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Yes, Jennifer Lawrence Can Be a Body Positive Role Model

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I am about to talk about negative body image. I consider myself qualified to write about this because I occasionally (read: often) have a negative body image. Yes, women can blame the patriarchy. However, men also suffer from negative body image. Whoa! No way! P.S. If you Google any celebrity, one of the top four search engine suggestions is usually "Insert name here, weight." That is a problem. We care way too much, guys.

Well-known actress Jennifer Lawrence has been in the spotlight lately because she supports what we are calling "body positivity." I literally could not find a definition of that term on the Internet, but I interpret it to mean accepting all body types as beautiful and good. That means that your body is fine. His body is fine. Your mom's body is fine. In fact, those bodies are so fine that you don't think about bodies as being much different from one another. In fact, you might even start to consider personality as something more important than appearance. But let's not be too ambitious. I'm not trying to make anyone feel bad here; I'm just trying to start a conversation.

Anyway, Jennifer Lawrence has made many comments on this subject, which you can easily track down on the Internet. Her words are not perfect (whose are?) and she is still body-shaming in various ways through her commentary. She is quoted saying, "I would rather look chubby on screen and like a person in real life."

This statement appalled many people, but I do not feel offended. I am not thin or obese, and I am not "conventionally beautiful" according to Hollywood's standards. I hear a statement like that and think "amen sister" because what I hear is someone who I consider to be beautiful saying that she cares so little about people's perception of her that she would face public scrutiny just to obtain happiness. One Huffington Post writer determined this to mean, "the message between the lines is that thin people don't look like people," which I do not agree with.

The message is that Hollywood's standards say that looking chubby on camera is so unheard of and unacceptable that she had to make a conscious choice to go against the norm. In no way do Hollywood's standards say that thin people don't look like people. In fact, I think it is safe to say that frequently, Hollywood says that thin people are the only real people. This idea is a reason body positive role models like Jennifer Lawrence need to exist.

We live in an incredibly connected age where people follow celebrities through Twitter and Instagram and magazine covers and movies and TV shows and YouTube channels and blogs. We can see today's trending topics, which are now present on Facebook as well as Twitter. We can get live updates sent to our phones about pop culture. We are receiving more body image overload than ever before, and the issue is that because of the Internet, we can anonymously say anything we want about anyone we want to. The same society that preaches body acceptance also buys the May issue of Cosmo that promises you the best beach body and the secret to Kim Kardashian's flawless makeup. The same society that buys those magazines buys the new issue US Weekly with the newest unflattering photo from John Travolta's beach vacation plastered on the cover. The same society, even still, buys the new issue of Vogue with Jennifer Lawrence on the cover.

The point I am trying to make is that we are feeding into an endless conversation about body positivity. No matter what anyone says, there is something wrong to be found.

Many people criticize Jennifer Lawrence because she has an average, if not above average (according to social standards) body. People complain that the extreme ends of the weight spectrum do not have a public voice. The very fat and the very thin do have a voice. The problem is that they do not have an incredibly public voice because the people we look to for words of wisdom are a small group of 200 people who got to where they are partially because they met a set of pre-defined beauty standards. We are looking to only the small percentage of famous people who are allowed to speak their minds, which is again only a tiny subset of the entirety of the celebrity community. Looks are currently very important in Hollywood, and even theater communities. You can be the greatest actress in the world, but if you don't look the part you're not going to get the job. I am guilty of this kind of discrimination as well. When I think about photography or making short films, I think, "Who will look great on camera?"

The problem with the body positivity movement is not Jennifer Lawrence. It is in fact very impressive to me that a "conventionally beautiful woman" cares about the effect that an unhealthy appearance could have on her young audience. That is a thought that most young celebrities don't even think to have. I love that the people who for so long conformed to and invented beauty standards are now speaking out against them. Jennifer Lawrence isn't saying what body type is right and what body type is wrong. She's saying that she doesn't care if she doesn't look the way Hollywood says she should look. Obviously there are not going to be tons of actresses and actors who are a size 16 preaching about acceptance. You cannot be a size 16 actor in Hollywood unless you are funny or typecast. That is the unfortunate truth of the current acting world. The goal of the body positive movement should not be getting mad at Jennifer Lawrence for being too "normal." It should be to change the way standards are set in the first place. If we can get people of all body types into positions of influence and authority like Jennifer Lawrence's, we can truly change the definitions we have of beauty and attractiveness.

If we can get Hollywood and pop culture decision-makers to stop causing an acceptance bottleneck, we can make strides in improving the confidence of people of all ages, shapes, genders and sizes. The day I see a size 0 actress and a size 6 actress and a size 18 actress and a 4'7″ actress and a 6'4″ actress side by side by side on the red carpet will be the day I rejoice. The day that those actresses don't get their dresses judged for three hours on TMZ will be the day I rejoice. When they get rid of the "Who Wore It Better?" column in magazines I will rejoice. Body positivity, ironically, begins with the end of body discussions. The day we care more about the actual person in the body than the body itself will be the day we see actual real change with the body positive movement.

Acceptance is acceptance. All bodies are bodies, but who cares? The people inside of them are way more interesting.

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Bea Miller's Sam Smith Cover Will Give You Goosebumps

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Original Song: "Stay With Me" by Sam Smith

Cover Artist: Bea Miller, one of our favorite former "X Factor USA" contestants originally recorded the cover in July, and then performed it again at a radio station in Tampa, Florida.

How It's Different: Miller nixes the choir that accompanied Smith in his original version, performing alongside a single guitarist. She slows the song down and transforms the pop song into a sadder, more soulful ballad. Without the back-up vocals or the energetic drum beat, our focus is entirely on her voice.

Why We Love It: Miller's voice packs enough punch on its own, and she's best when singing love ballads. Miller strips down Smith's original track to its bare bones, and takes time to let her gravelly voice explore each note. We're not surprised; she added the same emotional rawness to her cover of Katy Perry's pop anthem "Roar" last year, which she performed alongside Boyce Avenue.

What do you think of Bea Miller's cover? Sound off in the comments below or tweet @HuffPostTeen!

(Hat tip: Hot 101.5 Tampa Bay)

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Time to Pick America's Hero Dog, the Real Superhero of Unconditional Love

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Every dog has his day...

If only each could claim the winner's purse as America's Hero Dog... that is my wish for the exceptional eight nominees, real-life superheroes competing in the final round of the American Humane Association's (AHA) 2014 Hero Dog Awards. As a member of the board of the AHA, I can tell you this is one of the most rewarding events of the year for me.

These magnificent animals truly define courage, loyalty and caring as man's enduring best friend -- all being recognized for exemplifying the limitless unconditional love canines have been gifting humans for centuries. Already, more than 1 million votes have been cast by the public and a celebrity panel of dog lovers and experts, narrowing the field from the original 135 contenders at the beginning of the year to the final round of eight -- a very difficult elimination process. Voting on that final round remains open to the public through September 15 here.

The 2014 American Hero Dog winner will be named during the fourth annual Hero Dog Awards, broadcast on the Hallmark Channel on September 27 from The Beverly Hilton hotel. No one goes home empty handed as each of the eight finalists is given $1,500 for their chosen charity selected from the contest's list of 15 charity partners. The winner's purse is an additional $5,000 given to the charity partner.

The awards are presented by the Lois Pope LIFE Foundation and carried to more than 1 billion people around the world by the media, seeking to honor dogs who are the exception to the rule -- dogs who save lives, lend sight and hearing to those in need, not to mention the joy of having them love us each and every day.

The contenders include Kai a 6-year-old shelter rescue black Lab that works at the San Antonio Fire Department helping to keep others safe by investigating arson cases and educating children on fire safety. Xena, a pit bull found barely surviving and brought to a Georgia shelter that made a recovery and has changed the life of a young boy with autism. And XXon, a German Shepherd who is the eyes and constant companion of an Air Force Sergeant blinded in an explosion in Afghanistan that took the lives of his fellow servicemen. Now living with his family in Connecticut the two are inseparable.

There is Kota, the German Shepherd law enforcement dog injured in an eight-foot fall aiding Virginia police responding to a burglary in progress. Even a fractured limb didn't detour the call of duty to protect Kota's fellow officers. Another contender is 8-year-old Black lab Chaney, who retired from the Marines in 2013 after multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan as an IED detection dog. Chaney now works with his Iowa handler for a service dog organization that helps disabled veterans and children with autism.

There is the remarkable Golden Retriever Bretagne, who made enormous contributions as a search and rescue dog at the World Trade Center site after 9/11, the 2002 Olympic Winter Games and Hurricane Rita in 2005. Today she helps first graders in Texas learn to read. JJ Krawczyk is a Lhasa Apso mix shelter dog that is the lifeline for a young girl in North Carolina suffering from a rare condition called Mastocytosis. This service dog can detect when the child's life threatening reactions are about to occur and alerts her parents. And last but not least, Susie, the pit bull mix therapy dog that was horrifically abused and then rescued and paired with a North Carolina woman who suffered a brutal dog attack. Together they changed the state's animal cruelty laws and now visit hospitals, schools, and nursing homes to inspire people to never give up.

So please, pause for paws and cast your vote for the one you believe deserves the greatest applause. It is hard to choose I know, but the truth is -- no matter whom you choose you have picked a winner!

Obama Held An Important Press Conference And All People Cared About Was His Tan Suit

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President Barack Obama showed up at his press conference on Thursday to answer some important questions about ... oh my gosh, did you see what he's wearing? (It was actually a pretty important press conference on foreign policy, and you should read about it here and here.)

Obama made quite the bold sartorial choice on this late summer afternoon and donned a tan suit...

obamasuit

Perhaps it was the upcoming long weekend that inspired the president to choose a lighter, more breezy color? Or maybe it was his attempt to come across as just a regular gent, who likes to change up his suit colors every once in a while. Whichever the case, for a man who once told Vanity Fair that he wears "only gray or blue suits," the stark color change shocked the country...and by country, we mean Twitter. Instead of covering the content of what Obama was saying -- which again, was important -- many decided to become serious fashion critics for a hot second.























Congrats, America, your very important stances on Obama's suit made news. Dreams really do come true.



Will Forte Has A Massive Beard, Leaves Everyone Impressed With His Ability To Grow Facial Hair

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Will Forte is currently rocking a massive beard. He's been growing it for some time, but it's now at the stage where his beard deserves some recognition.

Indeed, we certainly are pretty impressed with the former "Saturday Night Live" cast member's ability to grow facial hair, which is for his mid-season comedy "The Last Man on Earth."

But seriously, we're impressed. Keep it up, Will! You are just killing it out there with that thing.

will forte beard

For reference, this is what he looks like without the beard:

You Only Live Once, So Do It Warren Buffett's Way

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"You'd get very rich if you thought of yourself as having a card with only twenty punches in a lifetime, and every financial decision used up one punch. You'd resist the temptation to dabble. You'd make more good decisions and you'd make more big decisions."
--Warren Buffett , quoted in The Snowball by Alice Schroeder

This week Warren Buffett celebrates his 84th birthday.

Those of you who follow my blogs know I have a bit of a man crush on Buffett, not just because of his investing acumen but because he has always seemed to me endowed with a kind of uber-common sense -- an ability to cut to the heart of a situation or an issue and capture it in a few words, understandable to experts and common folk alike.

Lists of his "10 greatest" or "18 greatest" (or however many greatest) sayings pop up everywhere in online searches. But the Buffettism that's stayed with me is the one at the top of this blog post -- namely the notion of a punch card (a quaintly antiquated thing you don't run across very often these days).

Buffett used his punch-card analogy in an investment context. It's consistent with his belief that really profitable investment decisions are few and far between. His counsel to individual investors has always been to "wait for the fat pitch." (See "Bored Investors Beware.")

But I think the punch-card analogy applies equally well to life, and to the decisions that define and shape our lives over the five, six, seven or eight decades most of us are on Earth. For someone graduating from high school, I think the number 20 is just about right. For someone like me, in middle age, the number of unpunched punches on the card is a lot smaller. There might be only two or three left.

The point is that, whether it's two or 20, the number of inflection points in our lives is a lot smaller than it often seems. The trick is having the wisdom, or the instinct, to recognize "fat pitches" at the time they show up, which is always easier in hindsight. Then we need to make our big decisions count.

Getting married. Having children (or not). Making a career change. Starting or investing in a business. Those are obvious hole punches.

By contrast, the last two times I punched my card, it had less to do with me, personally, than with the opportunity to make a difference in the lives of others.

The first of these was agreeing to chair Wall Street's advocacy group -- the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association -- in the wake of the financial crisis. I did so because I never wanted our clients, the investing public, to again have to go through the trauma and disruption they experienced in their financial and personal lives during that unprecedented and volatile period.

My second recent hole punch was deciding to help lead, in 2011 and 2012, a campaign to defeat a constitutional amendment that would have banned same-sex marriage in my home state of Minnesota. I got a lot of advice and counsel against getting involved, as a business leader, in what became known as the "Vote No" campaign. But every bone in my body told me this was a once-in-a-lifetime chance to make a difference in the lives of tens of thousands of LGBT residents in a state long known for its progressive brand, inclusive culture and values of respect and tolerance.

As it turned out, the support of the business community was critical to not only defeating the amendment but, six months later, legalizing same-sex marriage in Minnesota.

That was last year. Just this month two gay friends who had lived together for 34 years before getting married last year at Minneapolis' City Hall thanked me, with tears in their eyes, for being able to celebrate their first-ever wedding anniversary.

I wish someone had told me about Buffett's punch-card analogy when I was a lot younger. However, I'm glad I have the opportunity to use it now to recognize and lean into the few remaining "big decisions" in my life. I pass it on here as a birthday gift to others -- not from me but from Warren Buffett, who, by the simple arithmetic of his own analogy, has made a big decision once in every four of his 84 years.

Why Courtney Stodden Will Never Be Marilyn Monroe, In Her Own Words

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Courtney Stodden has penned a piece for the Daily Star in which she explains why she will never be like Marilyn Monroe.

While commenting on allegations that her former U.K.'s "Celebrity Big Brother" co-star Mario Falcone was caught using cocaine, Stodden delved into her own philosophy on the subject:

"I can honestly say that I've never ever EVER been under the influence of drugs, nor have I ever even tried a drug," wrote Stodden, who turns 20-years-old today. "Thus, I can most positively say that I won't die like Marilyn Monroe or Anna Nicole Smith."

Stodden rose to fame back in 2011, when as a 16-year-old she married the then 51-year-old "Lost" actor Doug Hutchison. The two separated in 2013, but confirmed earlier this month that they were once again a couple.

"I will NEVER be a drug addict," Stodden wrote in closing of her Daily Star piece, "but I'll always be a Doug addict!"

5 Seconds Of Summer's Calum Hood Sends Naked Snapchat, Then Shrugs It Off With Emoticon

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He looks so perfect standing there without his American Apparel underwear. IT'S TOO EASY!

5 Seconds of Summer's Calum Hood, 18, sent a naked Snapchat video of his penis to a fan. The fan filmed the clip (duh) and uploaded it to Vine. The caption reads, "CALUMS DICK I'M SCREAMING."

We can't see his face in the video, but Hood owned up to the footage and tweeted a response.







See the full Vine over at Spin.

'So You Think You Can Dance' Breaks Its Routine By Going Gay, And We Love It

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"So You Think You Can Dance" is show that runs on physical skill and sexual chemistry, but up until now, that chemistry's been pretty heterosexual.

Although the dancers in the show do occasionally pair up in same-sex duets, as gay site The Backlot notes, those duets are always very pointedly unromantic. (Think Sharks vs. Jets, not Tony and Maria.)

Which is why the show's opening number on Wednesday night was so groundbreaking.

The final four competitors danced to the ballad "Wind Beneath My Wings." Where another choreographer might have paired them off in the heterosexual couples the show's audience is accustomed to, "So You Think You Can Dance" veteran Travis Wall decided to do things a little differently.



The dancers, clad in white dresses or white suits that seem almost wedding-inspired, balance their weight on their partners as they twist and turn.

Together, they're graceful and loving and proud.

Although as part of the opening number the choreography was presented without preamble, Wall posted a triumphant photo to his Instagram Thursday with a single word as a caption: "#Equality."



h/t Elite Daily

'Jersey Shore Massacre' Is Awful, But At Least It's Supposed To Be

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It should come as no surprise that "Jersey Shore Massacre" isn't gunning for an Oscar. The Snooki-meets-"Sharknado" horror comedy perhaps got the highest of compliments when Variety's review of the film stated "it could've been worse."

And "Jersey Shore Massacre" definitely would've been worse, if it weren't for the help of JWoww.

Jenni "JWoww" Farley told HuffPost Entertainment that she was contacted about halfway through the film's process, when producers wanted to add an authentic "Jersey Shore" cast member to the production team. When Farley eagerly signed on as executive producer -- "I've always dreamed of being a movie producer" -- the film took a whole new direction.

"It was more of a thriller, slasher. And I’m like, 'This totally should be a comedy,'" Farley said.

"When you think of the show 'Jersey Shore,' of course there was drama, but everybody likes the show because it's funny and lighthearted. That's what I was trying to focus on in the film," she added.

The movie centers on a group of obnoxious girls heading down the shore for the weekend. Ron Jeremy -- yes, that Ron Jeremy -- gives a realistic performance in his role of stoner landlord. (Because if you haven't encountered an unreliable, irresponsible super in your lifetime, don't worry ... you will.)

Once Jeremy's character mistakenly rents out the girls' house to another party, Teresa (Danielle Dallacco) offers up her mobster uncle’s woodland estate in the Pine Barrens as an alternative vacation getaway. From there, "Jersey Shore Massacre" develops into a mix of cliche "Jersey Shore" moments and unoriginal horror movie tropes: a creepy neighbor, a secluded mansion in the woods and more. Just like MTV's reality show, there are definitely scenes of uncomfortable male aggressiveness and misogyny. But it's hard to be incredibly offended considering "Jersey Shore Massacre" isn't expected to be tasteful.

"There are moments where I clearly got inspiration from the 'Jersey Shore' cast members," Farley said. "You'll definitely watch at one point and be like, 'Oh, my god, that's so Mike.'

"And this is my way to kill them off, too, because we always wanted to kill each other" Farley joked.

Overall, Farley said she's happy to be give something back to the "Jersey Shore" fans.

"A lot of people miss our show and say they want a new season. I don't know if we'll ever have another season or get back together, but at least you can laugh your ass off at these dumb, stereotypical 'Jersey Shore' moments," she said.

Watch the trailer for "Jersey Shore Massacre":

Paris Hilton Uses The ALS Ice Bucket Challenge To Further Awareness Of Her Existence

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We've seen a ton of celebrities take on the ALS ice bucket challenge, but no star can hold a candle to the ever attention-seeking Paris Hilton.

The 33-year-old heiress was sure to raise awareness for her own existence in an Instagram video posted Aug. 28. In the clip, Hilton wears a tiny red bikini top while a man pours ice water--from a gigantic Moet champagne glass, of course-- on her head. And if you expected this to go down in Hilton's own backyard, then you don't know Paris Hilton. Of course the socialite took the opportunity to do her Ice Bucket Challenge onstage at a club in Ibiza.



Hilton makes no mention of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a degenerative nerve disease, in the clip. The only audible person in the video is a MC, who shouts, "Yeah! Give it up for Paris Hilton!"

At least Hilton made mention of the real reason behind the viral challenge in her video caption:

"I was nominated by a lot of people to do the #ALSIceBucketChallenge. So I did it last night after my show at my #FoamAndDiamonds Party at @AmnesiaIbiza. I will be making a large donation to the cause. And I am nominating @DJChuckie @Birdman5Star & Lil Wayne. You guys have 24 hours. To find our [sp] how you can help the cause, please go to www.ALSA.org".



Help support ALS research through the "Donate" button above.

Jimmy Kimmel Calls Out 'Friends' Reunion Haters, Defends Jennifer Aniston

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Jimmy Kimmel recently brought the ladies of "Friends" together for a hilarious reunion on his show, but it turns out a lot of people weren't laughing. In the sketch, Jennifer Aniston is supposed to be annoyed that Kimmel makes her act out his inappropriate "Friends" fan fiction, but many Internet commenters took it seriously and started hating on her.

No one told Kimmel it was going to go this way, but at least he took some time to call out the haters and set the record straight.

Check out the "Friends" reunion to see what everyone got so upset about:



"Jimmy Kimmel Live" airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on ABC.

Demi Lovato Credits Kim Kardashian With Changing Cultural Standards Of Beauty

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Demi Lovato credits Kim Kardashian with making non-stick thin bodies a more accepted part of our beauty culture.

After posting a side-by-side image of four of her recent VMA outfits to Instagram on Monday with a note about her own body struggles, Lovato opened up to Access Hollywood about how she thinks things have changed since the time that she was a young girl.

"When I was growing up and when I was a pre-teen, the people that I had to look up to [for] body image [were] extremely underweight," Lovato said in the interview on Thursday. "[They] were all very bony at that time and that was the in thing."

But the singer says now things are different. "I really credit women like Beyonce and Kim Kardashian. [They] completely revolutionized our generation's view...of what beautiful is," she said. "You can think whatever you want about the Kardashians, but they really did help tons of women feel comfortable in their own skin, and I like to carry that message on."

kim kardashian demi lovato

Since attending treatment for eating disorders and cutting back in 2010, Lovato has strived to be an outspoken role model for young girls dealing with cultural pressures to be thin. She spoke to Ellen DeGeneres in 2011 about the importance of seeing a variety of body types represented in media:

"There was nobody out there for me to look at and say, maybe this is unhealthy. Maybe starving myself isn't the answer," she said. "So I want to be that for a 13-year-old girl at home deciding whether or not to eat dinner, or an 18-year-old deciding whether or not to keep her breakfast down. There needs to be a role model out there, and for the first time in my life, I actually feel like one."

Bodies naturally come in all shapes and sizes, and our culture should not endorse one specific size or type over another. A big thanks to Demi for taking a public stand!

Tim Tebow Makes Fan's Dreams Come True, Scores A Touchdown In Our Hearts

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For one fan with a life-threatening illness, Tim Tebow isn't just an NFL star, he's also Prince Charming.

Haley Burke of Kingsport, Tennessee, is an 18-year-old who has a life-threatening illness, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome -- a disorder that affects connective tissue. She is also a dedicated Tebow fan, according to the Jacksonville Business Journal. Back in 2011, while she was in hospital, Burke made her dream of meeting the superstar athlete known to Make-A-Wish, the Kingsport Times-News reported. She was eventually put into contact with the football player's organization, the Tim Tebow Foundation, and last month, the athlete granted her wish.




The quarterback flew the teen and her family to Scottsdale, Arizona, and set them up in a presidential suite at a resort, according to People magazine. Burke enjoyed a spa day and a helicopter tour of the Grand Canyon. She also threw out the first pitch at an Arizona Diamondbacks game and attended a workout session with Tebow -- all as a part of the star's "W15H" program, in which Tebow fulfills the wishes of children with life-threatening illnesses who want to meet him.

"He's such a nice guy. He's everything you would expect him to be, but 10 times better," Burke told the Kingsport Times-News.




Among the many perks, Burke says the highlight of the trip was having dinner with the athlete.

"He came up behind me and put his hands on my shoulders and asked me if I cared if he had dinner with me. I was ecstatic!" Burke told the Times-News.

The teen said that meeting Tebow wasn't just a dream come true, but it also gave her a more positive outlook.

"My time with Tim has made me feel more confident and more encouraged to keep going," Burke said. "So many times you feel that it is just too hard to get through one more day. But now that I've met him and he's given me such encouragement, it just makes me want to keep fighting."




While Burke and her family say they were moved by his generosity, it seems the player himself has also taken something away from the experience.

"They're amazing," Tebow told People magazine. "The entire time I was with them, I was so inspired by their strength and courage in facing every day and every struggle with a positive attitude."

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Adam Brody Reveals What It Was Like To Kiss Rachel Bilson & Other Pressing AMA Answers

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Adam Brody, our favorite Death Cab for Cutie fan and all-around chill guy, participated in a Reddit Ask Me Anything session on Thursday to promote the premiere of "The Cosmopolitans." The series, from director Whit Stillman, is part of Amazon's newest batch of pilots (it's great, we've seen it!), and showcases Brody in a starring role as an American ex-pat living in Paris. That's all well and good, but Brody's AMA really focused on his other works: "Scream 4," a guest appearance on "Gilmore Girls" and, of course, "The O.C." Ahead, our favorite quotes from Brody's dip into the Reddit world, including one about what it was like to kiss Rachel Bilson, his former girlfriend and "O.C." co-star.



Question: "Do you miss the OC? I miss the OC." -- EckhartsLadder

Brody: "I miss the original 90210, actually."



Question: "Alright, I have to ask. What was it like to work on Gilmore Girls? Was it tiring, keeping up with all the pop culture going back and forth? And did you understand all the references??" -- courtiebabe420

Brody: "It was nice because the people were cool and the writing was great, but also hard because they made sure you said every syllable. In a way I've never seen before or since."



Question: "Hi Adam! Do you think there is any chance for an OC reunion in the future? And; is Big Japan still active? If so, what kind of drum kit do you play? (My Sister wants to know how it felt to be killed in Scream 4!)" -- Maccas75

Brody: "Dying in Scream 4 felt silly, and if you look closely I'm pretty sure I'm smiling."



Question: "did Peter Gallagher ever give you advice in real life ?" -- Frajer

Brody: "He always told me to grow out my eyebrows. Boom!"



Question: "Chris Pratt said that when he was on The OC final season, all you young actors were so ready for it to be over and basically said that it pissed him off because you guys didn't know how lucky you had it when there were so many actors struggling for work. Do you think you and other actors were guilty of taking it all for granted and acted a bit bratty actor-ish?" -- SoltanPill

Brody: "I do not think we were guilty of taking it for granted. I also love Chris and he loves me so shut up!"



Question: "Hi Adam! You were definitely the best part of the O.C., i've always enjoyed when you were improvising. But anyway, i've been wanting to ask you a question since i was 13 or 14: how was it like to kiss Rachel Bilson? Is she a good kisser? Since i had a crush on her at the time, the 13 years old that's still in me is screaming and is dying to know." -- George_Hale

Brody: "One of the all time greats!"


Reese Witherspoon Does 'Legally Blonde' Throwback In Sweet Video For A Kid With Cancer

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Reese Witherspoon broke out her pink wardrobe this week to let a young fan know he's on her mind.

The "Legally Blonde" star took to social media on Wednesday to throw support behind one of her biggest fans. Dressed in character as law student Elle Woods, Witherspoon posted the video above on YouTube and shared the image below on Instagram to let 4-year-old Will, who is battling cancer, know she's rooting for him.

Witherspoon had received an email from Will's mom explaining the actress' comedic 2001 film was helping put a smile on her son's face while he's in the hospital.

"I just wanted to let you know that me and Bruiser said, 'Hi,'" Witherspoon said in the video, referencing her character's pet dog in the movie. "So please tell all your doctors and all your nurses and your mom and dad that they're doing such a great job taking care of you."

Witherspoon -- who plans to participate in Stand Up to Cancer in September, E News reported -- asked fans to share words of encouragement for Will by posting inspiring images using the #TeamWill hashtag.



In the photo's caption, Witherspoon wrote:

#TeamWill This is for one of the strongest little 4-year-olds I can imagine. Will -- I hear that you're fighting so hard and strong against cancer and that in the hospital you've been watching a lot of "Legally Blonde" and loving it. I hope it makes you laugh! I wanted you to know that I made this sign in your honor -- and I'm sending a big big hug and my hope and prayers. Just know -- I'm a really big fan of YOURS! PS anyone else -- feel free to make your own sign for Will and post it with the hashtag #TeamWill so he can see it ... I’m sure he’d love that!


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Taylor Swift Needed A Feminist Friend -- And So Do You

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Want other women to understand and embrace feminism? Befriend them.

Last Friday, Taylor Swift, a pop star known for her many Instagram-worthy lady BFFs (and her woefully uninformed understanding of the feminist movement), credited fellow celebrity feminist -- and close friend -- Lena Dunham with ushering in her recent feminist awakening.

Swift told The Guardian that as a teenager, she didn't understand what "feminist" really meant. (For those still in that boat, it's the belief in the social, political and economic equality of the sexes.) But her friendship with Dunham signaled a turning point. "Becoming friends with Lena -- without her preaching to me, but just seeing why she believes what she believes, why she says what she says, why she stands for what she stands for -- has made me realize that I’ve been taking a feminist stance without actually saying so," she said.

Lorde, too, has credited Tavi Gevinson's website, Rookie, with creating a "normal, non-scary, chill vibe" around feminism that she found "encouraging" when she was a younger teen. Beyoncé "was scrolling through videos of feminism on Youtube," when she stumbled upon Nigerian author Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's TEDx Talk, "We Should All Be Feminists" and realized everything Adichie said was exactly how she felt. And on Saturday night, the pop star presented Nicki Minaj with a "Flawless" necklace, which prompted the rapper to write, "I could never thank you enough for your influence on powerful women all around the world," on Instagram.



In the words of the commercially-empowered '90s pop princesses, the Spice Girls: "Girl power!" Or, rather, the power of girls (and women) talking to each other.

There are a number of popular misconceptions about feminism that prevent women from embracing the philosophy. "Feminists hate men," they say. Not even a little. "Feminists want women to dominate everything." Nope, we're actually all about equality. "Being a feminist and a humanist are mutually exclusive." Again, no.

Unfortunately, a lot of these myths are perpetuated by the things celebrity women say in the public eye, which is why Swift's recent change of heart was so important and also timely. Feminism is certainly having a powerful moment in popular culture -- just a day later, Beyoncé performed at the VMAs with the word "FEMINIST" emblazoned in capital letters behind her.

Her epiphany is also exciting because it puts on display just how important peer-to-peer, woman-to-woman conversations about gender issues are. And it's not just famous women who influence each other's understanding of gender equality and how we should get there -- it's all of us.

As Feministe's Chally pointed out in a 2010 blog post, "women’s friendships center [around] women’s experiences." And those common experiences make solidarity around a cause that much easier to relate to. I can't imagine feeling connected to or empowered by feminism if I didn't have a strong network of female friends and role models to lean on and look to for guidance. Translating big ideas of feminism into our daily routines -- and grappling with the backlash we often face when we declare ourselves as feminists -- becomes a whole lot easier when you can tweet or blog or grab a coffee alongside another woman who can help you make sense of it all.

When it comes to enacting feminism in small, everyday ways in our own lives, proximity to powerful, interesting women can only help. "I want the strongest, happiest, smartest women in my corner, pushing me to negotiate for more money, telling me to drop men who make me feel bad about myself, and responding to my outfit selfies from a place of love and stylishness, not competition and body-snarking," Ann Friedman wrote on The Cut last May.

Indeed, the strongest, happiest, smartest women I've come into contact with also happen to be politically-engaged, and down to talk about practical solutions to the war on reproductive rights, the gender pay gap and the epidemic of campus sexual assault.

Feminism goes far beyond "girl power" and lighthearted conversations between friends, but getting women to speak about these larger issues on a small, more intimate scale is a great place to start. Thanks for the reminder, T-Swift.

We're Starting To Understand Exactly Why Brody Jenner Wasn't At Kim Kardashian's Wedding

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The story of Brody Jenner skipping Kim Kardashian and Kanye West's wedding has taken yet another turn, and this time it involves Brody's girlfriend.

In a clip from Sunday's upcoming episode of "Keeping Up With the Kardashians," Kim pulls Bruce Jenner aside during a family meal to discuss Brody's issues.

"I didn't want to say it in front of mom because it'll hurt her feelings," she says to Bruce in the minute-long clip, "but I think Brody's upset because you and mom paid for Brandon [Jenner] and [wife] Leah," to which Bruce agrees that "Brody can get a little huffy at times."

"And he asked to bring, you know, his girlfriends and I said no," Kim continues, referencing her stepbrother's model girlfriend, Kaitlynn Carter. Bruce agrees "that's not gonna happen."

Brody missed Kimye's wedding extravaganza in May because he had work commitments. However, the upcoming episode of "KUWTK" paints a different picture, and Brody is supposedly not happy about it.

“Bruce asked Brody to tell the media that he wasn’t going because of work commitments. So Brody publicly went on record and said he had commitments and the wedding was too far away," an unnamed source told RadarOnline.com “Brody was stunned when footage of the show revealed that Brody wouldn’t be going because Kaitlynn wasn’t invited."

Such is life in the fishbowl.

Natural Is The New Airbrush: An Actress Bares All And Starts A #NOFILTER Revolution

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Shelby Bilbruck for GLAM4GOOD

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Ellen Barkin is my new hero! It's hard these days to know what stars really look like. All the filters and digital retouching that go on top of their pictures make a young woman like me want to retouch my pictures, too. Then along comes 60-year-old Barkin posing for a series of photos in Violet Grey's online magazine, The Violet Files, and her pictures are not retouched in any way! Barkin makes it cool to show wrinkles, smile lines and imperfect skin. Not just for women her age, but for all young women in the age of filter mania!

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"Those pictures with the dark circles under my eyes are exactly what I look like," the stunning 60-year-old said in an interview. In the shoot, Barkin shows off her fine lines, under eye circles, and everything else that makes her human -- and guess what. She's still stunningly beautiful.

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Not only did she nix retouching the photos, but she did stuff you do in everyday life in them. Chomping down on bacon cheeseburgers, lounging in a robe with a towel on her head, even having a cup of coffee.

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So many times we're told that being beautiful means being perfect. You have to have straight, white teeth, lustrous hair, no wrinkles or other imperfections on your face. But who is actually like that? No one!

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So to all the young ladies out their, stop spending 20 minutes making your Instagram selfies unrecognizable from all the touch ups and filters, and take a cue from Barkin. Confidence and being yourself, it's the new airbrush -- and GLAM4GOOD is loving it!


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All photos courtesy of Violet Grey.

Is the Brad Pitt, Angelina Jolie Marriage Really a Slap in the Face to Gay Couples?

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In case you missed the breathless news, Brad and Angelina just got hitched in a French ceremony that, rather miraculously, they managed to keep secret from the media vultures. Everyone, naturally, is celebrating this long-awaited occasion and dare-we-say happy moment for the impossibly gorgeous A-list pair.

Well, not everyone.

Time writer Bryan Moylan is of the belief that this wedding could hurt the gay rights movement. In his searing piece--unequivocally titled "Brad and Angelina Getting Married Is A Slap in the Face to Gay Americans"--Moylan writes: "I'm sorry, Brangelina, but real fighters for civil rights don't buckle under pressure when it gets hard."

Why is this straight celebrity couple shouldering the homosexual-marriage movement you ask? Because many moons ago, while deflecting the inevitable questions about not getting married to Angelina, Brad said he would "consider tying the knot when everyone else in the country who wants to be married is legally able."

Flash-forward to today, and just 19 states have legalized gay marriage--yet Brad has put a ring on it. And to Moylan, this is tantamount to him damaging the gay rights cause.

It's not.

Here's the thing: Brad and Angelina getting married will have no discernible impact on the fight for gay marriage equality--just as them not getting married had no discernible impact on the cause. As much as celebs like to pretend otherwise, people aren't going to change their deeply entrenched views because someone they like to watch in movies tell them to.

I sincerely doubt there's a single bigoted soul in the depths of Alabama who decided gays were actually OK because those actors in Mr. and Mrs. Smith said so. Nor do I believe there are legislators who were ready to sign off on gay marriage until they hard about this wedding. People may change their views as a result of getting to know actual gay couples, or by responding to a shifting cultural climate, but let's not pretend a beefcake actor has the same sway.

That said, I'm not totally above poo-pooing Brangelina. I just think that Brad's mistake wasn't marrying Angelina; it was making his ultimatum in the first place. In this sense, I agree with Moylan, who writes:

It seems like what Brad and Angie said the first time around doesn't matter to them at all. It's as if they didn't want to get married in 2006 and said, 'What if we say it's because gay people can't get married? Then people will stop bothering us about getting hitched and we'll look so noble.' Now that they've had their ceremony and the wedding cake is in the freezer, it looks like their declaration was mercenary rather than thoughtful.

It does appear as if Brad made that claim to look noble while shirking questions about his personal life. And for using the gay cause in such a callous way, he does deserve some possible condemnation.

But, to reiterate, that doesn't mean he shouldn't have gotten married. Because what's important about this entire "scandal" is remembering what the fight is about: the right to get hitched. Yes, it's deeply unfair that Brad and Angie can get married when thousands of gay couples in so many states are deprived of said matrimonial bliss. But doesn't demanding someone deny their own right to get married undermine the whole damn thing?

The narrative here should be this: Brad and Angelina are married. It presumably made them happy. And proffering that happiness to everyone is something well worth fighting for. One broken promise by two actors doesn't diminish, sabotage or weaken anything activists have achieved--or foreshadow a bleak future of continued bigotry and silenced chapel bells.

This story first appeared at Ravishly.com, an alternative news+culture women's website.

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