmered. And it was put to good use in a show-stopping production number saluting movie musicals including "Chicago," "Dreamgirls" and "Les Miserables," performed by stars from those films.

On a program that honored the 50th anniversary of the James Bond films, Adele wailed the theme song from the newest, "Skyfall." Far juicier, Shirley Bassey belted out the theme from "Goldfinger" about as forcefully as she did in 1964.

And accompanying the In Memoriam tribute, in a year that saw the passing of composer-songwriter Marvin Hamlisch, Barbra Streisand made a rare television appearance to sing "The Way We Were" in his honor.

(If any of the studio-perfect performances raised suspicions of lip-syncing, the academy declared all the singing was done live.)

Speaking of music, the orchestra got surprisingly aggressive forcing off winners in mid-acceptance, often with the sinister theme from "Jaws," of all things.

But silver-tressed Claudio Miranda, accepting the best cinematography Oscar for "Life of Pi," didn't need the hook. Beginning with "Aw, gee, wow," he seemed to be channeling Diane Keaton in "Annie Hall" as he gratefully stumbled through his thank-yous with a series of gasps, sentence fragments, and finally his own self-imposed wrap-up, "Oh, my God, I can't even speak." In his brief appearance, he became the patron saint of any viewer who was ever forced to speak in public from the heart – and crumbled.

Few presenters knocked it out of the park in their fleeting turns, but none had viewers' teeth grinding.

Perhaps inevitably, Mark Wahlberg was reunited with his "Ted" co-star, a digitally rendered Teddy bear voiced by MacFarlane. Ted, at his politically incorrect best, wondered aloud where the post-Oscars orgy would be ("Jack Nicholson's house," Wahlberg finally replied) and professed that he was Jewish to ensure he would "work in this town."

Yes, MacFarlane had his moments of dubious taste. What did anybody expect who'd ever spent a moment with "Family Guy"?

But did he really cross the line when he described "Django Unchained" as "the story of a man fighting to get back his woman who's been subjected to unthinkable violence – or, as Chris Brown and Rihanna call it, a date movie"?

Especially on a night where everyone else seemed to be on their best behavior, MacFarlane's strategic misbehavior furnished welcome relief.

In interviews beforehand, he had spoken of his hope to strike a balance between respect for Hollywood and some necessary sass. Mission accomplished.

Leading-man handsome with a gleaming smile, he began the broadcast without a net and looking totally relaxed: Alone on the stage, he delivered a series of one-liners, most of which scored. (The Oscarcast was being watched by "close to a billion people worldwide," he intoned, "which is why Jodie Foster will be up here in a bit to ask for her privacy.")

Then he opened the door to his reputation for raunch with the appearance on a video screen of William Shatner as "Star Trek's" Captain Kirk, who had arrived from the future to scold MacFarland in advance for the hosting performance he was just starting.

"The show's a disaster," declared Shatner.

As evidence, he pointed to an "incredibly offensive song that upsets a lot of actresses in the audience."

With that, a pre-taped production number featured MacFarlane singing "We Saw Your Boobs," saluting a roster of actresses who have bared themselves in their films.

But then, in an effort to atone, MacFarlane sang a classy rendition of "The Way You Look Tonight" accompanied by Charlize Theron and Channing Tatum in dance.

Not good enough, said Shatner, who then revealed a video clip where MacFarlane, costumed in a Flying Nun habit, hit on Oscar nominee Sally Field in the green room.

Back and forth went the routine: Bad Seth and Good Seth. Both were very funny, stewarding a broadcast that never went askew.

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Frazier Moore is a national television columnist for The Associated Press. He can be reached at fmoore(at)ap.org and at http://www.twitter.com/tvfrazier

Oscars 2013: Best And Worst Dressed - YOU DECIDE (PICS)

Oscars 2013: Red Carpet (PICS)

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It's the biggest night in the showbiz calendar and the 85th Academy Awards are already shaping up to be the best yet as the cream of the big screen begin to arrive at the Oscars bash at the Dolby Theatre in Hollywood.

And it isn't just about those highly coveted gold statues either - just as much attention is focused on what everyone is wearing on the red carpet, and, more importantly who got it right and who got it oh so wrong.

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Police Respond To MC Hammer's Racial Profiling Claim

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DUBLIN, Calif. -- A sheriff's department spokesman in Northern California says a Dublin police officer stopped and then arrested MC Hammer because the '90s rap star was driving a car with expired registration and refused to get out of the vehicle.

Lt. Herb Walters of the Alameda County Sheriff's Office said in a statement issued Monday that Hammer was "very argumentative" with the officer during the traffic stop late Thursday. He says it's unclear who owns the car.

Hammer eventually came out of the car and was arrested for investigation of obstructing an officer in the performance of his duties.

Hammer, who was born Stanley Burrell, has offered a different account, suggesting he was the victim of racial profiling. He tweeted on Saturday that the officer asked him if he were on parole or probation and tried to pull him out through the car window.

Bacon Says 'The Following' Is 'Definitely Testing The Waters' In Terms Of Violence

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Zap2it: Why did you decide to do TV?

Kevin Bacon: Three or four years ago I reluctantly said I want to do a series. When I started out, that was where you went to die. It took me way longer to come to than my wife (Kyra Sedgwick). I read two or three scripts that were way better than movie scripts. That began a process. I was developing stuff for premium.

Rapper Becomes An Art Critic... Sort Of

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When he is not mix-and-matching neon ensembles or shaving his immaculately executed zig-zag facial hair, rapper RiFF RaFF is building a rep as an art critic. The fruits of his labors are clear in "Art Ballin'," a RiFF-RaFF-tastic tour around Art Basel Miami beach conducted by a questionably sober hip-hop artist and produced by Pharrell's YouTube channel iamOTHER.

The hilarious video, which we spotted on Paper Mag, features RiFF RaFF waxing poetic on Basel's standout pieces in ways Sister Wendy never could. He really puts it all out there, or in his words, "sweated out his perm," for the video. He also sports a fantastic jacket, which we actually once spied a version of in a Manhattan thrift store.

riff raff video

Relive Art Basel Miami Beach in the slideshow below, and let us know your thoughts in the comments:


LOOK: 5 Divorced Stars Who Turned Heads On Oscar Night

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The pressure is always on for celebs to look their best on Oscar night. But after a divorce, the pressure is even more intense -- who doesn't want to show their ex exactly what they're missing?

Click through the slideshow below for five celebs who turned heads on Oscar night, from Kim Kardashian in a baby-bump-revealing gown to Liberty Ross' daring all-black ensemble.


How Did The Oscars Do This Year?

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NEW YORK -- The Oscars telecast was seen by 40.3 million people, a slight increase over last year's show.

The Nielsen Company said Monday it was the most-watched Oscars telecast in three years. Last year's show, when "The Artist" won best picture, had an audience of 39.3 million people. After bringing in "Family Guy" creator Seth MacFarlane as host this year, ABC saw an 11 percent ratings boost over 2012 among viewers ages 18 to 49 years old.

The Academy Awards exceeded 40 million viewers four times in the previous 10 years.

The Oscars regained its traditional status as most-watched awards show, after the Grammy Awards topped it last year.

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