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Why Robin Williams' Passing Is a Reminder to Bring Mental Illness Into the Spotlight

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Robin Williams' sudden and tragic death reminds us of the ripple effect we each have on those around us, of the countless lives that one person can touch. His loss has impacted millions, and the outpouring of love and support for him and his family is clearly evident. The media will cover his passing extensively and the reaction to his tragic death for most of us is like that of losing a close friend. Developments continue to appear in the story of this tragedy, with the most recent statement by Williams' wife noting that he suffered from the early stages of Parkinson's disease in addition to depression, substance abuse and anxiety. Despite his struggles, in his life and in his films, Robin Williams always seemed to know exactly what to say. So many of his lines are quotable, and yet, at his passing, we are stunned into silence.



But silence should not be the legacy of a man who caused entire theaters to burst into laughter. In the wake of this tragedy, we must find the strength for an ongoing conversation about mental health, a topic that is too often addressed in whispers. Mental illness affects all of us. One in four adults and one in five children, at any point in time, have a diagnosable mental illness and one of two Americans will suffer one at some point in their lives. Suicide will claim one American every 13 minutes and 12 times that number will make an attempt each day. However, as is the case this week, we often only consider mental health issues when a celebrity loses his or her life or a dramatic event happens. As a society, we have to do better than this.



As the public facts of Williams' case typify, the vast majority of those who attempt suicide suffer from a mental illness. Most feel desperate and they experience such psychic pain that, even with compelling reasons to live, suicide seems like the only solution. Often, suicide is preceded by periods of self-medication through drugs and alcohol, which offer immediate relief then contribute to agitation and increased depression upon withdrawal. We also know that most people who contemplate suicide have recently seen a physician and have confided in someone about their desperate feelings. Like any other chronic condition, a serious depression typically requires multiple courses of treatment, consistent family and social support and a lifestyle change that acknowledges that one is always "in recovery."



Our society must work to reduce the stigma associated with mental illness so that people will feel more willing to seek care. Reticence to seek help (and repeated help) due to fears of judgment (by others or oneself) is a significant contributor to tragic outcomes. We have excellent treatments, including medications, cognitive-behavioral therapy, family therapy and psychodynamic therapy, and we need to do more to make these accessible to those in need. It is time to bring mental illness out of the shadows and into the spotlight. We should not wait for tragedy to strike before we raise our voices and fight for the proper mental healthcare.



Of course, this is easier said than done; something that will be achieved with long-term thought rather than short-term solutions. However, we have seen such change accomplished with many challenging medical conditions such as cancer and HIV/AIDS. We must anticipate that ending this stigma will take time, but that it is achievable if we all work to make it happen.



Sadly, there is nothing that we can do for this beloved man; but we can honor his memory by being the change that prevents others from taking their lives and suffering without adequate mental health resources. We need to make sure that conversations about depression, substance abuse and suicide do not stop when the news cycle's focus shifts away from Robin Williams' passing. Starting today, let's bring mental health into the spotlight. Let's repay Robin Williams for decades of laughs by helping those who also struggle with mental illness.



Need help? In the U.S., call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.


A Dear Jon (Voight) Letter About Gaza and the History of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict

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Dear Jon Voight,

We write to you as admirers of your work for many years. We are also professors of modern Middle Eastern studies, specializing on the history and contemporary realities of Israel, Zionism and Palestine, and between the two of us, we have written and edited over half a dozen books on the country and the two peoples who are destined -- or doomed, depending on your point of view -- to share it.

We have read your open letter to Javier Bardem, Penelope Cruz and other critics of the latest Israeli bombing and invasion of Gaza, in response to their own open letter condemning Israeli actions during the war. Your passion for defending Israel is clearly as great as your passion for acting. However, behind your passion is a view of Israel's history and current actions that are utterly at odds with the actual history and present-day realities in the country. They are simply dead-wrong, and your belief in them has led you to adopt views that will ultimately -- and at this rate, sooner rather than later -- doom, not defend, Israel. Moreover, while you have laudably said that they or other actors should not face industry sanctions for standing up to Israel, we believe that the intensity of your criticism, coupled with the inaccuracy of the arguments, not only exacerbates the rewriting of the conflict's history in the mainstream media but contributes both to a toxic atmosphere of hatred against Palestinians and to a purported blacklist against them.

Let us begin with your opening argument:

They are obviously ignorant of the whole story of Israel's birth, when in 1948 the Jewish people were offered by the UN a portion of the land originally set aside for them in 1921, and the Arab Palestinians were offered the other half. The Arabs rejected the offer, and the Jews accepted, only to be attacked by five surrounding Arab countries committed to driving them into the sea. But the Israelis won. The Arabs tried it again in 1967, and again in 1973, launching a sneak attack on the holiest Jewish holiday. Each time the Jews prevailed but not without great loss of life. And when Israel was not fighting a major war, it was defending itself against terrorist campaigns.


This is the traditional narrative of Israel's birth, part of what Israeli hisitorian Simha Flapan described as the "myths" surrounding Israel in his famous 1987 book The Birth of Israel: Myths and Realities. However, this is a distortion of the actual history, which saw Zionism arrive on the soil of a Palestine that was already in the midst of its own modernization, against which what Israeli sociologist Gershon Shafir describes as a "militant [Zionist] nationalist movement" developed, deploying the "conquest of labor" and then the "conquest of land" to increasingly powerful effect once the British conquered Palestine in 1917.

After three decades of British rule that was legally committed -- through the Balfour Declaration and the Palestine Mandate -- to facilitate the creation of a Jewish "national home" at the expense of fostering Palestinian Arab nationalism, outright civil war became inevitable. When war finally came, the Zionist leadership "accepted" the terms of the 1947 Partition Plan. In reality, they had little intention of actually fulfilling them, and over the next year, through intercommunal conflict and then all-out war, three quarters of a million Palestinians were permanently forced from their homes, and over 500 villages were destroyed.

As for your claims that Israel was attacked by surrounding countries determined to throw it into the sea, this too is belied by the historical record. As Oxford University professors Avi Shlaim and Eugene Rogan demonstrated in their book The War for Palestine, Rewriting the History of 1948, minimal and badly trained and equipped forces were sent; their main goals were to prevent themselves from looking like collaborators and their rival Mufti of Jerusalem from establishing a state, and, where possible, to take whatever territory they could for themselves. Most important here, Jordan -- the one neighbor with an effective, British-run army -- had reached a modus vivendi with the Zionist/Israeli leadership in which it would take over the West Bank and leave Israel the rest of the country. The only exception was Jerusalem, about which the two sides couldn't agree and which therefore became the scene of the worst fighting of the war.

Let's leave aside the fact that you don't mention the 1956 tripartite invasion of Egypt by Israel, France and the UK, which not even Israelis argue was a defensive war. Similar to your description of 1948, your description of 1967 as the "Arab trying again" to destroy Israel is historically inaccurate. There were certainly many threats emanating from Arab capitals in the late spring of 1967, but ultimately it was Israel, not the Arab states, that clearly launched a "sneak attack." The CIA even predicted that Israel could wipe out the combined forces of the surrounding states in roughly five days, which is exactly what happened.

While presented to the world as a war of survival, 1967 was in fact a war of conquest and expansion. How do we know this? Quite simply because that's just what Israel did: It conquered and occupied the West Bank, Gaza, Sinai and the Golan Heights and proceeded to settle them intensively, particularly in the biblical heartland of the West Bank.

Here, Mr. Voight, it is absolutely crucial to understand that if Israel were really afraid to turn over the West Bank to Palestinians for security reasons -- that is, if the occupation were in fact about security -- it could have maintained a military occupation to this day without violating international law. But instead it began a settlement enterprise that came to dominate Israeli political life, eventually placing well over half a million settlers in the West Bank and East Jerusalem, in clear contravention of international law, which expressly forbids transferring civilians from one country into an occupied territory.

Indeed, Israel today could withdraw civilian settlers from the West Bank at any moment and bring itself into compliance with international law while continuing to occupy the West Bank militarily indefinitely. But of course it will never do that. In fact, as Israeli scholar Meron Benvenisti already argued back in 1987 with his West Bank Database Project, when there were only about 60,000 settlers (one 10th of the present number), by this time the West Bank was already so integrated into Israel that it would never be possible to withdraw from it.

Mr. Voight, have you ever visited the Palestinian West Bank or Gaza or spoken with Palestinians who've suffered under decades of Israeli occupation? Had you been forced to suffer their fate, your anger would certainly be directed elsewhere. During the last five decades Palestinians have suffered continuous expropriation of their lands, collective punishment, destruction of their homes, seizures of their agricultural land and destruction of their trees and crops, extrajudicial executions, exile, kidnapping, torture, use of human shields, economic blockade and closure, constant invasions and bombing, denial of the right to education or development, massive exploitation and then closure. And contrary to your assertion that Israel has "always labored for peaceful relations," it not only completely ignored its obligations to support full Palestinian autonomy in the Camp David Agreements but invaded and occupied another sovereign country, Lebanon, for 19 years.

Do you think Israel, which has received hundreds of billions of U.S. tax dollars, should be able to behave like this with impunity? Human Rights Watch has just released a report based on survivors' testimonies demonstrating that Israel shot and bombed fleeing civilians during hostilities, in complete contravention of international law. This is not new, you should know. Israel engaged in similar attacks on fleeing civilians during the 2008-'09 war with Gaza and has in fact killed thousands of Palestinians in this manner. Where is the justice in that? How do such actions make Israel or America safer, freer or more secure?

Similarly, today, Israel did not "give the Palestinians all of Gaza as a peace gesture." To begin with, Gaza was never a gift Israel could "give" to Palestinians. It was not only occupied under international law but legally inseparable from the West Bank. Israel could merely withdraw and then impose a blockade while at the same time intensifying once again its settlements in and control over the West Bank. But that is precisely what then-Prime Minister Ariel Sharon did: His goal, according to his then-Bureau Chief Dov Weisglass, was specifically to place the peace process into "formaldehyde" and "freeze" it while Israel's hold over the West Bank was made permanent, and there has been no major shift in Israeli policy since then. Mr. Voight, do these policies seem "peaceful" to you?

This is the context to understand why Palestinians elected Hamas in 2006. Even the archconservative New York Post admitted that Hamas was elected not because Palestinians supported terrorism but because Palestinians were completely disgusted with the Palestinian Authority (PA), controlled by Yasser Arafat's Fatah party, which was utterly coopted by and dependent upon Israel and the U.S. and had become hugely corrupt and as brutal as Israel in its treatment of dissent. Hamas did not begin firing missiles into Israel until after it had attempted to remove the newly elected leadership by force in a U.S.- and PA-supported coup. No significant rocket fire occurred until two years after Hamas was elected, during which time Israel continued its siege on Gaza and its ever-tightening stranglehold on the West Bank.

If Hamas rightly deserves scorn and punishment for its war crimes (and mistreatment of Palestinians as well), what do Israel's leaders, guilty of far greater crimes, deserve? If we were to hold Hamas and Israel to the same standards, what would you feel that Israeli leaders should receive for their treatment of Palestinians for half a century? There has been no attempt by any Israeli government to make any peace to which any reasonable person could be expected to agree -- that is, one that would enable the creation of a territorially and economically viable Palestinian state. Nor are Israelis still "attacked by their enemies," as peace treaties with Egypt and Jordan and close cooperation with Arab regimes from Morocco to the Persian Gulf make clear.

With respect to the present conflict, you are incorrect to say that Javier Bardem and other critics "have forgotten how this war started. Did Hamas not kidnap and kill three young teenagers for the sake of killing, and celebrated after the killing? What a travesty of justice." Indeed, this is not what happened. Rather, as reported in great detail in the Israeli media, the Israeli government began a series of attacks on Hamas and other Palestinian activists, arresting, shooting and even killing many in response to a unity deal struck between Hamas and the Palestinian Authority in preparation for resumed negotiations.

Mr. Voight, there is no way to describe what Israel has done in Gaza other than as a massive crime against humanity. Is it genocide, as the letter that Mr. Bardem and others signed alleges? Given the history of genocide against the Jews -- the very term was invented to describe the Holocaust -- it is tragic that such a characterization can even be considered. But in fact it must be faced, because Israel's actions, which have long been characterized as "politicide" or "spaciocide" by Israeli and Palestinian scholars such as Baruch Kimmerling and Sari Hanafi, have become so intense that one can no longer take such an accusation off the table.

It is undeniable that Israelis have suffered in this present conflict and in the past that led us here, but what is certain is that the suffering that Israel has inflicted upon Palestinians is exponentially greater, and the responsibility for that suffering lies not just with Israel but with the United States, which has, in the words of Jon Stewart, acted as its "drug dealer" while pretending to be a caring friend. If you really care about Israel, you will take the time to understand the actual history and present realities, not myths that have no more accuracy than the Wild West fantasies that used to be taught to schoolchildren in the United States. Otherwise, all your passion and concern for Israel will only lead it closer to the very reckoning that you are desperately trying to avoid.

Thank you for taking the time to read this letter.  Please consider yourself to have an open invitation from the Levantine Center, the largest Middle Eastern cultural center on the West Coast, located in Hollywood, to organize a public forum where these issues can be discussed in a full, thoughtful and respectful manner.

Sincerely,

Gil Hochberg
Professor, Department of Comparative Literature, UCLA

Mark LeVine
Professor, Department of History, UC Irvine and Lund University, Center for Middle Eastern Studies

An earlier and much-abridged version of this letter appeared as a column on Al Jazeera English on Aug. 13, 2014.

Lauren Bacall's Iconic Hollywood Glamour Floored Twitter All Over Again This Week

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Nobody embodies old Hollywood glamour quite like Lauren Bacall.

After news broke that the 89-year-old star died earlier this week, publications, editors and fans took to Twitter to celebrate the star's inimitable style. The slew of vintage photos proved that the actress was truly a style and beauty icon. With her signature waves and perfectly tailored ensembles, this Hollywood legend never failed to impress.

Scroll through the tweets below to view some of the most stunning photos of Lauren Bacall.






















































Andrew Keegan Of '10 Things I Hate About You' Fame Founded A Religion, Full Circle

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Some teen heartthrobs grow up to become Oscar winners, sex tape stars or philanthropists. Others found religions. Andrew Keegan, who starred in 1999's "10 Things I Hate About You," falls into the latter camp and has started a "spiritual movement" called Full Circle in Venice Beach, Vice reported in a recent profile.

Keegan started the church after he and two friends were attacked by alleged gang members in Venice Beach in 2011. That event, combined with the tsunami in Japan and "a series of odd events" led him on a new path. “I had a moment where I was looking at a street lamp and it exploded. That was a weird coincidence,” he told Vice. “At a ceremony, a heart-shaped rose quartz crystal was on the altar, and synchronistically, this whole thing happened. It’s a long story, but basically the crystal jumped off the altar and skipped on camera. That was weird.” The church's mission is to "take war out of our story, which is essentially peace, but activated peace."

Full Circle's website claims it's a "Co-creative Collective, activating a next-level human experience." They hold meditation and yoga classes, concerts and political rallies. "We are artivists, thought-leaders, professionals and teachers…fulfilling our dreams of making a positive difference." Keegan is on the church's "Passion Team," and is described as a "serial entrepreneur," trying to make the world a better place.

According to Keegan, he named the movement Full Circle because time is indeed a flat circle. “Synchronicity. Time. That's what it's all about. Whatever, the past, some other time. It's a circle; in the center is now. That's what it's about."

After "10 Things I Hate About You," Keegan had other roles in TV shows and movies like "7th Heaven," "O" and "The Price Of War," but he'll probably always be known to us as Joey "Eat Me" Donner. Watch a promo for Full Circle below.



[via Vice]

Hilary Duff Looks Gorgeous In A Makeup-Free Instagram Photo

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Who needs makeup when you look this gorgeous without it?

Hilary Duff shared a fresh-faced selfie to her Instagram account Aug. 15, writing "Make up free Friday..... I swear I have a bikini on":



The 26-year-old singer looks like she's enjoying a vacation with a friend and her two-year-old son, Luca. She shared this adorable collage of underwater pool shots on Aug. 14:



Duff spent all last month promoting her latest single, "Chasing The Sun." We're glad to see she found some time to relax.


Paramore's Tribute To Robin Williams Is A Powerful Message About Hope

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Paramore's Hayley Williams took a moment during the band's Tuesday night show in Denver to recognize Robin Williams, who died on Monday. In a moving speech about sadness and fear, she spoke of overwhelming depression and the way out of a dark period.

"There was a point right before we released the new record, actually when we were writing it, that this song sort of spilled out of us," Williams said. "I realized how sad we had been. We had been in this place where we weren't content or fulfilled anymore."

Williams continued the intro to "Last Hope," saying, "It was very scary. It was very depressing, then this song happened, and a light came on. It was amazing how much I realized that I was a part of something... that we, the three of us, were a part of something," she said, sitting down at the keyboard. "I want you to know before you leave tonight that you, being here tonight, listening to any of your favorite bands, writing songs yourself, writing poems, reading books, any of that: you're a part of something. It goes on way longer than any of us will be alive. You are a part of something. Please know that. This song goes out to Robin Williams."

Watch her moving speech and the live version of "Last Hope" below.

Jessica Simpson Cuddles With Her Kids In Precious Instagram Photo

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Here's your daily dose of cuteness, brought to you by Jessica Simpson's Instagram.

The 34-year-old shared an adorable Instagram photo as she snuggled up with her two-year old daughter Maxwell and one-year-old son Ace on Aug. 15. Simpson, who went makeup-free and swept her hair into a messy bun, simply captioned the black-and-white shot, "Nighty nite":



Simpson and her husband, former NFL player Eric Johnson, are the proud parents of their two beautiful children. Simpson and Johnson, 34, tied the knot in a lavish wedding in Montecito, California earlier this summer.







Best Tweets: What Women Said On Twitter This Week

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The women of Twitter were on their game this week with numerous hilarious tweets that kept us laughing non-stop. Slightly Funny Jew was a bit nostalgic, tweeting: "Wish you were here* // *cheesecake." Ah yes, we wish cheesecake was (always) here too.

Twitter user Jess! was punnier than most when she tweeted: "I was going to do a sausage tweet, but I couldn't figure out how to link it." Get it? Sausages have links.

For more great tweets from women, scroll through the list below. Then visit our Funniest Tweets From Women page for our past collections.























































Oprah Does The Ice Bucket Challenge, Brilliantly

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Oprah did the famed Ice Bucket Challenge on Friday, and duh, it was amazing. Check out her scream! That's how you know it was real. (Props to Gayle King for doing the honors, too.)

WATCH:

John Legend: 'Black And Brown People Are Just Treated Differently In This Country'

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At a private performance Friday evening in Santa Monica, California, singer John Legend discussed the upheaval in Ferguson, Missouri, bluntly. “Black and brown people are just treated differently in this country,” he said to a room of about 150 people.

“One of our original sins in this country has been racism and slavery. And we still haven’t figured out how to solve that problem,” Legend said during an on-stage discussion with KCRW Music Director Jason Bentley in between sets. Given the news of this week, it's no surprise that the fatal shooting of Michael Brown at the hands of police officers in Ferguson quickly came into the conversation.

“We’ve given our police these military-style weapons, and you know, it’s a mess,” Legend continued. “But this is not new. The weapons are only exasperating it. But this was happening with Bull Connor in the '60s, this was happening with lynchings well before the '60s, where there were all kinds of extralegal ways for black folks to get killed and for black bodies to not be valued in this country."

Legend noted that even today, unarmed black men are shot on a regular basis. "It's like every 28 hours -- some cop or vigilante kills an unarmed black man. It just shows you that we still have a long way to go. We could do better. And hopefully we will."

john legend

Legend will put on an expansive Marvin Gaye tribute at the Hollywood Bowl next week, and Bentley asked him if he feels songs about social issues have lost their place in American society.

“I think there’s less urgency now,” Legend said. “My theory is that the draft makes a difference. Because when each and every person has the potential to be sent off to Vietnam, it gives every young person a greater sense of urgency about what’s going on in politics, what’s going on in the world.”

He continued, “Now that the people who choose to do it are doing it, I think fewer young people feel connected to decisions that politicians make. So I’m not saying we should have the draft. I am saying that because we don’t have the draft, fewer people feel that sense of urgency.”

The full interview with John Legend and Jason Bentley will air on KCRW's Morning Becomes Eclectic on Wednesday, August 20.

john legend

'Downton Abbey' Cast Has The Best Response To That Water Bottle Mistake

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Why do we love the "Downton Abbey" cast? Because they know how to laugh at themselves and stay hydrated.

Earlier this week a new photo from "Downton Abbey" Season 5 went viral for a hilarious historical error -- there was a plastic water bottle on the mantelpiece. This wasn't just some behind-the-scenes photo either, it was an official press photo. Yet, the ladies and gentlemen of Downton aren't ashamed of the mistake and decided to laugh along with the joke. The show's official Instagram posted a photo of the entire cast holding water bottles in what is maybe the most adorable response ever.



At this point we don't even care if any more historical inaccuracies leak into Season 5; all is already forgiven.

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Beyonce And Jay Z Take Blue Ivy To The Go-Kart Track

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Oh, to be a fly on the wall for one of Bey, Jay and Blue's awesome family excursions.

Beyonce and Jay Z recently took little Blue Ivy to an indoor go-kart track to celebrate a family friend's birthday. The 32-year-old shared the family photos on her website, Beyonce.com, on August 15, because if you looked this good in a helmet, you'd totally post these photos, too.

First, Beyonce made history by being the first person to look fierce in go-kart headgear:

bey gokart

Seriously, Bey, you're making the rest of us look bad:

bey 2

Jay Z lovingly held Blue Ivy's hand as they scoped out the track:

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And Beyonce took her place at the number one spot at the winner's podium, because Queen Bey can't lose:

bey winner

And that concludes a day in the life of our favorite power couple.

Watch Kim Kardashian Meet Khloe's Boyfriend, French Montana, For The First Time

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Khloe Kardashian began dating rapper French Montana after she ended her marriage to Lamar Odom, but Kim Kardashian didn't meet her sister's new man until much later. In a new clip of Sunday's episode of "Keeping Up With The Kardashians," viewers will see Kim meet Montana for the first time after an unexpected run-in with Odom.

Kim and Jonathan Cheban surprised Khloe, Montana and their friends at a club, but things got awkward when Khloe's ex-husband Odom had also shown up. "I changed my number and now he's showing up," Khloe said.

Her sister Kim tried to diffuse the situation and finally met Montana. "It is so obvious that Khloe and French are dating," Kim said. "They are so cute and he is so sweet with her ... I get why she's hesitant on introducing anyone to the family, but if she's out and about all over the world with this guy, there's no reason she shouldn't share it with her family."

Watch the clip from "KUWTK" below:



Recently Khloe appeared in her boyfriend's music video for "Don't Panic", though she spent most of the time wearing a scary mask.

We Can't Tell If Lena Dunham Just Dyed Her Hair Blonde

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Is this a wig or the real deal?

Lena Dunham surprised her Instagram followers on August 15 when she posted a photo of herself sporting a drastically new 'do. The natural brunette unveiled her new platinum blonde bowl cut along with a simple caption, "change is good":



Hm. Seems legit? Maybe Dunham got used to the blonde look when she reenacted Sia's "Chandelier" music video on "Late Night With Seth Meyers."

We'd love to trust Lena, but we're still kind of scarred from when Kim Kardashian fooled us all when she rocked a blonde wig. Guess only time will tell!

Watch Katy Perry Get Her Nose Pierced

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Katy Perry got her nose pierced and now we can relive the pain with her. She posted a video of the whole ordeal on Instagram and wrote, "Last time I did this I was on my own with a safety pin & cube of ice @ 13. This time I thought it was best I left it to the pro's. Sorry mom (again)."



She hasn't debuted any jewelry just yet, but we're hoping her lil' nose stud will shoot whipped cream or dragon fire or something.

Elon Musk Fulfills Ice Bucket Challenge With A Little Help From His Five Sons

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Tech titan Elon Musk became the latest celebrity to complete the "ice bucket challenge" Saturday, aided by a delightful contraption that allowed his five sons to dump water on him simultaneously.

The challenge asks participants to either donate money to the ALS Association or film themselves pouring ice water over their head. Those who complete it then ask others to do the same.

Musk made good on a challenge from Bill Gates, who had himself been challenged by Mark Zuckerberg. In turn, Musk challenged Minecraft creator Markus "Notch" Persson, Johnny Depp and skateboarding legend Tony Hawk.

But Musk's impressive engineering has nothing on Oprah's scream.

Watch Musk complete the challenge, above.

The Rope Braid Is The Hottest Style In Hollywood Right Now

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If you're getting tired of wearing the same old French or fishtail braid, take a hair cue from Hollywood's hot young stars.

At the 2014 Teen Choice Awards, a few celebrities hit the red carpet wearing rope braids. Both Nina Dobrev and Shay Mitchell sported twisted plaits that fell to one side. By maintaining lots of volume at their crown of their head with side-swept bangs, the two actresses looked youthful yet sophisticated.

See their rope braid hairstyles below, and find out which other celebs made this week's best and worst beauty list.

BEST: Nina Dobrev

nina dobrev

The 25-year-old looks super sweet with her chestnut strands styled in this thick rope braid. Her lighter hair ends play off the colors in her crop top outfit, and smokey eye makeup gives Dobrev's look some edge.

BEST: Shay Mitchell

shay mitchell

Mitchell's textured rope braid balances out the sexiness of her white lace number and her '90s-inspired burgundy lips.

BEST: Bella Thorne

bella thorne

This former Disney star is all grown up with her flaming red hair styled in loose curls and soft makeup. The simple hairstyle balances out her bright blue sleeveless dress.

BEST: Chloe Grace Moretz

chloe grace moretz

Days later, we're still obsessed with Moretz's bedhead hairstyle. And now that we know the secret to achieving this look, you best believe we'll be copying it.

BEST: Taylor Swift

taylor swift

Swift is bronzed and beautiful! What keeps her from appearing too orange is that there are no obvious faux tan lines. And this girl can wear the hell out of a red lip.

WORST: Maddie Hasson

maddie hansen

The "Twisted" actress tried her hand at the rope braid, but it got lost in translation with the severeness of her ponytail.

WORST: Hailee Steinfeld

hailee steinfeld

We applaud Steinfeld for taking a risk with her eye makeup and incorporating colors found in her blouse. However, the graphic liner and powder pink blush and lipstick clashes.

WORST: Taylor Swift

taylor swift

Yes, the country singer is on both the best AND worst dressed lists. She missed the marked at the Teen Choice Awards with this mullet hairdo that ages her and electric purple eyeliner that makes Swift look extremely tired.

WORST: Zendaya

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Supermodel Tyra Banks called out Zendaya for stealing her wavy bob hairstyle, and we think the comparison is canny. The 17-year-old's version looks way too wiggy, in our opinion.

WORST: Cat Deeley

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We get what the English TV host was attempting to do here with her hair and makeup, but her clumpy eyelashes, bold blush and red-orange lipstick creates a cartoonish effect.

Christina Aguilera Welcomes Baby Girl With Fiance Matthew Rutler

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Baby Xtina has arrived!

Christina Aguilera welcomed a daughter with fiance Matthew Rutler. This is the first child for Rutler and the second for Aguilera, who has a 6-year-old son Max with her first husband, Jordan Bratman.

Aguilera gave birth on August 16 via a C-section at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, according to US Weekly. Neither Aguilera or Rutler has revealed their daughter's name yet.

Although she kept quiet about the pregnancy in the beginning, the 33-year-old singer was eager to share photos and updates on Twitter once she started to show.







"I love the theatrics, and entertaining is what I was put on this Earth to do, but there's a superficiality to it," Aguilera told Marie Claire of motherhood in 2012. "When I was younger, I lived for my art and my work; I wanted it to be 'Back to Basics' all the time. Becoming a mother has helped me to realize who I am aside from my career."

Here Are All Of The Creative Arts Emmys Winners From Last Night's Ceremony

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On Saturday, August 16, the Creative Arts Emmys were presented at the Nokia Theater L.A. Live. Heidi Klum showed up in a dress "made from tiny strings that frayed out like a peacock when she twirled" and Uzo Aduba cried when Morgan Freeman presented her with the award for Outstanding Guest Actress In A Comedy Series. Check out the winners below.



    Outstanding Guest Actress In A Comedy Series
  • Uzo Aduba, "Orange Is the New Black"

  • Natasha Lyonne, "Orange Is the New Black"

  • Laverne Cox, "Orange Is the New Black"

  • Tina Fey, "Saturday Night Live"

  • Melissa McCarthy, "Saturday Night Live"

  • Joan Cusack, "Shameless"


    Outstanding Guest Actor In A Comedy Series
  • Jimmy Fallon, "Saturday Night Live"

  • Bob Newhart, The Big Bang Theory

  • Nathan Lane, Modern Family

  • Steve Buscemi, Portlandia

  • Louis C.K., Saturday Night Live

  • Gary Cole, Veep


    Outstanding Guest Actor In A Drama Series
  • Joe Morton, "Scandal"

  • Paul Giamatti, Downton Abbey

  • Dylan Baker, The Good Wife

  • Reg E. Cathey, House Of Cards

  • Robert Morse, Mad Men

  • Beau Bridges, Masters of Sex


    Outstanding Guest Actress In A Drama Series
  • Allison Janney, "Masters of Sex"

  • Margo Martindale, "The Americans"

  • Diana Rigg, "Game of Thrones"

  • Kate Mara, "House of Cards"

  • Jane Fonda, "The Newsroom"

  • Kate Burton, "Scandal"


    Outstanding Host For A Reality Or Reality-Competition Program
  • Jane Lynch, "Hollywood Game Night"

  • Betty White, "Betty White’s Off Their Rockers"

  • Tom Bergeron, "Dancing With The Stars"

  • Heidi Klum and Tim Gunn, "Project Runway"

  • Cat Deeley, "So You Think You Can Dance"

  • Anthony Bourdain, "The Taste"


    Outstanding Unstructured Reality Program
  • "Deadliest Catch"

  • "Alaska: The Last Frontier"

  • "Flipping Out"

  • "Million Dollar Listing New York"

  • "Wahlburgers"

  • "Wild Things With Dominic Monaghan"


    Outstanding Structured Reality Program
  • "Shark Tank"

  • "Antiques Roadshow"

  • "MythBusters"

  • "Undercover Boss"

  • "Who Do You Think You Are?"


  • Outstanding Animated Program

  • "Bob’s Burgers"

  • "Archer"

  • "Futurama"

  • "South Park"

  • "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Manhattan Project"


    Outstanding Writing For A Variety Series
  • "The Colbert Report"

  • "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart"

  • "Inside Amy Schumer"

  • "Portlandia"


    Outstanding Directing For A Variety Series
  • "Saturday Night Live"

  • "The Colbert Report"

  • "The Daily Show With Jon Stewart"

  • "Portlandia"

  • "The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon"


For a comprehensive list of winners head over to The Hollywood Reporter.

Heidi Klum Wears Dress Made Of Tiny Strings, Spins Around A Lot At The Creative Arts Emmys

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Heidi Klum arrived at the Creative Arts Emmy Awards last night, August 16, in a dress made entirely of tiny strings by "Project Runway" contestant Sean Kelly. Since the tiny strings fell flat when standing still, Klum was required to twirl aggressively across the red carpet. She spun around and around, likely as Tim Gunn whispered in her ear to propel her forward. "Make it work," he said, probably. Anyway, here is the dress.

heidi klum

You could print these out and make a flip book, if that is something you have time to do.

heidi klum

heidi klum

heidi klum
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