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Jennifer Lawrence Got Doritos All Over Her 'American Hustle' Dress Because She's Jennifer Lawrence

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Jennifer Lawrence really, honestly, truly eats whatever she wants, whenever she wants, wearing whatever she wants. And if you needed more proof of the woman's sincerity, besides her kick-ass healthy body-image quotes, we've got it.

The Oscar-nominated costume designer of "American Hustle" spoke to Vanity Fair Tuesday (Jan. 28) and divulged details about Lawrence's character's iconic white dress. If you've seen the movie (or the posters, or the trailer), the dress Lawrence nearly spills out of -- all on purpose, of course -- was tailored just for her, made to accentuate her "every single lump and bump." But even a clingy dress can't get between Lawrence and her snacks, as costume designer Michael Wilkinson revealed.

And Lawrence was in the mood for Doritos.

"I'm kind of glad we [constructed four different versions of the dress]," Wilkinson said, "Because Jennifer Lawrence is a very ... let's say ... raw and intuitive young lady, and she's not against eating Doritos and snack food in her costume. So we were glad that we had a couple [backups]."

We can just picture the bubbly 23-year-old wiping that Cool Ranch dust all over her shimmery white frock.

Oh, Jennifer. You never cease to amaze us.

'Pretty Little Liars': Spencer Makes A Major Discovery

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Spencer may be finally piecing the clues together on "Pretty Little Liars." All this while "A" was coming up with the craziest way to deliver a message yet. Hanna went to the dentist's office for a routine check-up (and to snoop in the records room), but she got gassed. Then "A" stuck a note into her gums. Yeah, this show is bonkers!

When the girls got together, Spencer pulled the note out and read it: "I told you: Dead girls can't smile. Stop looking. -A."

While that was the weirdest moment of the night, the biggest moment might have been when Spencer started figuring things out. Alison's diary made mention of "Board Shorts Ale", and it turns out that's Ezra's lager of choice. Sounds like Ezra is the guy she was writing about! Hollywood Life's Andy Swift said he audibly gasped as it clicked for her. "This isn't just big, people; this is HUGE!" he wrote.

How will "A" ever top this message delivery method? Find out if s/he can as "Pretty Little Liars" continues Tuesdays at 8 p.m. EST on ABC Family.

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.

Anna Kendrick Loves Beyonce: 'We're Gonna Be Best Friends, Or She Has A Restraining Order'

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Anna Kendrick clearly had a blast at the Grammys, and the after-parties, and she's still glowing from the experience. During her visit to "Conan," she was gushing about the experience, and one moment in particular.

A huge fan of Beyonce, Kendrick got the chance to meet "Queen Bey." She put a picture of the two of them talking on Instagram with the caption, "Fangirl of the year." When Conan O'Brien asked her about the heart on the picture, Kendrick said she didn't add it. "That was just there," she insisted.

“I feel like we’re either gonna be best friends, or she has a restraining order," Kendrick said of Beyonce. "But ... you gotta try.”

"Conan" airs weeknights at 11 p.m. EST On TBS.

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.

'Sharknado' Stars Ian Ziering And Tara Reid Return For Sequel

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Just when you thought it was safe to go back in the water ...

"Sharknado" stars Ian Ziering and Tara Reid have signed on to return for Syfy's "Sharknado" sequel, "Sharknado: The Second One," reports the New York Daily News.

While part of the cast remains, the location of the Sharknado has changed. These bi-coastal sharks traded Los Angeles for New York.

How will the Big Apple handle an onslaught of flying sharks? Only time will tell since Ziering and Reid start filming the sequel next month on location in Manhattan.

Stay safe, New Yorkers!

"Sharknado: The Second One" is set to premiere on Syfy this July.





ABC Orders A Pilot About Selfies

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ABC just picked up two comedy pilots with wildly different summaries. One these potential shows has a hooky title and a description that seems engaging and colorful, the others sounds more like a college elective class. See what you think of these two ideas for new comedies next season, both from talented writers of popular shows:

11 Most Random Super Bowl Halftime Shows Of All Time Ever

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If the combination of pop crooner Bruno Mars and the shirt-hating alt-rockers Red Hot Chili Peppers playing the Super Bowl Halftime show together seems pretty random, well, that's because it is pretty random. But that's nothing new to Super Bowl halftime shows.

Sure, Beyonce made sense as both a way to woo women to the broadcast and because Bey is basically the queen of America right now, and the last decade was filled with classic rockers like Prince, Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen and the Who, all of whom made sense in a Super Bowl context even if they weren't all up to snuff.

But 2012's combination of Madonna with M.I.A., Nicki Minaj, LMFAO and Cee-Lo was weird even before M.I.A. flipped America the bird, and earlier halftime shows have been even weirder.

So we dug around and found the most random Super Bowl halftime shows ever. Though to be fair, at least nobody at the NFL thought it was a good idea to book Bieber. (yeah, we're giving you the stink-eye, Grey Cup).

Beyonce's Baby Photo Is The Best Thing We've Seen Today

Late-Blooming Celebrities Prove No One's Too Old To 'Make It' In Hollywood

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Many people think that it's impossible to "make it" in the entertainment industry once they've hit a certain age. With so many child and teenaged stars in the mix, it's easy to understand how an aspiring entertainer who has already reached adulthood might think he or she is over the hill in Hollywood-years. But that hill is actually far from insurmountable.

Passion, determination and talent are more important than age when it comes to making a career in entertainment. These 10 stars prove that it's never too late to follow your dreams.


Why Our Children Should Be Off Limits to the Paparazzi

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A few days ago my wife and I wrote tweets urging folks to boycott publications that buy photos of celebrities' children without the consent of their parents (paparazzi generated pics). We got a myriad of responses, ranging from heartfelt solidarity to vitriolic rage. The overwhelming majority was very supportive, and for that we are thankful. There were a few common threads that ran through the hateful responses, and I hope to address those here. First, however, I'd like to explain what led us to tweet in the first place.

A few months ago we were invited to a gathering at the home of Jennifer Garner. The bulk of the attendees were actors and musicians. I was excited. We had finally been invited to a celebrity orgy. I had heard about these as a 15-year-old boy from Michigan, and now, 23 years later, I was at one. Jennifer addressed the crowd, but instead of discussing boundaries, safe words and hygiene, she walked us through California Senate Bill 606, which made it illegal to photograph a child because of their parent's employment in a manner that "seriously alarms, annoys, torments, or terrorizes" them.

She and Halle Berry had worked tirelessly, and at their own expense, to get this bill passed. I think I speak for everyone there when I say we were all incredibly grateful for Jennifer and Halle's momentous achievement.

The meeting had some of the key lawmakers who had drafted the bill, as well as law enforcement representatives who helped explain how to best enforce the law. Implicit in the bill are some obvious first amendment issues. It does, at the end of the day, limit the rights of the "press" to "alarm, annoy, torment or terrorize" children in the pursuit of "news gathering." I am starting to use a lot of quotes. This is my snarky way of hinting that I don't believe entertainment paparazzi are actually "press" any more than a peeping tom using a "shoe-cam" at the local mall is "press." Nor do I think photographing children being held by a famous parent can be considered "news gathering" by any definition. All that aside, I deeply value the freedom of the press and think it is an indispensable facet of a healthy democracy that should be protected fervently.

I left that night feeling like the implementation of this new law was going to be difficult. I hoped in my bones it would hold up in court, where it will eventually land and play out. I also left with the nagging feeling that this new law mirrored the "war on drugs" in one key way: it only really addressed the supply side of the equation, and not the demand. We Americans have proven time and time again that if we want something, through hell or high water, we will get it. So as long as people pay good money to buy magazines featuring famous people's children, there will be men popping out of bushes and lurking around playgrounds to get those pics. Those are just the facts.

The consumer is the only one who can put an end to this. They are the only ones with real power.

This issue wasn't even on our radar ten months ago. We didn't have a baby yet, and like many couples without children, we thought of kids as gremlins who willfully dropped their food items on the floor to distract their parents from having adult conversations with us. Then we had our daughter, and every corny cliché became instantly relevant and true. It was immediate. A love like we'd never known. My heart ached when I looked at her, the way it did in eighth grade when I would listen to The Cure whilst writing letters to my girlfriend. My wife and I have both had wonderful lives filled with lots of highlights, and this dwarfed them all.

On day two of our hospital stay, within an hour of filling out her birth certificate, we got an email from our publicist saying a popular tabloid was going to run an announcement with the baby's sex, full name, time of birth and weight. That was a bummer. We hadn't yet shared that info with our extended family. We thought, rightly or wrongly, that it would be best at that point to announce it ourselves on Twitter to deny the tabloid the chance at an "exclusive." I don't know that it mattered one way or another, but I do know it was a sobering warning of more things to come. Since bringing her home ten months ago, there has been a car or two parked across the street from our house, waiting at all times for us to leave. We go to great lengths to keep her anonymous, and have been, for the most part, successful. They have photographed her at five of her eight doctor's appointments, a bunch of times leaving our favorite restaurant, and during a few set visits to mom's work. In all of those instances we were able to keep her covered with a blanket.

Last Saturday we went to our friend's house in a tiny, nondescript neighborhood in the San Fernando Valley. We were there playing for three hours. I didn't think we had been followed, but on Sunday morning my mother emailed me pictures of our daughter, clear as day, being carried and put into the car by me. This broke my heart in a way that's not entirely reasonable. I had charged myself, as her dad, with protecting her. I personally believe, and I understand a lot of people differ on this point, that protecting her includes keeping her life private until the moment she decides otherwise. I think she is entitled to that. I think every minor is entitled to that. My wife and I, ever the approval-junkies, made a decision to get into show business and become public figures, but she has not. She hasn't even decided if she prefers pureed carrots to peanut butter.

So we took to Twitter urging consumers to stop buying magazines that print unsolicited photos of minors. We recognize that the odds of this happening are exceedingly low. We are not naive.

We have hope, though. We think that people who like looking at children in magazines must actually like children. We are betting on the chance that they like them enough to protect them from constantly being shadowed by strange men (not trying to be sexist -- I'm sure there are plenty of strange women in the 'razzi game). We pray that one of the classier weeklies, like People, will enact a no-kids policy, and that they will be rewarded by the consumer for doing so. And we hope that leads to others following suit. It would be miraculous if the situation changed and celebrities' children got to be just children. And it would be even more miraculous if that change came from the will of the people and not legislation. I think this could be a good step in our ever evolving social consciousness. It could fold nicely into the same wave of change that wants to see gay people happily married, orcas freed, and pot smokers decriminalized. It would be a slightly better version of ourselves and our culture, and we are mildly optimistic.

Now, against the advice of my better half, I am going to address some of those Twitter detractors:

"You knew what you were getting into when you signed up to be famous."

First of all, god how I wish there had been an actual "sign-up" sheet. That would have saved me the eight years of no work I endured. Secondly, yes, I do know what comes with the job, which is why I'm NOT asking you to boycott magazines with my photo in them. I'm only asking on behalf of my child who did not "sign up."

"There are way more important things to boycott than your rich kid getting her picture taken."

I couldn't agree more. This is very low on the list indeed. But, it is, nevertheless, on the list. We aren't asking you to ignore a man on fire for this cause, but after you've helped extinguish him, there's no reason you can't whisper in his ear, "Hey, don't buy Us Weekly. They display photos of children being stalked."

"Celebrities call the paparazzi on their own kids and exploit them for personal exposure."

This may happen. I would have no way of knowing. It's a vile notion, and I'm happy to say none of our actor friends do this. But if you really believe this happens, isn't that all the more reason to boycott? Don't you want to take that option away from those vomitus parents?

"Why don't you just post your own pics so it will devalue the paparazzi's?"

We don't believe it works that way. A photo from us won't satiate curiosity; it will simply introduce a new character into the soap opera. We think out-of-sight, out-of-mind is the best defense.

"Boo-hoo. Cry me a river. Why don't you get a real job and stop whining."

Hmm. Well, I understand you resent what I do for a living. There is no arguing that there is very little lifting involved. However, there couldn't be a more detestable racket than Bernie Madoff's Ponzi scheme, and yet, I would never want to see his two year-old sons ambushed for his repugnance.

"Stop acting like you're Brad and Angelina. No one cares about you or your kid."

Another strong point. This is very true. We don't deal with anything close to what they deal with. If paps were cancer, they'd have small cell carcinoma and we'd have a suspicious looking mole that should probably come off just to be safe. Despite the different threat level, it's still best to seek treatment.

"You're a shitty actor and your movies suck."

...that's subjective?

Yes, #ScarJo, There's a Line Between Israel and Palestine

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Last June, the Israeli anti-occupation group All That's Left marked the anniversary of Israel's military occupation of the West Bank by "re-painting the Green Line" on the international border between Israel and Palestine, highlighting the border that supporters of Israel's occupation of the West Bank are always trying to erase.

Unfortunately, celebrity Scarlett Johansson didn't get the memo. As a result, Johansson will no longer be a "global ambassador" for Oxfam, because, as Oxfam noted,

Johansson's role promoting the company SodaStream is incompatible with her role as an Oxfam global ambassador. Oxfam believes that businesses, such as SodaStream, that operate in settlements further the ongoing poverty and denial of rights of the Palestinian communities that we work to support. Oxfam is opposed to all trade from Israeli settlements, which are illegal under international law.


Johansson's statements on the controversy have tried to obscure a crucial issue: what relationship should people who support the two-state solution have to Israeli settlements in the West Bank?

On January 24, as the controversy "bubbled," Johansson wrote on The Huffington Post:

"I remain a supporter of economic cooperation and social interaction between a democratic Israel and Palestine... I am happy that light is being shed on this issue in hopes that a greater number of voices will contribute to the conversation of a peaceful two state solution in the near future."


Clearly, Johansson wants us to believe that she supports a two-state solution to the conflict.

In a statement Wednesday announcing that Johansson and Oxfam were parting ways, Johansson's representative said, "[Johansson] and Oxfam have a fundamental difference of opinion in regards to the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement."

This statement was deeply misleading. It was not "a fundamental difference of opinion in regards to the boycott, divestment and sanctions movement" that led to the split between Johansson and Oxfam. It was a fundamental difference of opinion on the proper relationship of people who support the two-state solution to Israeli settlements in the West Bank.

Oxfam's view is that someone who supports the two-state solution should not be promoting economic ties with Israeli settlements in the West Bank. Johansson's view, apparently, is that it's ok to claim that you support a two-state solution and then turn around and promote economic ties with Israeli settlements in the West Bank, thereby bolstering and normalizing the occupation.

Oxfam's view is normative among sincere advocates of a two-state solution. Johansson's apparent view is marginal among sincere advocates of a two-state solution.

For example, the mainstream Israeli peace group Peace Now has supported the boycott of Israeli settlement products. So has its American counterpart, Americans for Peace Now. As APN President Debra DeLee said in July 2011,

"Today we join Peace Now in urging all those who care about Israel's character as a democracy to boycott settlements and products made in settlements. Settlements are not Israel. Such a boycott is the best way to show our support for Israel and to register our commitment to Israeli democracy." [my emphasis]


As Debra DeLee wrote this week in the Forward:

Under normal circumstances, I would buy SodaStream and recommend it to my friends. But the circumstances under which the product is made are not normal. And because Israel's occupation of the West Bank is such an anomaly, as much as I may like Scarlett (and seltzer), I will not buy SodaStream, not until it moves its headquarters away from a West Bank settlement. [my emphasis]


By claiming to support a two-state solution while helping to bolster the occupation, Scarlett Johansson is acting as a Susan Collins for the occupation, pretending to be moderate, while acting to bolster extremists.

Oxfam did the right thing in taking a principled stand. You can thank Oxfam for their principled stand at MoveOn here and on Thunderclap here. The Thunderclap is set to go off on Sunday evening during the #SuperBowl. Let's extend that conversation about the two-state solution that Johansson called for to people watching her TV commercial for SodaStream.

Happy Chinese New Year! Here Are 12 Songs To Celebrate The Year Of The Horse

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It's Chinese New Year, so let's celebrate with a brief horoscope and a bunch of songs!

According to the Chinese zodiac, January 31 marks the beginning of the Year of the Horse, so we've put together a list of some of music's most popular songs about horses in honour of that.

Predictions for this Year of the Horse -- known specifically as the Year of the Wooden Horse -- include promises of adventure and romance. The songs on our list have a bit of that in them, as well.

In astrology, horses (aka people born in Horse years like 1954, 1966, 1978, 1990, 2002 and 2014) are generally hard workers and good with their money. They exude raw sex appeal and form romantic bonds easily but are sometimes afraid of intimacy. They're witty and are often known as the life of the party, but they can also be impulsive.

In popular music, actual horses tend to represent a lot of the same things. Artists like The Rolling Stones, PJ Harvey, and U2 have all sung about horses as a way to express their wanderlust, their longing, and their love. Katy Perry and Big & Rich have, in their own way, used horse songs to talk about sexy times. And Toby Keith has sung about getting his horses drunk. We’re not really if last one really has much to contribute grander horse theme, but we included it anyway.

So Happy New Year! Here are twelve of music's best – or at least most notorious – songs about horses.

Zac Efron Sings And Plays Guitar For Ellen DeGeneres On Her Birthday

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Zac Efron gets ready to serenade Ellen DeGeneres for her birthday on The Ellen DeGeneres Show in his appearance, airing today.

Blake Lively Was Awesome, Even in High School

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Blake Lively's childhood pictures are really getting us in the throwback Thursday mood. New photos of the actress recently popped up, and it turns out Blake was quite the jokester in high school. In fact, she was voted "Class Clown," and these pictures prove she had a fun sense of humor, joking around with fake curves with her pals and pretending to take cheesecake pictures on top of a car. It's no wonder that Blake's fellow funny girl, Anna Kendrick, is such a fan!

These Photos Of Madonna As A Teenager Prove She's A Natural Beauty

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If anyone has proved that "age is just a number," it's Madonna. The 55-year-old singer more than kept up with 21-year-old Miley Cyrus during their "MTV Unplugged" performance on Wednesday (Jan. 29).

Wondering what Madonna actually looked like when she was closer to Miley's age? Before becoming an international pop star, she was a regular teenager. Here's Madonna's yearbook photo from her senior year of high-school, courtesy of Snakkle.

young madonna 2

Madonna was a cheerleader in high school, which has undoubtedly inspired her high-energy performances.

teenage madonna

Head over to Snakkle to see more photos of stars before they became famous.

Orlando Bloom Reportedly Dating French Actress Nora Arnezeder

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He's been linked to pal Liv Tyler, had major chemistry with his Romeo and Juliet co-star Condola Rashad, and now it seems Orlando Bloom may actually have a new leading lady in his life. According to the Daily Mail, Orlando is seeing 24-year old French actress Nora Arnezeder. 

Scarlett Johansson's SodaStream Controversy May Leave Her Caught In An Israeli-Palestinian Debate

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(RNS) In the run-up to the Super Bowl, advertisers work hard to get their money’s worth, even before their spot has run. They leak teasers and hype the stars who will appear in them. If they can find a way, they generate controversy.

This year, SodaStream is already the big winner in the controversy category. One of the dust-ups surrounds a tug of war between SodaStream and Oxfam International over Scarlett Johansson, who recently accepted a role with the carbonation company and will appear in its Super Bowl ad.

On Wednesday (Jan. 29), Johansson resigned her eight-year-long goodwill ambassadorship with Oxfam, citing a “fundamental difference of opinion.”

The problem is that the rapidly growing SodaStream happens to manufacture most of its products in an Israeli settlement in the West Bank.

The international charity made its displeasure clear, issuing a statement that read in part: “Oxfam believes that businesses, such as SodaStream, that operate in settlements further the ongoing poverty and denial of rights of the Palestinian communities that we work to support.”

Johansson, the daughter of an American Jewish mother and a Danish Christian father, defended SodaStream as a “bridge-builder” between Israelis and Palestinians and noted that the company employs Palestinians and treats them equally.

But supporters of the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement demanded that Oxfam sever ties with Johansson, comparing her to entertainers who ignored apartheid in South Africa in order to profit from performances.

What role does a company like SodaStream play in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict? Here are some of the basic facts:

1. SodaStream machines are manufactured in an Israeli settlement.

SodaStream’s principal manufacturing plant is in the industrial park of the Ma’ale Adumim settlement, a community of approximately 40,000 people located about seven miles from Jerusalem, well within Palestinian territory.

The third largest West Bank settlement has been in the spotlight because a proposed highway project, called the E1, would connect Ma’ale Adumim to Jerusalem, bisecting the West Bank and making it difficult for Palestinians in the northern part of the West Bank to travel to the southern part, as well as reach East Jerusalem.

An article about the settlement in the December 2012 issue of Foreign Policy magazine was titled “The Settlement that Broke the Two State Solution.” Ma’ale Adumim’s former mayor has been quoted as saying the settlement was built to make a contiguous Palestinian state impossible.

According to the website for the industrial park that houses the SodaStream plant, there are now 230 plants and businesses in the location.

2. Under international law, settlements are considered illegal.

Israeli communities built outside the 1967 armistice line (often called the “Green Line”) are considered settlements. Israeli building in the West Bank, defined as occupied territory, is illegal under international law. Approximately 350,000 Israelis live in settlements (with another 200,000 in East Jerusalem, which was annexed by Israel).

While some settlements built near the Green Line may be part of a negotiated “land swap,” settlements like Ma’ale Adumim are too far inside Palestinian territory to be considered and are too large and established to be given up easily by the Israelis who live and work there.

3. SodaStream provides employment for Palestinians.

The World Bank estimates the unemployment rate in the West Bank at 22 percent. SodaStream employs approximately 900 Palestinian workers from East Jerusalem and the West Bank, making it one of the largest employers of Palestinians.

The West Bank plant predates the CEO of SodaStream, Daniel Birnbaum, who said he wouldn’t have built a plant in that location and is currently building a larger plant within Israel. But he also notes that he gives equal compensation and treatment to his Palestinian employees and refuses to bow to pressure to close the plant, saying in an interview with The Forward, “I just don’t see how it would help the cause of the Palestinians if we fired them.”

4. The BDS movement aims to pressure Israel.

The Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions movement against Israel is modeled on the campaign used to pressure South Africa to end apartheid. It calls for the boycott of Israeli products as well as sporting, cultural and academic events held in Israel, and divestment of holdings in Israeli companies until Israel ends the occupation of Palestinian territory.

Popular in Europe, the movement has led to some stores refusing to stock Israeli products, the requirement that products produced in settlements be labeled and a drop in revenue for products made in Israel. Many performers have also refused bookings in Israel.

A recent resolution by the 5,000-member American Studies Association bans “formal collaborations with Israeli academic institutions, or with scholars who are expressly serving as representatives or ambassadors of those institutions.”

Some American mainline church bodies also support the BDS movement and ask their congregations to boycott products such as SodaStream, Ahava cosmetics and Sabra hummus.

5. Supporters of the “two-state solution” do not necessarily embrace the BDS movement.

For some supporters of the two-state solution the BDS movement is a step too far.

Some see it as an attempt to punish Israel and all Israelis for the occupation of the Palestinian territory. Others say it evokes experiences from the past when Jews were ostracized and Jewish businesses were targets of anti-Semitism. Some say it is part of an international movement to de-legitimize Israel.

Peter Beinart, the American Jewish writer, makes a distinction between Israeli products and those produced in Israeli settlements. In his book “The Crisis of Zionism,” Beinart supports a boycott of products produced in settlements along with an embrace of products produced within Israel itself.

Some Israelis also make a distinction between settlers who are hostile to Palestinians and those who seek to live together peacefully, including those who employ them in the settlements.

But most Palestinians reject this thinking, feeling it is at best a move to “normalize” the current situation or at worst, a collaboration with the enemy.

While some critics have labeled Johansson naïve or accused her of simply choosing a more lucrative deal, others welcome the opportunity to discuss the situation. For SodaStream, the Super Bowl ad and its new spokeswoman will bring attention to a company that claims to be trying to do the right thing in a bad situation.

(Dale Hanson Bourke is the author of “The Israeli-Palestinian Conflict” (IVPress, 2013). She can be followed @DaleHBourke.)

See Sofia Vergara's Sexiest Instagram Pics

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At 41, Sofia Vergara is beautiful, bodacious, hilarious, and boasts one of the highest paychecks and cutest accents on television. 

This Modern Family star is also a fan of modern technology, and she loves showing off what her mama gave her on Instagram.

Here's Rihanna On Grammys Night For #tbt

Kendra Wilkinson Thinks The U.S. Should Legalize Prostitution

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There's NOTHING wrong with whores ... so says Kendra Wilkinson -- who claims the United States should STOP arresting people for prostitution when it involves two consenting adults.

Miley Cyrus Says She'll Sing Live, Not Focus On Choreography During 'Bangerz' Tour

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BURBANK, Calif. (AP) — Miley Cyrus wants you to concentrate on her voice — not her twerking — when she launches her tour next month.

"Ren and Stimpy" creator John Kricfalusi and contemporary artist Ben Jones have crafted videos to play during the 38 shows as Cyrus prioritizes singing over dance routines. "When it's such a visual show, I'm not going to get up there and dance because I've got to sing live," Cyrus said in an interview Thursday night. "So it's like to have things that people can watch other than me ... not about me trying to keep up with choreography."

The 21-year-old performer spoke at a rehearsal studio two days after performing with — and spanking — Madonna at her "MTV Unplugged" concert this week. She found the 55-year-old star a kindred spirit in displaying unabashed eroticism.

"I'm not trying to replicate her or be her, but we're standing for a similar freedom," Cyrus said. "It's even easier for me than I'm sure it was for Madonna. So I think it's going to get easier and easier, as generations go on, women are going to be more accepted to be free and embrace sexuality."

Her North American tour kicks of Feb. 14 in Vancouver.

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Online:


http://www.mileycyrus.com


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Follow AP Entertainment Writer Ryan Pearson at www.twitter.com/ryanwrd
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