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Ashley Benson Talks Nudity, Drugs & Her Ridiculous 'Pretty Little Liars' Wardrobe In Cosmopolitan

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Ashley Benson is Cosmopolitan's March 2014 cover girl and she has no problem revealing exactly what's on her mind.

The 24-year-old is best known for her role as Hannah on the hit show "Pretty Little Liars," but she'd like to make it clear that she's nothing like the teenager she plays on TV.

Benson, who is currently rocking brunette tresses and dyed her hair brown several times this year only to have to dye it back to blond for the ABC Family show, tells the magazine she feels more like herself as a brunette. "As a blonde, I get categorized as the b--chy popular girl for roles, and I just want to be the normal girl."

Benson also says what we've all been thinking when it comes to her show's amazing, yet completely unrealistic, wardrobe choices:

"The thing I always make fun of is the wardrobe," she revealed to Cosmo. "Really, do you think anyone would actually wear full hair and makeup and six-inch heels to school? I was 13 when I was last in school, and I never wore makeup. I wasn't allowed. Now [girls are] all wearing heels and makeup and getting their hair done, so I'm not sure it's us influencing girls or that's just the way it is now."

Benson, who took on a racy role in "Spring Breakers" in 2013, also opened up to the magazine about on-screen nudity, telling the magazine, “I never want to do nudity that’s gratuitous. Girls look so much better in lingerie or a t-shirt and leave the rest up to the imagination. I make it clear that I have a line."

She continued, "Everyone tries to push you, and it’s easy to get talked into doing those things. I’ll just walk off-set. But not everyone realizes they can do that.”

The actress, who is the on-again-off-again girlfriend of Justin Bieber's former swagger coach Ryan Good, also wasn't shy when it came to discussing why she has steered clear of drugs while growing up in Hollywood.

"There are drugs and alcohol in my family on both sides, so I’ve seen lives ruined, going to jail and all that. Once you start with any drug, it can be an addiction -– that’s why I never want to start and am not even tempted, because that chain is relentless," she explained. "And if it runs in your family, you see how unglamorous it is. I would never want to be out of control with my body.”

For more with Ashley Benson, head over to Cosmopolitan.

ashley benson cosmopolitan

The White House Goes All 'West Wing' With 'Big Block Of Cheese Day'

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President Bartlet may not be our Commander in Chief, but that doesn't mean the White House isn't influenced by the fictional president from "The West Wing."

This Wednesday (Jan. 29), the White House will hold a virtual version of "Big Block of Cheese Day" which was first introduced to the American people in 1837 when President Jackson "hosted an open house featuring a 1,400-pound block of cheese that sat in the main foyer of the White House."

The event "opened the doors of the White House to thousands of citizens to interact with cabinet members and White House staff -- and carve off a slice of the four foot by two foot thick slab of cheddar," according to the announcement released by the White House blog.

During this year's virtual version, White House officials will take over White House social media accounts to answer questions from Americans in real time.

President Jackson may have held the first "Big Block of Cheese Day," but it was President Bartlet that continued the tradition on "The West Wing."

Watch the video above to see White House Press Secretary C.J. Cregg Jay Carney call up some old "West Wing" alums to make the announcement, and if you need a "Big Block of Cheese Day" refresher check out some clips from the classic NBC series below:





'Sherlock' Gives Epic Best Man Speech At Watson's Wedding

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It was an epic and memorable best man speech on "Sherlock." Uncomfortable in the spotlight as much as he craves the recognition, Sherlock Holmes proved nevertheless both a master of the speech, as well as a buffoon. He recovered from early awkwardness to create a genuinely touching moment for his best friend. But then it just kept going.

"To the crowd, the speech comes off as self-indulgent and wildly tangential, he even insults them, and yet he ultimately wins them over because Sherlock -- the character and the show -- is totally charismatic and hits the right emotional buttons," wrote Entertainment Weekly's James Hibberd.

Things did get a little more complicated when Sherlock realized that there was a murderer in attendance. He had to deduce both the killer and their intended victim, all while keeping the attention of the audience with his never-ending speech. It was a masterclass in double-speak and misdirection, while still managing to squeeze in a fun murder mystery -- and even save the intended victim.

"Sherlock" wraps its season next Sunday at 10 p.m. EST on PBS.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Kristen Bell, Dax Shepard Call For Boycott Of Magazines That Pay For Photos Of Celebrity Kids

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Kristen Bell and Dax Shepard are taking a stand against magazines that pay for paparazzi photos of celebrity children.

On Monday (Jan. 27), Shepard, who welcomed his first child with wife Bell back in March 2013, took to Twitter asking fans to boycott magazines that would shell out cash for photos of his daughter against his wishes.

“Please boycott magazines that run pics of ‘celebrity children.’ They shouldn’t be punished for who their parents are,” Shepard tweeted, adding, "Children shouldn't be stalked. #boycottusweekly #boycottstar #boycottpeople #boycottintouch #boycottboycottboycott"

The couple have yet to release a photo of their nearly one-year-old daughter Lincoln to the public, and called for the boycott after paparazzi photos of their daughter were published for the first time. Bell followed up her husband's tweet on her own account:










Paparazzi photos of celebrity kids have been a contentious issue for years, and here at HuffPost Celebrity we made the editorial decision to only publish photos of celebrity children shared by the parents themselves via social media accounts, or in a context of an official photo shoot done with parental approval.

Things have become so problematic between celebrity parents and the paparazzi that a bill was finally passed in California in September 2013, that "will boost penalties for actions that include taking photos and video of a child without parental consent and in a harassing manner," according to the Associated Press.

Under the new legislation, which took effect this month, violators can face up to a year in county jail and a fine of up to $10,000, with fines increasing for subsequent convictions.

Shakira Shows Her Unique Hairstyling Methods With Milan (PHOTO)

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“Uh oh, mommy's been playing with my hair!”

Milan’s “cry of distress” was heard by Shakira’s fans over the weekend, after the Colombian singer took to Twitter to share photos of her unique hairstyling methods.




The songstress celebrated her son’s first birthday last Wednesday and the now one-year-old Milan will surely be next to his mommy’s side when she celebrates her 37th birthday this Sunday.

The singer-songwriter has already started the year with a bang. In January Shaki released her new single “Can’t Remember To Forget You” featuring Rihanna and a week later the Spanish-language version of the track was released.

Both songs will be included in Shakira’s upcoming self-titled album, set to be released on March 25. During Sunday night’s Grammys, the singer released a special Target promo for the new CD.



Celebrities Loved Beyonce And Jay Z's Grammys Performance

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Beyonce and Jay Z's performance at the Grammy Awards on Sunday (Jan. 26) was a whole 'lotta something. Reviews of the racy song and dance have been mixed, but the celeb camp is firmly planted on the pro-Beyonce side.

Lots of celebrities were blown away by Bey and Jay's rendition of "Drunk in Love."













Christina Perri loved it, but not as much as she loved John Legend.




The performance drew some criticism though, as some viewers felt it was was too raunchy for a family show. Jesse Tyler Ferguson thought the whole ordeal was pretty scandalous.



But never fear, Bey! Comedian Russell Kane attacked the opposition at its source.




Apparently, Beyonce can do anything.




Like it or not, people will be talking about this performance for a long time to come.

'Divorce Court' Judge Lynn Toler Has Some Advice That Could Save Your Marriage

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Years of presiding over bickering couples has taught "Divorce Court" judge Lynn Toler something you might not expect: the secret to staying married.

The 54-year-old arbiter stopped by "Bethenny" Monday and offered up some real talk on sustaining a successful, long-lasting marriage.

"Marriage is not a state of being, it's a process," she explained. "I think as you age, as your priorities change, as peoples' interests change, you have to actively engage in re-learning how to love each other all the time."

Toler also gave some tips about arguing fairly with your spouse.

"The first thing is timing. You never have an argument when you're mad about it. Let that go. Wait until there's a time where everyone's not angry," she said. "If you argue with an angry person all they hear is static and they defend and nothing gets resolved."

Maybe we shouldn't be too surprised that the tough but fair-minded Toler has such great marriage advice to dispense. She has, after all, been married for 25 years to husband Eric Mumford.

And back in September 2012, the "Divorce Court" judge blogged about how listening to the complaints of one divorce-bound couple on the show helped her right her own marriage when it hit a rough patch a few years back.

"By year 19, my husband, Big E, and I were off the road and deep in the weeds. Barely speaking, when one of us walked in a room the other would walk out," she revealed. "He was angry and unhappy and he saw me as the source of both. I, on the other hand, saw him as a jerk, a man who cared nothing for my needs. Of course, as I eventually learned at work, we were both wrong. It was, instead, those unexamined needs that had taken us off the road."

Watch the video above for more of Toler's tips on relationships, then check out her musings on her own marriage for HuffPost Divorce here.


Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Divorce on Facebook and Twitter.

Miles Teller's Filmography Expands With 'Whiplash,' 'Divergent'

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PARK CITY, Utah (AP) — Miles Teller is a name movie fans can expect to hear a lot this year.

The 26-year-old actor stars alongside Zac Efron and Michael B. Jordan in the romantic comedy "That Awkward Moment," opening Friday. He appears in the anticipated dystopian adventure "Divergent" this spring. And he dazzled Sundance Film Festival audiences with his passionate performance in "Whiplash," which won both jury and audience honors Saturday at the festival's awards ceremony. "It's rare to get a script where they really trust an actor, especially an actor my age, to really do some heavy lifting and some hard work, and that's my favorite," he said. "When I was in college, I never did scenes from romantic comedies. I always picked the weird stuff or the darker stuff, more challenging material. So hopefully this is a trend for things that I want to do and accomplish."

In "Whiplash," Teller plays a jazz drummer determined to succeed. He foregoes friends and romantic relationships, opting instead to practice until his hands bleed. As a student at the nation's leading music conservatory, he fights for a spot in the competition band, led by an unforgiving, intimidating and often abusive instructor (played by J.K. Simmons at his scariest).

Writer-director Damien Chazelle introduced "Whiplash" as a short film at the 2013 Sundance Film Festival to gain funding for his debut feature that opened the festival this year. And from the start, he wanted Teller for the role.

"I saw 'Rabbit Hole,' his first movie when it came out, and it was right around the time I was writing the first draft of this script," Chazelle said. "I was just immediately like, 'Who the hell is this kid? I've got to work with this kid.'"

"Even though you were only two years older than me at the time," Teller added.

The young actor is in nearly every frame of the film, and he took four-hour drum lessons three times a week to prepare for the part. Like his character, Teller's hands blistered and bled as he thrashed at the drum kit.

"I remember (he) was really proud when (he) showed me the first drop of blood (after) doing the drum solo," Chazelle said. "(He) was like, 'Look, it actually happened! It's not makeup!'"

"Whiplash" will be distributed in North America by Sony Pictures Classics, though no release date has been announced.

Teller has two other films slated for release in 2014: the comedies "Two Night Stand" and "Get A Job." He also earned accolades for his Sundance debut in 2013, playing opposite Shailene Woodley in the coming-of-age drama "The Spectacular Now." (He and Woodley reunite in "Divergent.")

"As a young actor, you just know about Sundance and all the great film festivals, and you think about what it would be like to get up there," he said. "And last year it completely lived up to that. It was a really special moment in my career. And now to come back with this film and have it open up and have the response that we're getting, it's very rewarding. It feels good."

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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Sandy Cohen at www.twitter.com/APSandy .

This Is What Happened When DMX Crashed A Wedding Party

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Wedding crashers are generally not a welcome sight to brides and grooms -- but if it's DMX who's crashing the nuptials, amazing videos like this happen instead.

Posted to Reddit by user JohnQx25, the video shows DMX rapping and dancing on a party bus carrying a groom and his groomsmen in New York City.

In case you're doubting that it's actually the rap star, the poster wrote, "I confirmed it was the real DMX. Besides, notice his bouncer follows him onto the bus. Most random people don't have their own bouncer."

It's true. They don't.

Check out even more celebrity wedding crashers in the slideshow below.

Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Weddings on Facebook, Twitter and Pinterest.







Open Letter to Aaron Eckhart

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Recently, you revealed that while studying and preparing for a new movie role, you went to a support group for grieving parents who just lost a child. I heard you talk about it on the Howard Stern show and then read this article in Us Weekly. I am here to say that this is not acceptable. As someone with no acting ability whatsoever, I do not fully understand your craft; however I will say that trying to blend into a room full of parents expressing such raw emotion in order for you to "play a part" is completely reprehensible to me. I say all this even though I have frankly enjoyed many of the roles that you have played and will continue to watch you act. I am not suggesting a boycott or that I dislike you.

You see, I am one of those parents who has sat in that room and participated as these raw emotions have flown like water over Niagara Falls. My amazing daughter Alexis was taken from me two weeks shy of her fifth birthday by an indiscriminate killer called brain cancer. I have sat in this room, tears welling up in my eyes, emotions raw, listening to others talk about this most difficult of losses. The thought that someone would sit in on these discussions that has not experienced the loss of a child, listened to the horrors of losing a child and utilize it for research through deception simply does not sit well with me. Maybe I am being overly sensitive. That may be a fair assessment, and no doubt some of you reading this may express this opinion. You are certainly entitled.

So, you really want to know what it is like to lose a child? Well let me tell you from someone who just marked three years without his hero on January 14, 2014. For the first year, you are numb. You go through life each day and the simple victory is rising from bed each morning. There is fog all around you and daily functioning can be a monumental task. As the fog lifts and time progresses, the pain becomes more real and palpable. It becomes crushing at times. Imagine a plastic bag placed over your head. Imagine the inability to breath, heart pounding through your chest. Imagine for a minute that you have no compass for your life. As time moves forward, the days of these feelings do become fewer thankfully. It is still a task to get out of bed each morning, care for yourself and your other children and focus on many of the trivial aspects of life. But it does become slightly less difficult most of the time. You never mark a day where the loss of your child is not the most significant aspect of your consciousness, though.

But then there are the anniversaries. Having just marked three years without my daughter, as I stated above, this date came upon me with such abject trepidation. It almost became a self-fulfilling, crushing prophecy. The plastic bag drew ever so tightly around my head and I barely escaped with a modicum of sanity. Think I am exaggerating? I would hope not after your brief experience in my world.

The Us Weekly article suggests that when you left the session, you felt as though you lost a child yourself. You may have experienced some small measure of what the pain is like; however, you have no concept of what it truly means to lose a child, and hopefully for your sake, you never will know this pain. It is not something that I would wish on any human being. Those of us who have lost children to diseases such as cancer, or some other process or accident have not had the choice regarding this experience. It is not something that anyone would choose to experience, and that may go as the most obvious statement of my letter to you. You are a tremendously talented actor that entertains millions of people, including myself. I can understand on the surface that it is important to research your roles in great depth. I simply think you made a very poor choice in this regard. One that was highly insensitive to those parents who unfortunately know what it is like to lose a child and will never be able to step out of the role that was unfortunately chosen for them.

If you wish to discuss your role further, what it is like to lose a child or anything in-between, I am more than happy to chat and quite easy to find through my website: www.jonathanagin.com.

Sincerely,

Jonathan Agin, bereaved parent for life

Lea Michele Releases New Single, 'What Is Love'

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"Glee" fans rejoice: Lea Michele has released a new song!

"What is Love," the latest single from Michele's "Louder" album, premiered on Entertainment Weekly on Monday.

The new track is simple and emotional, and as expected, it showcases Michele's powerful voice.




Michele tweeted snippets of the song's lyrics, in anticipation of its release.







"What is Love" will be available for purchase on iTunes on Tuesday (Jan. 28), and "Louder" will release in full on March 4.

Listen to "What is Love" below.

State of Our Fractured Union: 5 Things We'd Like to Hear From President Obama

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As President Obama prepares to deliver his State of the Union address, we sincerely hope his message on energy will be based on science, reflecting the very real climate crisis that currently vexes our great nation. In previous years, he has used his platform to promote his "all of the above" energy plan, which includes significantly expanding domestic oil and gas production -- i.e. fracking -- thus betraying the promises he articulated in his nomination speech at the 2008 Democratic National Convention to curtail the "rise of the oceans" and to let the planet begin to heal.



While it has been clear for some time that fracking poses a grave threat to our water, air, climate and communities, mounting evidence over the past year makes the harms of fracking undeniable. When it comes to exacerbating climate change and the health of millions of Americans, fracking is the most pressing environmental issue of our day.



It's time that President Obama and his administration stop downplaying the significant risks of fracking and promoting policies that will escalate the process and exacerbate climate change. Our nation and our planet teeter on a critical precipice; President Obama should seize this opportunity and shift course.



Although past and recent instances suggest he will disappoint, here are five things we would like to see President Obama say to the nation on Tuesday:



1. We Are Experiencing a Climate Crisis, and Fracking Makes Climate Change Much Worse



President Obama should address the realities of the climate change crisis. A recent report by the Intergovernmental Planet on Climate Change (IPCC) embraced an upper limit on greenhouse gases that the world is on track to hit around 2040, warning that unless very serious steps are taken soon to reduce emissions, we will face irreversible consequences. From extreme weather, to agricultural failures, to water shortages, the effects of this are, and will continue to be devastating. Now is the time for action.



By embracing fracking, President Obama is not only failing to address climate change, he is making the problem significantly worse. In many places like North Dakota and California, the industry is fracking for oil, which clearly holds no climate benefit. Elsewhere in Pennsylvania, Colorado, Wyoming, Texas and beyond, methane leaks and emissions from fracking and drilling operations pose significant risks to the environment. Methane is a much more potent greenhouse gas than CO2, 34 times more potent in the atmosphere than CO2 over a 100-year time scale and 86 times more so over a 20-year time scale, according to the IPCC. Yet inexplicably, President Obama's EPA is using very outdated measurements on the potency of methane. Worse still, a Harvard University study found that the EPA is underestimating the effects of methane, and that methane leaks associated with oil and gas drilling are up to five times greater than the agency's estimates.



President Obama should acknowledge that fracking exacerbates climate change, and acknowledge that U.S. energy policy cannot be based on this destructive practice.



2. Announce a Ban of Fracking on Federal Lands



As part of this shift, President Obama should announce an immediate ban on fracking on all federal lands. Last year the Bureau of Land Management held a comment period on proposed new rules that would continue to facilitate fracking on federal lands. In response, Americans Against Fracking member groups delivered more than 650,000 comments to the Obama administration calling for a ban on fracking on all federal lands, citing concerns about water contamination, air pollution and climate change.



Our federal lands include some of our most treasured spaces, but also cover large areas that could potentially be subject to development. President Obama has the power to prevent this from happening, and should announce his intention to do so.



3. Stop Promoting International Corporate Interests over the Public Interest - Say No to Oil and Gas Exports and the TPP



President Obama has touted oil and gas production as vital to our national security and energy independence, but at the same time his administration is moving to allow companies to export oil and gas produced in the U.S. to be sold abroad. This contradicts the alleged benefits to American consumers. Meanwhile, President Obama is in the process of negotiating a secret trade deal with 12 other nations called the Trans Pacific Partnership, which would further drive exports of gas while also undermining the ability of local communities to ban fracking. The president should reverse course, say no to exporting fossil fuels, and step back from the TPP.



4. Reopen the EPA Investigations into Fracking Pollution



In addition to promoting climate change, fracking contaminates drinking water. Over the past several years, regional EPA offices have linked fracking to dangerous water pollution in Pavillion, Wyoming; Parker County, Texas; and Dimock, Pennsylvania. In all three cases, EPA bowed to industry pressure and scuttled further investigation or enforcement.



The EPA Inspector General recently examined the Parker County, Texas case and found that the regional EPA office was correct in concluding that a nearby gas well was the most likely cause of the water contamination, and that an overall risk assessment had never been conducted. The EPA dropped the case with the justification that residents could purchase water elsewhere. It is utterly ridiculous to expect families to bear such a burden when the oil and gas industry is responsible for this mess.



Today, more than 200 national and grassroots organizations urged President Obama to apologize to the affected families in these communities, agree to meet with them, announce that he is reopening these investigations and direct the EPA to take all necessary action to make sure communities are protected from fracking.



5. Like JFK's Race to the Moon, President Obama should Announce a Bold, Swift Transition to Renewable Energy



As the IPCC and nearly all of the world's climate scientists have determined, we need to immediately transition to renewable energy, and President Obama should use his State of the Union address to announce plans to do so. In 1961, President John F. Kennedy boldly and ambitiously told a joint session of Congress that the United States would send a man to the moon and bring him home in less than a decade. At that time, we didn't even have the technology.



We need a similarly ambitious goal today with renewable energy. But the difference is that we already have the technology and the means to do so - we just need the political will and the leadership. Just as presidents have called on the nation to do great things in times of crisis in the past, President Obama should use the State of the Union address to outline a bold vision for investing in programs to deploy energy efficiency and renewable technologies such as wind and solar power.



He should call on and inspire Americans to take part in combating the greatest issue of our day and lay out a plan to fight climate change without giving our essential resources away to large corporate interests. Instead, we must preserve and protect them for generations to come.



Join the growing national movement at www.AmericansAgainstFracking.org.

Shonda Rhimes Talks Diversity Award, Is 'Kind Of Pissed' That There Needs To Be An Award

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This past Saturday (Jan. 25), Shonda Rhimes and "Scandal" executive producer Betsy Beers received a Diversity Award from the Directors Guild of America.

So how does Rhimes feel about being honored in such a way? Not too great.

“When I heard I was getting a Diversity Award, I was really, truly, profoundly honored ... but I was also a little pissed off,” Rhimes said, according to EW. “So was Betsy. So over many, many, many bottles of wine we discussed this.”

“We’re a little pissed off because there still needs to be an award. Like, there’s such a lack of people hiring women and minorities that when someone does it on a regular basis, they are given an award.”

Although she's right that diversity on TV should be more prominent, Rhimes has made waves in this particular area. And her empire isn't going anywhere.

At the Television Critics Association press tour, ABC president Paul Lee said that the long-running "Grey's Anatomy" would be continuing for years to come.

"[Rhimes] is one of the greatest writers that our generation has seen," Lee said, according to E! "She's continuing to write an immensely powerful show. It makes you laugh and cry every week, and what season are we now? And by the way, to her enormous credit, it is completely different than 'Scandal.' And I love it. I think it's going to stay on the network for many years to come."

"Scandal" returns on Thurs., Feb. 27 at 10 p.m. EST on ABC.

A Q&A With Director Peter Hyams Takes Us Closer

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Peter Hyams has been making movies for over 40 years. A native New Yorker, Hyams has the distinction of being one of the only directors who also serves as his own cinematographer on his films, a hyphenate that has caused him some controversy among cameramen (see below for more details). After making his mark with such classics as Capricorn One, Outland, The Star Chamber, 2010, and many others, Hyams hasn't slowed down, bringing us his 21st feature film. Enemies Closer is a white-knuckle thriller starring Jean-Claude Van Damme as the ruthless (and flamboyant) leader of a drug cartel on a search and destroy mission for his missing cache of product, which sits at the bottom of a lake on the U.S.-Canadian border. Tom Everett Scott plays the U.S. Park Ranger with a murky past who tries to stop him, along with Orlando Jones as a vengeful ex-con and Linzey Cocker as a damsel in distress with a secret of her own. The Lionsgate release is currently playing in selected theaters and is available on demand.



Peter Hyams sat down with Alex Simon recently to discuss his latest film and the highlights of his career. Here's what transpired:



The first thing that caught my attention in reading the press notes was the fact that the entire film was shot in Bulgaria, standing in for the American Pacific Northwest.

Peter Hyams: I did a film before in Eastern Europe as a (cinematographer) which my son, John, directed. It's filled with many very skilled people and some very avid people. So you can do a lot there.

Van Damme was a pleasure to watch in this. He's actually become a good actor. It seems like he's "let go" a great deal.

When the film was offered to me, Van Damme was attached to the role that Tom Scott plays. And I said "I've been there and I've done that. I want him to be the bad guy." I told Jean-Claude that I was going to fashion the bad guy to be this incredibly flamboyant character: a cross between Hannibal Lecter and Robin Williams. He's going to be crazy, funny and lethal. And he pulled it off beautifully.



The film JCVD seemed to metamorphosize him into this really solid actor.

Yeah, and one who's also very funny. There's a lot of terrific humor in that film. Jean-Claude is never half-in anything. He's either all in, or not.

He had the guts to look ridiculous and it really works in his favor and the character's.

It's the reason I wanted to do the film: It was a chance to show a different side of Van Damme. His character is all 90-degree arcs -- he's smiling and sweet one minute, then sticks a knife in someone's belly.

Was it a tight shoot in terms of the budget and schedule?

I've said before that it's a director's job to pour a quart of water into a pint bottle. So yeah, we did it for very little money and shot it in 27 days.

Don't you find though, that when you have $1.40 and a gun to your head with a ticking clock, that's when the cool stuff comes out, creatively speaking?

Yes, and the analogy is the same: If they give you a quart bottle, you're going to pour a gallon into it. If they gave me the Pacific Ocean, I'd be lost. It forces you to figure things out quickly and be very prepared. I was talking with a really wonderful filmmaker about a project we were going to do together. He said "It's going to cost X." I said, 'No, I think I can do it for Y." He said "How the fuck are you going to do that?" I said, 'Easy, I just won't get everything I want.' If you're prepared not to get everything you want, then work around that, you can do it.

And how do you do triage in that sense, to pick what stays and what goes?

Each day of making a film is kind of like your mom and dad has given you 10 bucks. So are you going to spend it on 10 one-dollar things or get something really cool for six or seven bucks, then spread the remaining three bucks around? That's what filmmaking is. I pick one shot during a day of filmmaking where I say 'Okay, that's seven of the 10 dollars.' Then I have to do the rest for three.

You're one of the few directors who has almost consistently always been his own cinematographer, as well.

Yeah, I started out studying photography in high school and college, formally. I thought the best amalgam of photography and film and drawing and design and the world around me was documentary film. So I set out to do documentaries and wound up at CBS. At 21, I was doing the news in New York. I wasn't very good at it and quickly realized that I was more interested in writing a sentence that would move people than I was in accuracy. I was more interested in taking a photograph that was artful than taking one that was a chronicle. I don't believe a camera is a recording device. To me it's a number two soft pencil and a blank piece of sketch paper.

There's a famous story about your trying to gain admittance to the American Society of Cinematographers (ASC) after you'd already become a very established director and D.P.

My entrance into the union was acrimonious. They just didn't want me. At one point they said, "You can join if you start at the bottom as a loader." So I said 'the hyphenate would be "writer-director-loader"? I don't think that would work.' Laughs. I talked a lot with Connie Hall, because I admired him so much. So Connie called me one day and said "Would you join if Haskell Wexler and I signed your application?" I said 'Sure, I'd be honored.' So they did. I was scheduled for this meeting and went down to the ASC clubhouse for the interview. About 48 hours later, a registered letter arrived at my house that said "You've been rejected." One of the guys who was also there being interviewed for admittance had been my camera assistant and, of course, he was accepted. So I took the letter and I had it framed. The lady at the frame story called my wife and said "Are you sure your husband wants to frame this?" She said "Yeah, he does." So it hangs in my office to this day.



Your first film was a terrific TV movie called Goodnight My Love.



Barry Diller was head of Movies of the Week at that point over at ABC. Barry green-lit Duel for Steven Spielberg, a movie called Binary for Michael Crichton, and gave a lot of us our first breaks. I said to Barry 'I've got two ideas. The first is about the U.S. government faking a moon shot, then trying to cover it up.' He said "What's the other one?" I said, 'I'm a Raymond Chandler freak. I want to do a 1940s detective story about a private eye and his dwarf sidekick.' He said "Do that one."

It starred two of my favorite actors: Richard Boone and Michael Dunn.

Richard Boone was a terrific actor. He had one of the most amazing faces. He, uh, liked to drink a bit. Laughs. I remember the first shot he did for me; we literally had to prop him up. But when we cut it all together, it worked great.

Michael Dunn has been almost forgotten now, but as a huge fan of The Wild, Wild West, I sought out his work when I was a kid. I understand he had a genius level IQ.

Michael was one of the most gifted people I ever met, just a remarkable man. He also sang like an angel.



Actor Michael Dunn (1934-1973).


All that talent in a body that didn't want to work.

Yes, and he was in terrible pain constantly. It was a real gift to have made my first movie with him. I wish we could have done more.



And the other movie you pitched, which became Capricorn One, was the movie that really put you on the map.



It was a wonderful experience making that film because we kind of did it under the radar, so I was really allowed to just go off and make the film. I had written it years before. The studios didn't like it and it wasn't like they said "Gee, this is interesting, but could you change this part?" It was "Get your car out of the parking lot." Laughs. Not much was expected of it when I did make it. The reason why it was a success is because Richard Donner couldn't deliver Superman for the summer and Warner Bros. didn't have a summer film. So I got the bookings and the ads that Superman would have gotten that summer. Otherwise, who knows what would have happened. One thing I've learned over the years is that when a film is going to be a hit, it's going to be a hit. We did a sneak preview here in L.A. at the National Theater in Westwood and there were lines around the block. The manager said the phone had been ringing all day with people asking if the movie being sneaked was Capricorn One. So you knew something was happening.



You did two films with Sean Connery, one of my boyhood heroes.



And he's rightly your hero, because he's a hero in life. He has the biggest presence of any movie star I've been around in my life. Incredibly bright, doesn't suffer fools at all, and you must be 100 percent straight and honest with him. If you don't know, say so. If you don't agree, say so. All the discussions and arguments we had were about how to make the film better. They were never about ego, or anything else. Gene Hackman is the same way. At one point during Outland, on a day Sean wasn't working, he was still hanging around the set, supervising some dolly track that was being laid out. I said 'Don't you have some movie star dressing room you should be lounging in?' He said "Can't fit there, boy. Too much fan mail." Laughs. I love Sean.

When 2010 came out in 1984 I was ready to leap at the screen with a dagger, thinking it would be sacrilege to all things Stanley Kubrick. I came away as a huge fan of the film. Were you apprehensive about taking it on, given its lineage?

Yeah, I was scared shitless! I wanted to run for the hills and turned it down multiple times. I finally agreed to do it on two conditions: One, Stanley Kubrick had to sign off on me. If he didn't, I understood and they should get somebody better, which I'm sure they could have. Two, the book that Arthur C. Clarke had written was not about politics. Everybody got along. I wanted a serious change, in making a Cold War film. Arthur Clarke signed off on it, and we worked together, which was also a remarkable experience.



Did you meet with Kubrick?



No, but we talked a lot on the phone. The first time I got a phone call from him, I actually stood up, at attention, and said 'Hello, Mr. Kubrick.' And he was so sweet and disarming. The first thing he asked me was about one of my earlier films: "How'd you make that shot?" It turns out that he'd tried to be admitted into the cinematographer's guild in England years earlier, and they would take him, either. At the end of our talk, my assistant came in and said "Well, what was he like?" I said, "Well, we talked for two hours. I told him everything and he told me nothing." Laughs.

The Grammys Really Love White Rappers, Here's Proof

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When Macklemore and Ryan Lewis' names were called as winners for "Best Rap Album" at the 2014 Grammy Awards, the Internet exploded with criticism as rap fans everywhere were shocked and appalled. Chief amongst their gripes was that "The Heist," Macklemore's pop-centric album, beat out Kendrick Lamar's universally recognized hip hop classic "good kid M.A.A.D. City."

But should fans have been that surprised? A closer look at the history of the Grammys' "Best Rap Album" category -- and what typically happens when white rappers are nominated -- reveals an interesting trend.

The Huffington Post created the below infographic to highlight a few fun facts about what has become one of the Grammy's most controversial awards:

See the full-size image here.


Infographic by Alissa Scheller for the Huffington Post.



Jimmy Fallon Interviews Himself For Men's Health

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Just when you thought Jimmy Fallon couldn't get any funnier, he agreed to interview himself for the March issue of Men's Health. Yup, you read that right -- Jimmy Fallon interviewed Jimmy Fallon and it was pretty epic.

Here are some highlights:

This is Men’s Health, so we should probably talk about how I’m keeping in such amazing shape.
Oh, Jimmy, you really are. And you’re doing it in spite of the beer and pizza and the chicken wings you found at this awesome Korean place that you go to at least once a week. But go ahead, Jimmy, lie to yourself. Tell yourself you’re in great shape.

You’ve had your share of workouts on "Late Night." There’s the “History of Rap” bit we do with Justin Timberlake. We have to be at least in semigood shape to pull off all that dancing.
Well, it didn’t come naturally. I remember watching Soulja Boy on YouTube over and over again to prepare for it. For the first one, I was up all night in my kitchen practicing the dance because I knew I had to dance with Timberlake, and that guy can dance. And you, Jimmy Fallon, cannot dance. But that’s just because you over-rehearsed it. You didn’t stop until finally your wife came into the kitchen and said, “Honey, it’s 1:30 in the morning. You have to stop this. Just go to sleep.”

What have we learned about women over the years? What’s the Jimmy Fallon secret to ending up with a fantastic woman?
The truest thing I can say is ... sometimes you just know. But that’s terrible advice. The only people who say that are the people who just knew. How do you know unless you found that person?

What’s your happiness secret?
[Long pause.] Wow. Now we’re spelunking into a cave of thought. Hmm ... It’s just a way of being. Every little thing in moderation: stress, anger, joy, depression.

But what was a high point for you? When are you, we, Jimmy Fallon our very happiest?
You’ve had a lot of those high points. You have a baby, which you’ve been wanting for a long time. You felt very lucky that it happened at all.

We had a long struggle with that.
We did. I think that makes you slow down sometimes and appreciate the little things. There’ll be nights when you’re sitting on your couch, and you’re with your beautiful wife, who you can’t believe married you, and your beautiful baby, who you feel endlessly grateful you were able to have. And your dog ...

Our dog is amazing too?
Oh my gosh, we have a really, really great dog. It doesn’t bark. My dog almost smiles, which is weird. So you’re sitting there, with your wife and your baby and your smiling dog, and you’re watching "Real Housewives" getting into fistfights on TV. And you go, “How great is my life? I’m so happy right now.”

That trumps your "Tonight" gig?
It really does. That’s what true happiness is right there.

See more of Jimmy's interview at MensHealth.com and pick up the new issue, on newsstands Feb. 4.

jimmy

'Fleming' Review: A Look At The Spy Who Created Bond, James Bond

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Would it surprise you to learn that the man who created Bond -- James Bond -- liked fast cars, fine living, custom-made cigarettes and cocktails made in a very particular way?

Probably not, but unless you've read a biography of Bond's creator, portions of the well-acted four-part miniseries "Fleming" (10 p.m. ET Wednesday, BBC America) may come as a surprise.

Dominic Cooper infuses the role of Ian Fleming with the right mixture of insouciance and world-weariness, and half the fun of "Fleming" is seeing what a failure the author was before he turned to spycraft and writing, two careers that turned out to be perfect for his strange emotional makeup and his odd mixture of talents.

When we first meet Fleming, he's in debt, flailing professionally as "London's worst stockbroker" and regularly infuriating his disapproving mother, who comes off throughout as a character straight out of a P.G. Woodhouse novel. Fleming has luck with ladies, but in all other respects, he's outshone by his far more respectable brother, who is regarded as the family's only promising prospect.

With his mother's help, Fleming stumbles into a job in the Navel Intelligence Division just as World War II begins, and that's when the story really gets going. Samuel West plays Fleming's boss with winning drollness, which helps to distract the viewer from some underwritten supporting roles, including a Fleming flame who's supposedly a prototype for a Bond Girl but is mostly forgettable here. Anna Chancellor ("The Hour"), who has been absolutely terrific in everything I've seen her in, plays a warm, witty Intelligence aide, and she adds a lot of spark to the scenes of Fleming at work.

It's a good thing that the actors know how to deliver this sometimes-clunky material, because dialogue is often all they have to work with. It's true that Fleming wasn't engaged in field work for most of the war, so scenes set in offices and luxury hotels make sense, but "Fleming" feels curiously constricted for a story about a well-traveled writer who created an archetypal "man of the world." There are some lovely sets and decent action scenes here and there, but the limitations of "Fleming's" paltry budget become obvious as it trundles through the author's pre-literary life. Don't come to this expecting the flash and big-budget thrills of a Bond film; like its overextended lead character, "Fleming" simply doesn't have the cash for it.

The drama is also almost hilariously unsubtle at times, as if it doesn't trust the viewer to have a working knowledge of the most basic Bond lore. Characters pointedly discuss Bond tropes like the "license to kill" and have to deliver lines that are painfully obvious or on the nose ("What made you like this?" "Ian's a puzzle!").

That said, Cooper does a solid job with the title role, and the early installments have an engaging briskness. Fleming is repeatedly told that war isn't a game, but the weapons and tactics of espionage suit his irreverent intelligence and lively imagination very well indeed. However, "Fleming" drags a bit in its second half; given its slender budget, it might have worked better as a three-episode miniseries.

Even if you're not particularly into Bond-ian history, a reason to give "Fleming" a try comes in the form of Lara Pulver, who manages to steal the show from its ostensible lead.

Pulver, who gave such memorable liveliness to Irene Adler on "Sherlock," plays Ann O'Neill, a society beauty with whom Fleming has a tortured love affair, and the actress gives texture, depth and pathos to O'Neill's emotional states. The Fleming-O'Neill affair goes around in circles a few too many times, but the fact that Cooper and Pulver are able to access the characters' brutality, affection and carnality so readily makes the storyline more watchable than it almost has a right to be.

Cooper's been burbling around the edges of film stardom for a while, but I wonder if the movies or the TV industry will figure out what to do with Pulver, who has a retro look but exudes a very modern confidence and intelligence. The fact that Pulver is stuck on "DaVinci's Demons" making do with material that is far beneath her talents is a migraine-inducing crime. But I have faith that, as was the case with Fleming, the talented Pulver will rise above the occasional indignities of her early career.

Cameron Diaz Talks The Media's Contempt For Single Women, Totally Nails It

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Single women everywhere, lend us your ears. We've found a new spokeswoman: Cameron Diaz

In the February issue of Self, the 41-year-old actress and newly-minted author calls out "chauvinism and misogyny" in the media, particularly the way that single women are often portrayed as victims of their inability to "hold on" to men. Diaz told Self's Erin Bried:

If a relationship fails, it’s because the woman couldn’t hold on to her man, not that the man cheated. It’s terrifying for a woman to get out of a relationship, because it’s always going to be her fault.

I get that a lot, being a single woman. The reports are always saying that I’m "acting inappropriately" toward men. I don’t at all harp on that s—, but I clock it. I notice it. And then I let it go because there is nothing I can do about it.


Diaz points out a frustrating truth about mainstream media's depiction of single women: the assumption that no woman chooses to be on her own. Sadly, single women's stigmatized status is nothing new. As Diaz notes, the suggestion is often that single women have made their bed when they can't (or -- dare we say -- choose not to) "hold on" to men, which somehow gives dudes permission to let their eyes wander.

Honestly, we're sure Cameron Diaz has a gorgeous bed that she is happy to sleep in, single or otherwise.

(h/t SFGate)

'Frozen' Has Officially Made More Money At The Box Office Than 'The Lion King'

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Disney's "Frozen" has become a sensation in the 10 weeks since its Thanksgiving premiere. It has made a worldwide total of $810 million during its time in theaters, meaning that it has passed "The Lion King" to become the second-highest grossing, non-sequel animated release in history. "Frozen" has made $347 million in the U.S. and $462 million in international territories; it will not even be released in China and Japan until Feb. 5 and March 15, respectively.

Take a look at how we're feeling about the film's huge and much deserved success.

As you know, Disney's "Frozen" is a massive smash hit.





It's adventurous, inspiring and just plain cute.





And yeah, Elsa and Anna have made more box-office cash than Simba, Timon and Pumbaa.





Even through a polar vortex and plenty of inclement weather, Disney fans have shown up in droves to see the chilly film.




The only other non-sequel, animated film to make more money than "Frozen" during its release was "Finding Nemo," but the wintry flick has accepted that challenge and is gunning for the top spot.





It's sure to make even more cash throughout the remainder of its box-office run.





So far, "Frozen" has had its most international success in the U.K., Germany and France.





It's so popular, it's received two Academy Awards nominations.




So if you love "Frozen," raise your hands ...




And repeat after us: Snow business like show business.


Lorde's Real Age Questioned By Conspiracy Theorists, Birth Certificate Revealed

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Ever since Lorde burst onto the scene with the hit song "Royals" this past spring, you've probably caught yourself saying, "I can't believe she's only 16." And since Nov. 7, you've been saying, "I can't believe she's only 17."

It's okay. Lorde doesn't really bear resemblance to any teenager we've ever known, and she also seems to possess more wisdom than most adults three times her alleged age. Theorists additionally note that some of the singer's quips in recent interviews seem to give the conspiracy legs.

"Hi, I'm Ella," she deadpanned to Vanity Fair at a pre-Grammys party, "And I'm actually 45."

And then there was that time she told Rookie Mag's Tavi Gevinson, "[The Virgin Suicides] really resonated with me as a teenager," adding, " I mean, I am still a teenager."

So now you're thinking it's all part of a scam, right? Just like that "Felicity" writer/actress Riley Weston who claimed to be 18, and earned praise as a "wunderkind," before it was revealed she was actually 32. It was all very movie-of-the-week, but when it comes to Lorde, apparently she's actually the real deal.

The Hairpin shelled out a whopping $17.02 to the New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs for a copy of the singer's birth certificate. According to the document, Lorde, whose real name is Ella Maria Lani Yelich-O'Connor, was born Nov. 7, 1996.

She's 17.

Come on people, she's just an old soul.
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