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TGIT Ratings Prove Thursday Really is Shonda Rhimes' Night

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Shonda Rimes owns Thursday nights. ABC marketed Thursday's new lineup as #TGIT, airing Rhimes' three shows, "Grey's Anatomy," "Scandal" and newcomer "How to Get Away with Murder." The grouping paid off.

The Season 11 premiere of "Grey's Anatomy" opened the night at 8:00 p.m. with 9.8 million viewers and a 3.0 rating in the desirable 18-49 demographic. The Season 4 premiere of "Scandal," starting at 9:00 p.m., garnered 11.9 million viewers and a 3.8 rating. But the big surprise was "How to Get Away with Murder," starring Viola Davis as a law professor. The freshman drama captured an outstanding 14 million viewers and the same in-demo rating as "Scandal."

Rhimes' new show -- written and created by Pete Nowalk -- is up 33 percent from last year's "Scandal" season opener, then in the 10:00 p.m. time slot. According to reports, Sept. 25 was ABC's biggest Thursday night in five years. All hail Shondaland.


Sofia Vergara Reveals Feud With 'Modern Family' 'Co-Star'

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Sofia Vergara revealed her on-set feud with one of her “Modern Family” co-stars during an appearance on Thursday’s “Watch What Happens Live.”

Gwyneth Paltrow: 'Some Days I Just Think I Am Failing'

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Gwyneth Paltrow may seem perfect to most people but the actress revealed that her life is definitely far from being so.

People Magazine Tweets, Then Deletes Controversial Viola Davis Comment

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Whoever is behind People magazine's Twitter account has a lot of explaining to do.

The magazine faced harsh scrutiny during its live-tweeting of ABC's premiere lineup Thursday night, which included all three series executive produced by Shonda Rhimes. During "How To Get Away With Murder," rather than celebrating star Viola Davis for her performance as a law school professor, People apparently could only see her as the maid, Aibileen Clark, whom she played in "The Help."

Fans immediately responded to the magazine's tweet, which has since been deleted, for its racist and offensive nature:










But that wasn't the magazine's only misstep Thursday night. People also tweeted out a comment about actress Kerry Washington's hair during the season premiere of "Scandal," which viewers also found offensive.







The Huffington Post has reached out for comment and will update the post if and when the magazine responds.

[h/t: Salon]

A Guide To Not Being Ignorant When Talking About Amazon's 'Transparent'

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Amazon's new original series, "Transparent," will likely generate some important conversations about identity, but starting that discourse requires some knowledge of how we should talk about the transgender -- and larger LGBTQ -- community. The reality is that there is no "right" way, though there are most certainly wrong ones.

The series, which premiered its first 10 episodes on Friday, follows Mort's transition to Maura (Jeffrey Tambor) as she comes out to her family and learns to be comfortable with her identity.

HuffPost Entertainment spoke with Jeffrey Tambor, co-star Gaby Hoffmann and creator Jill Soloway earlier this month about the project. In order to better understand how to discuss topics of gender and sexuality in "Transparent," begin with a glossary (of sorts), along with the cast and creator's thoughts:


Transgender -- "Transgender" or "trans" should be used as an adjective. That means you need a noun for it to modify. Calling someone "a transgender" or "transgendered" would be incorrect usage. Correct sample sentence: "Maura is a trans woman."

Cisgender -- This refers to people who identify with the gender they were assigned at birth.

Sexual Orientation -- Someone's sexual orientation is completely separate from whether they identify as cis- or transgender. It should not be assumed that transitioning means anything about a person's sexuality.

Genderqueer -- Genderqueer refers to an identity that does not follow the male-female binary. It's an umbrella term that refers to a fluid spectrum outside of those labels. Gaby Hoffmann's character from "Transparent," Ali, is an example of a character who is questioning her identity and most closely aligns with this term. Soloway said:

Ali is on a journey about her gender. When I think about where everybody would be in five years, my gut feeling is Ali could potentially be identifying as genderqueer at the end of five seasons.


He vs. She -- Once Mort has come out as Maura, it makes most sense to use feminine pronouns. Although, the best way to decide how to refer to a person is to ask in a respectful way which pronouns they prefer.

Gender Neutral Pronouns or Non-Binary/Non-Gendered Pronouns -- "They" or "them" are gender neutral pronouns that you can use if you're not sure whether masculine or feminine ones are preferred. Some trans people prefer other pronouns like "ze," "hir," "v" or even "it." Again, respectfully asking someone what term they use and prefer you to use is the best course of action.

Transitioning -- "Transition" refers to the process, either medically or socially. It is not defined by surgery or any specific method. As Jill Soloway told HuffPost Entertainment about what she learned while making the show:

That a lot of people ask about surgery first. They want to know about Maura, when is she going to get “the” surgery, as if there’s "a" surgery or one surgery that matters. I learned that there are hundreds and hundreds of ways of being trans.


Surgery -- Surgery can be part of transitioning, but focusing on specific body parts loses sight of the reality of the trans experience. Or as Hoffmann so helpfully put it:

Everybody is so obsessed with other people’s pussies and dicks and what they do with theirs. I hope [the show] just torpedoes us further into the future where these kinds of questions aren’t necessary.


Plurality -- It's important to remember that "Transparent" as a television series is not meant to define a universal trans experience as a whole, but one experience in particular. As Soloway said:

It’s not meant to represent every trans person. It’s meant to represent somebody who’s very, very early in their transition. I really look forward to trans people watching the show and giving it a chance to all that is transparent.


The first full season of "Transparent" is now available on Amazon Prime.

Enrique Iglesias Is Not Saying No To Duet With Legendary Father

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NEW YORK -- The darkened inside of Madison Square Garden lit up like a star-filled night sky on Thursday with the white glow of thousands of cell phones slowly swaying to the soft vocals of Enrique Iglesias' pop ballad "Hero."

It was an evening to remember for the Spanish superstar's fans -- especially "Joe from Brooklyn," a slightly flustered member of the audience whom Iglesias chose for an impromptu duet. Iglesias, 39, spoke to reporters before his set, sharing his thoughts on Pitbull, the nostalgia of being back at the Garden and the possibility of recording a song with his father, the legendary Julio Iglesias.

enrique iglesias hero

Nearly 20 years into his music career, and coming off a phenomenal year on the charts with hits like "Loco" and "Bailando" (the former with Romeo Santos, and the latter featuring Descemer Bueno and Gente de Zona), Iglesias said there was something "special" and "nostalgic" about performing at Madison Square Garden.

"It's the most famous arena in the world. You always get more nervous," said Iglesias, who first performed at the iconic venue in 1998. "At the same time, this morning I was thinking, and I told myself, 'You know, you have to have fun.' That's what's important. If you don't have a good time onstage, people are going to notice."

The day before, Iglesias had learned that he'd been nominated for five Latin Grammys.

"I woke up and I had an email congratulating me," Iglesias said of hearing the news on Wednesday. "The Latin Grammys are a great honor. Unfortunately this year, for now, we have a concert in Europe planned [that night] ... I couldn't have imagined that we would be nominated."

"Bailando" has received four Latin Grammy nominations, including record of the year, song of the year, best urban performance and best urban song. When Iglesias was asked whether it was true that the wildly successful single had not been a favorite of his when he originally recorded it, the star clarified that nothing could be further from the truth.

"That's incorrect," Iglesias told reporters Thursday. "'Bailando' is a song that Descemer Bueno and I wrote around two years ago, but what happened was that it was as a demo. Descemer left for Cuba and later came back to Miami and recorded it with Gente de Zona, and everything started there."

Iglesias is currently touring in support of his latest album, "Sex And Love." The tour includes the star power of Miami rapper Pitbull, a guest on the album, as well as the up-and-coming Colombian reggaeton artist J Balvin.

It's not the first time Pitbull, aka "Mr. Worldwide" (and formerly "Mr. 305"), has hit the road with Iglesias, who says the two are intimate friends offstage.

"I haven't seen him naked yet," Iglesias joked. "But going on tour with Pitbull, [and] we've done so many tours together, is a pleasure ... We get along stupendously well and I think we're very clear on things. We know very well what we want and how we want to do it."

Iglesias began his set on Thursday with an energetic performance of "I'm A Freak" and worked his way through hits like "Bailamos," "El Perdedor," "Hero" and "Loco." For the finale, the singer was joined onstage by the Cuban group Gente De Zona and Descemer Bueno for the English-language version of "Bailamos." Afterward, Pitbull and Iglesias closed off the night with "I Like It."

enrique iglesias
Enrique Iglesias performing with Gente De Zona and Descemer Bueno at Madison Square Garden.

One of the highlights of the evening was a candid duet with a fan from Brooklyn who gave his name as Joe. Iglesias made his way toward the back of the arena, saying that as a young kid he wondered why artists never tried to approach the fans all the way in the back during concerts. He then chose Joe, a heavyset fan with a Van Dyke beard, to sing with him.

After Iglesias made sure the Brooklynite wasn't driving home later, the two clinked glasses and Iglesias told the crowd he wanted to cover the Ben E. King classic "Stand By Me."

"My parents had just gotten divorced, and this is the song that got me through it," the star told fans, before turning to Joe for help.

A hesitant Joe began to sing along with Iglesias, until slowly the star left Joe alone on center stage. But nerves didn't get the best of the fan, who took the mic and continued to sing solo in a deep voice that carried well.

Fans cheered for the pair, but many had likely been hoping for a different kind of duet. For years, Iglesias has been expected to collaborate with his father, the legendary crooner Julio Iglesias.

Last year, Julio told People en Español that the two would probably "never" sing together, because a duet with his son would be "too commercial." Enrique, however, wasn't so quick to write off the possibility.

"For me, a duet with my father would something truly special," Iglesias said on Thursday. "But also, I'd try to treat it the same way I treat all my collaborations that I do, and that's by focusing primarily on the song. I think in the [end] what people, the public and my fans deserve are good songs. Not just because you have two artists that are popular, or two artists that have had success in their genres, are you going to record a song. So what's important for me would be the song."

Iglesias and Pitbull will close out the week in New Jersey and Boston. The United States leg of the tour will end on October 28 in Orlando, Florida. On November 13, Iglesias will appear in Barcelona, Spain to kick off a European tour.

Bryan Cranston Of 'Breaking Bad' Fulfills Terminally Ill Fan's Wish, Plays Best Guy Ever In Real Life

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Bryan Cranston just brought a lot of joy to this superfan who is battling cancer.

Brad Joyner, 19, of Mebane, North Carolina, has glioblastoma, a form of terminal brain cancer, ABC 11 reported. While the disease's survival rates are low, the recent high school grad isn't giving up hope.

"This cancer is nasty with a low rate of survival. But I have a strong faith and wanted to really live. So my mom and I made a 'living list,'" Joyner told Buzzfeed.




Joyner, a huge "Breaking Bad" fan, included meeting Cranston, the star of the show, as one of the big items on his list. Last weekend, his dream came true when the actor Skyped with Joyner for 30 minutes.

The excitement didn't stop there though -- Cranston also surprised the superfan by ordering an ice cream truck in his name, and all of Joyner's neighbors chowed down on the sweet treat, according to his mom's Facebook page.






"He is freaking awesome!" Joyner told Buzzfeed of Cranston. "I asked him if he had a living list what would he do. He is an adventure seeker who is all about the experience of living."

Joyner had been trying to meet the actor for some time, and had an active social media campaign, #BreakingBrad, in an attempt to grab Cranston's attention, ABC11 reported. People posted pictures of themselves holding a sign with the hashtag on it, to generate buzz.







The 19-year-old received a great deal of support from the online community, and his mom, Aimee Pettigrew, was eventually able to arrange the meeting with the actor through friends of friends. She captured the magical moment that she broke the news to her son, and shared the emotional video on YouTube.



Prior to meeting Cranston, Joyner had already checked two other big goals off -- driving a 1967 Mustang and swimming with sharks.


Watch a snippet of the Skype session between Cranston and Joyner, below:


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Patricia Richardson And Tim Allen Are Having A Mini 'Home Improvement' Reunion

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Does everybody know what time it is? Reunion time!

Entertainment Weekly reports that there will be a mini "Home Improvement" reunion this season on "Last Man Standing" when Patricia Richardson, who played Jill Taylor in the series, guest stars as one of Tim Allen's neighbors.

Richardson will play Helen Potts, a divorced character who likes to do home repairs and is bitter about her ex-husband, a guy who often destroyed things that he tried to fix around their house. (Sound familiar?)

Despite this mini reunion, Richardson previously told TMZ that a major "Home Improvement" get-together isn't going to happen due to the death of Earl Hindman, aka the Taylor's eccentric neighbor Wilson.

The addition of Richardson makes this the third time a main actor from the classic series has appeared on the show. "Home Improvement's" Richard Karn and Jonathan Taylor Thomas have both previously made appearances.

"Last Man Standing" returns Friday, Oct. 3, at 8:00 p.m. ET on ABC.

[h/t EW]

Vincent D'Onofrio Confirms That Robert Downey Jr. Hides Food All Over Movie Sets

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Fans of 2012's blockbuster hit "The Avengers" certainly noticed a quirk throughout the film: Robert Downey Jr. was always eating. Rumor had it that Downey was bringing his own food to set, hiding it and eating during scenes. It provided comic relief, so the film's producers let it be.

In a HuffPost Live interview Friday, Vincent D'Onofrio — set to co-star alongside Downey in the upcoming flick "The Judge" — confirmed that Downey indeed hides food throughout the set. And that's about all he would say.

"Downey does hide food all over set," D'Onofrio told host Marc Lamont Hill. "I'm not going to tell you why. But he does. It makes perfect sense."

"The Judge," which also stars BIlly Bob Thornton and Robert Duvall, hits theaters Oct. 10.

Watch the rest of the clip above, and catch the full HuffPost Live conversation here.

Sign up here for Live Today, HuffPost Live's new morning email that will let you know the newsmakers, celebrities and politicians joining us that day and give you the best clips from the day before!

'Truly Brave' Kids With Cancer Are All Smiles In Music Video From Cyndi Lauper, Sara Bareilles

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One look at the amazing kids in this video, and you'll notice the smiles on their faces long before the fact that they are battling pediatric cancer.

On Thursday, the "Today" show released the video above as part of their Shine a Light series. The video, called "Truly Brave," combines Cyndi Lauper's chart-topper "True Colors" and Sara Bareilles' recent hit "Brave," and spotlights several patients from the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia who are helping the two female artists sing the remix.

Seven years ago, "Today" co-host Hoda Kotb was diagnosed with breast cancer. She knows firsthand the struggles cancer patients go through and more than empathizes with the ones who must do so as children. So to acknowledge the strength of these kids, increase awareness of pediatric cancer and raise money for the American Cancer Society, Kotb created this collaborative project.

Kotb took over the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia to film the video, which shows the kids sneaking out of their rooms and banding together for one of the cutest painting parties we've ever seen -- all the way down to their plastic suits and blue scrub booties.

To donate to pediatric cancer research, use the widget below or visit Kotb's Crowdrise campaign page.






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Ali MacGraw: All My Marriages Ended In Divorce For The Same Reason (VIDEO)

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Ali MacGraw is no stranger to marriage (or divorce).

In the early 1960s, she married her college sweetheart, Robin Hoen; they divorced after a year and a half. In 1971, on the heels of MacGraw's success in "Love Story," she married legendary producer Robert Evans and gave birth to her only son, Josh. Two years later, MacGraw and Evans broke up after she began a public affair with screen icon Steve McQueen. And, after five tumultuous years together, McGraw and McQueen also divorced, in 1978.

During a conversation with Oprah for "Super Soul Sunday," MacGraw opened up about her three marriages, saying that they all ended for the same reason: She never really said who she was.

"[I thought,] 'If I say that, he's going to leave me,'" MacGraw says.

She's quick to clarify that this sentiment has nothing to do with meanness in her marriages. Rather, it was her belief that her husbands should simply know what she wants and needs without her having to express it.

"It was, 'Why can't you read my mind about what I'd like and what I wouldn't like?'" MacGraw says. "How about saying, 'This doesn't feel right,' or 'That does,' or 'I really would like to ask you if you could do this for me.'"

Because she followed the path of not expressing herself or allowing her true self to show, each relationship fell apart. Her expectation of her husbands, she says, was nothing short of arrogant.

"The arrogance of it just blows my mind. My arrogance," MacGraw admits.

"Expecting them to know what you wanted," Oprah echoes. "I think a lot of relationships go wrong because of that."

Ali MacGraw's full conversation with Oprah airs on "Super Soul Sunday" this Sunday, Sept. 28, on OWN at 11 a.m. ET, during which it also streams live on Oprah.com, Facebook.com/owntv and Facebook.com/supersoulsunday.

Jasmine Guy On The Big Lesson She Learned After Stardom (VIDEO)

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Though most people remember her as Whitley Gilbert, the southern belle on "A Different World," actress Jasmine Guy has had an incredibly versatile career as an artist. A professional dancer and choreographer, Guy got her start performing in New York at Alvin Ailey. She went on to appear in films like Spike Lee's "School Daze," the TV series "Fame," and released her own self-titled R&B album in 1990.

"I kind of looked at life like graduating from high school. Once you did [one thing], you move to the next level -- and that ain't always the case," Guy says in her recent interview for Oprah.com's new web series, "Who Am I."

"My biggest lesson in my life has been learning how to live in between the gigs," she says. “I understand my own fragility, and I don’t take that for granted anymore."

Also in the interview, Guy talks about raising her daughter, Imani, to have her own individuality. "I started to pray, 'God, please just don't let me get in the way of who she is supposed to be,'" Guy says.

Now that Imani is a teenager, things have become all the more complicated. "Actually having another woman mind to talk to and relate to -- and try to get to clean the bathroom -- is a little tricky," she says.

Guy reunites with the cast of "A Different World" on "Oprah: Where Are They Now?" airing Sunday, October 5 at 9 p.m. ET on OWN. Find more "Who Am I" videos on Oprah.com.




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9 Things You Need To Know About 'Gone Girl' Right Now

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The following contains some spoilers about "Gone Girl."

David Fincher's "Gone Girl" kicked off the 52nd annual New York Film Festival on Friday night with a lot of fanfare and a surfeit of positive reactions on Twitter. Starring Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike as Nick and Amy Dunne, a married couple hiding secrets and lies from each other and themselves, "Gone Girl" is a thrilling combination of pulpy noir tropes and wicked black comedy. Affleck and Pike are powerhouses onscreen, and the film's supporting cast (especially Tyler Perry, Carrie Coon, Kim Dickens and Neil Patrick Harris) are exceptional as well. In short, this is one of the year's truly great films, a conversation starter that doubles as perfect Friday night entertainment. Following the film's New York Film Festival press screening, Fincher, Affleck, Pike, Perry, Harris and author and screenwriter Gillian Flynn participated in a press conference about their feature. Highlights from the 30-minute Q&A session are below.

1. Don't Expect To See Everything You Loved In The Book Onscreen

gone girl gillian flynn

During the last nine months, much of the discussion around "Gone Girl" focused on its ending.

In January, Flynn (pictured above) told Entertainment Weekly that things were tweaked and Affleck was "shocked" by the screenplay. "He would say, 'This is a whole new third act!'" Flynn recalled.

Flynn later walked back those comments, and early reviews confirmed that the book's ending was retained for the feature film. Which isn't to say the "Gone Girl" denouement matches the final pages of the novel beat for beat. Flynn lost some key plot turns in the transition to screen, leading to a more streamlined conclusion that still manages to retain the book's true intentions.

"For me, I realized the important thing was to not be slavishly devoted to exactly every plot line, but to ultimately make sure it felt like the book," Flynn said during the press conference. "I was very concerned with [keeping] the tone and the dark heart of it and to not turn it into a whodunit."

Added Affleck: "What was very interesting was the book asked very hard questions about marriage and relationships. It didn't want to gloss over what we don't like to look at in others and ourselves. Sometimes you find out ugly things when you ask hard questions. That's why they're hard. [...] We wanted to give truth to Gillian's really dark look at marriage and David's subversive take on the dark look at marriage."

2. But Nick & Amy's Cat Actually Has Some Important Significance

gone girl ben affleck

Characters such as Nick's parents are short-changed in the film version of "Gone Girl," but not the Dunne's cat. The house pet watches silently as the couple's marriage collapses in on itself.

"There's a screenplay book called 'Save the Cat.' It's all about making your character likable," Flynn said. "In the first 10 minutes he should do something that makes you like him. I enjoyed that in the first 10 minutes he literally saves the cat."

"And yet you still don't like him," Affleck was quick to respond.

"I liked him," Flynn said. "I love that he's so devoted to his cat."

Affleck noted that the cat was a tough customer during the five days it was on set ("half-dead" is how he described the animal). But Pike joked that she, or rather Amy, won the cat over by making crepes.

"Which I don't actually like," Flynn said about the food preparation scene. "I feel like Amy is playing Cool Girl again at that point by letting him up on the counter."

3. David Fincher Is "Not Just A Demon"

gone girl david fincher

David Fincher has a reputation for being hard on actors -- just ask Jake Gyllenhaal -- but Affleck said it was a dream to work with the iconic filmmaker.

"I would have done the phone book with David, so you can imagine my relief when I read 'Gone Girl' and it wasn't just an alphabetical list of names," Affleck joked to some laughter from the crowd (there should have been more, it was funny). "It had a story and stuff."

This is the first film Affleck has made with Fincher, but don't expect it to be the last.

"I would do it again and again and again, a million times," he said of working with Fincher. "It was a joy. David, despite his reputation, is a very funny and nice guy. Not just a demon. That's the pull quote."

4. And His Desire For Many Takes Sounds Really Reasonable

david fincher gone girl

As for Fincher's oft-discussed desire for multiple takes from his performers, the director had a perfectly good explanation for what it accomplishes:

I always feel it's a silly thing to talk about: what you do to actors. I don't think you ever enter into the shepherding of something that's this expensive and complicated without letting them know upfront that we're all doing this together. The pressure on the set is there before the actors show up, so everything is done. There's no re-lighting within the take. It's how many bites of apple we give the people who are perfect for the part. To make it more concise, more human, less presentational. I feel like this thing is ... inflicted. But we're doing this together. We have to work as a ballet company. [...] Everyone has to make it sing, and then you can get a lot of data across to the audience in a short period of time.


5. Men & Women View Nick In Different Ways

gone girl

"Gone Girl" is the kind of divisive movie people will debate about long after it leaves theaters. (This might be the closest we get to "The Wolf of Wall Street" in 2014, at least in terms of discussion and outrage.) According to Affleck, he's already seen the discourse play out during his press obligations.

"Really what I found is that women and men have a very different reaction to this character," he said. "Most of the women journalists go, 'What was it like playing a dick?' Most of the men just go, '... Yeah.'"

6. And Amy Is A Lot More Complicated Than You Might Think

gone girl

Amy, too, is quite divisive, which is exactly how Flynn hoped she would come across onscreen.

"I see Amy as someone who knows all the tropes. She's seen the Lifetime movies. She's not afraid to use that to her will," Flynn said. "She's someone who can play any role that she wants, from the Cool Girl who men want to hang around with, to the woman men are afraid of. She's willing to kind of go there. That was what was at the center of Amy. It's basically nothing. It's someone who is made of a bundle of stories pulled together over the years."

According to Pike, who is given one of the trickiest characters in recent memory and pulls it off with an effortless aplomb, playing Amy was a lot of fun because of her multitudes and femininity.

"She's alluring, unpalatable, compelling, confounding. All those things. It goes beyond like or dislike. I understand her and like or dislike doesn't come into it," Pike said. "I'm really interested in the fact that I don't think she could have been a man. The way her brain works is purely female."

Allowing that her comments might be taken by some as negative, Pike added that most "strong female characters" in movies are either given the qualities of a man or are prone to using sex to get their way.

"Amy can do that, but it's not her modus operandi to use sex," Pike said. "It's just one of the things she can try on."

"Basically, she's having it all," Flynn added. "She's a modern woman. Lean in."

7. Rosamund Pike Doesn't Want David Fincher To See Her New Movie

rosamund pike

"Gone Girl" isn't the only movie Rosamund Pike has in theaters this fall. She also stars with David Tennant in "What We Did On Our Holiday." Not that the actress wants Fincher to know.

"The other day I was in London seeing the premiere of a film I did right before this," Pike said. ("What We Did On Our Holiday" had its U.K. premiere on Sept. 22.) "I watched it thinking, 'Oh, God David would hate that. David would have absolutely whipped that out of me.' I think you have pre- and post-Fincher in your work."

8. And It's A Good Thing She Doesn't Have Any Siblings

gone girl

Amy Elliott is an only child in "Gone Girl," and it's a trait Fincher realized was key to his casting process. Fortunately, Pike fit the description.

"It's this hermetically sealed socialization," Fincher said about why it was so important for the actress and character to share the same familial structure. "It's just a different thing."

Added Pike: "Weird kid."

Countered Fincher: "No. Just off."

9. Finally, In An Alternate Universe, This Could Have Been Ben Affleck's "Gone Girl"

gone girl

When asked why he cast Ben Affleck to play Nick Dunne, Fincher joked it was because the actor "was available." Except not really: As Fincher noted, Affleck had to "shut down his movie at Warner Bros. and send all the people he had hired home." That film was "Live By Night," and Affleck is set to direct it for Warner Bros. following his stint as Batman.

It turns out, however, that Affleck could have directed "Gone Girl" too. "He had already read the book because, I guess he didn't want to tell me, but Fox maybe offered it to him," Fincher revealed during the press conference.

In the end, neither that possible offer nor "Live By Night" made a difference when it come to hiring Affleck. Said Fincher: "Just because it's perfect casting, doesn't mean you shouldn't do it."

"Gone Girl" opens nationwide on Oct. 3.

Best Tweets: What Women Said On Twitter This Week

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With fall in full swing and election season just around the corner, Erin Gloria Ryan had a genius ploy to get people to the voting booths: "Everyone would vote if there was free pizza." If there was free pizza, people would be trying to vote twice.

In other news, Kim Kardashian and Kanye West might have some tough competition for the most famous celebrity couple since Chris Martin and Jennifer Lawrence are rumored to be dating. Callie Beusman asked a good question when she tweeted, "Are Chris Martin's kids Team Peeta or Team Gale?" We'd go with Team Peeta but to each their own.

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















































Jimmy Fallon Says What We're All Thinking About The 'People You May Know' Facebook Feature

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During his "Thank You Notes" segment on "The Tonight Show" on Friday, Jimmy Fallon paid homage to possibly the most awkward Facebook feature there is.

"Thank you, 'People You May Know' feature on Facebook," he said, "for being the online equivalent of seeing an old friend in the grocery store and avoiding eye contact."

Other thank you note recipients included Dr. Dre, Attorney General Eric Holder, and dumplings, "for tasting way better than they sound."

Watch the full clip above.

Reese Witherspoon Was Red Hot At The 'Gone Girl' Premiere

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She may not be in the film, but Reese Witherspoon was the star of the night at the "Gone Girl" premiere in New York on Friday.

Witherspoon, who produced "Gone Girl," wowed on the red carpet in a form-fitting red gown:

reese witherspoon

In a recent interview with Vanity Fair, the 38-year-old actress opened up about why she felt compelled to work behind the scenes for the film:

“A couple of years ago I started looking at the scripts that were coming in, just through the normal Hollywood pipeline, and I was sort of dissatisfied with the parts for women," the actress said.

"And I thought, if I don’t get busy trying to produce things –- for myself, for other women –- who’s gonna do it?”

John Mayer's Yearbook Photo Is Too Cute

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John Mayer recently posted an adorable throwback picture of himself as a 17-year-old high school student on Instagram.

Now That We've Seen 'Gone Girl,' Does It Live Up To Expectations? Let's Discuss

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On Friday, the New York Film Festival screened the world premiere of "Gone Girl," David Fincher's adaptation of Gillian Flynn's best-seller. Starring Ben Affleck as Nick Dunne and Rosamund Pike as Amy, his wife who goes missing, all eyes are on how the film lives up to the celebrated novel. We've already confirmed that the ending isn't as altered as previously imagined, but there is so much more to unpack within the 149-minute fever dream. HuffPost Entertainment editors Matthew Jacobs and Erin Whitney attended the screening and were left with more than enough to consider about "cool girls," manipulative pregnancies and anniversary gifts gone awry. (Warning: Spoilers ahead for anyone who hasn't read the book.)

gone girl


Jacobs: "Gone Girl" is arguably fall's most anticipated movie, and I can now say that it lived up to all of my expectations. It's been a year and a half since I read the novel, so I was more concerned with the film capturing the right tone than adhering to certain plot beats. With that in mind, Fincher has crafted an impeccable treatment of Flynn's story. It pulsates (literally, at times, thanks to Trent Reznor's threatening score) with the mystique of a macabre character study and the starkness of a rote crime procedural -- even though it doesn't feel rote at all.

With adaptations of novels as layered as this one, structure is often the first thing that suffers. Instead of establishing a film that can stand alone, they feel like the result of a checklist that ensured the right milestones from the book are satisfied. That's what I worried would happen to "Gone Girl," with its dual-narrator structure and heavy relationship with characters' pasts. But Flynn does smart things with the script -- the dialogue rarely feels expositional, even though these characters must do a lot of explaining throughout. And Ben Affleck and Rosamund Pike carry the film; Affleck with a detached rage and Pike with a calculated chill. I am thoroughly impressed, even if the final 10 minutes could be a bit more concentrated. You read the novel more recently, though, Erin. Did the movie hold up for you?

Whitney: I hate to admit it, but I can't deny the overwhelming disappointment I felt throughout the film. Full disclosure: I had literally just finished reading Flynn's novel days ago and completely loved every terrifying, brilliant page of it. I think that when you truly love a book that much, you're going to find yourself let down by any visual adaptation to some degree, and that's what happened for me. First though, let me state that Fincher's adaptation is a good movie with some of the best casting and performances I've seen all year. Whether you read the book or not, there is still something enjoyable and rewarding to take away from the film. But then again, I'm a perfectionist and a harsh critic, and when something I love in one form isn't translated as well in another, I feel cheated.

For me, Fincher's film played like a fun, entertaining recap of Flynn's novel, harvesting the best gems of the story that make it exciting and thrilling. Yet the film doesn't divulge the dark, twisted complexities beneath the surface, the nuances of Amy's psychopathy, Nick's sickened resentment and their ultimate addiction to destroying one another. Flynn's ability to continually flip the reader's sympathy and hatred for her characters doesn't translate as strongly to the screen, which is unfortunate since that is truly the defining achievement of her original story. In the film we aren't given strong reason to despise Amy wholly nor understand the depth of her passionate insanity -- instead of mutilating herself on the bathroom floor, she calmly drains her blood via a needle and tube while reading a book, and her murderous act in the film's latter stages is played as triumphant. Some of these moments are even comical in the film, which overall had more humor than I felt suited the story, trashy fun humor that read like an inside joke. I wanted "Gone Girl" to be darker and dirtier, in the vein of "Seven," but it felt lighter and too fun. Did this element of humor stand out to you, Matt, as much as it did to me?

Jacobs: I wasn't that disenchanted by the humor, but I do agree there's an "inside joke" sentiment running throughout the movie. Flynn seems to be writing for the people who read her book, which, in all fairness, will probably comprise a good bulk of the moviegoers who catch "Gone Girl" in theaters. She trims the edges of her story to fit a 2.5-hour format. Without the finesses of the character internalizations one can only glean from the more limitless pages of a novel, the movie does come with a whiff of melodrama. But sandwiching those hysterics between humor, for me, was a necessary respite, mostly because it doesn't distract from the more wrenching moments, like when Amy bludgeons herself with a hammer or when another character collapses upon her in a crimson deluge of blood. I think this movie captures a sense of cold calculation, which might mean, at times, truncating the characters' more inner workings in favor of emphasizing how astute their instabilities are.

What doesn't work for me, on a critical level -- and I very much understand this m.o. among critics and fans -- is when a movie like this is judged largely in comparison to the rest of the director's cannon. Fincher is working from a source material that commands a different atmosphere (and certainly a different interest level) than "Seven" or "Fight Club" or "The Social Network." Sure, "Gone Girl" may be a lot noisier than "Zodiac" and more restrained than "The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo," but I'm more interested in the way Fincher caters to the many people who want an accessible, big-budget thriller as well as those who can appreciate its stylistic nuances. I'm impressed, if not unsurprised, that Fincher has accomplished that.

Whitney: I have to agree with you that I'm definitely in the camp of not wanting to compare a director's latest work to his oeuvre. I strive to avoid succumbing to that temptation, but with someone like Fincher I find that even harder to do, and lately I've been craving more of the grittiness of his earlier work.

And I can definitely understand the decision to sacrifice the subtleties and latent darkness of the characters as a means to tell a more cohesive story. Sacrifices must be made somewhere, and I think Flynn made apt choices with her screenplay. Yet still, I don't think a story as rich and densely layered as "Gone Girl" is most suitable for a big-screen adaptation, mainly due to the time constraints. I can't help but wonder what it would look like as a miniseries. The era of the cinematic anthology TV series is in full swing right now, with FX's "Fargo" and HBO's "True Detective" proving that more can be accomplished with a 10-hour movie format broken up into episodes than with a roughly three-hour feature. While I'm not a fan of remakes, I do sort of hope that one day Fincher or another filmmaker will take "Gone Girl" down the anthology route so all of its delicious, psychotic and haunting fragments can be hashed out. Till then we have the film, and it is good and it does the job fine. It's like enjoying an incredible dish at a restaurant then going home and attempting to recreate it -- the overall flavor is there, but something's still missing. Or maybe I just need some distance from the book to better appreciate the film as a singular entity.

Jacobs: I love that thought, Erin. "Gone Girl" would have made a stellar miniseries. In that format, it really could have employed Amy's and Nick's bifurcated points of view in a more substantial way than the movie can. But since that's not what we're left with, I'd call "Gone Girl" a resounding success.

"Gone Girl" opens in theaters on Friday, Oct. 3.

This Reporter's Interview With Kristen Wiig And Bill Hader Is Hilariously Awkward

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This reporter probably should've seen "The Skeleton Twins" before he interviewed the film's stars, Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader. But if he had, we wouldn't have this hilariously awkward moment.

News anchor Chris Parente starts off his interview with Hader and Wigg by asking them to describe the film's plot. Then, seemingly out of nowhere, Parente asks Wiig, "Kristen, I am thinking, on this program, of doing the news completely full-frontal, completely nude. Do you recommend that? Do you have advice for going nude?"

Wiig, like everyone else, was completely thrown off by the question: "Um, do I have advice for going nude?"

When Parente says, "You do it in the film!" Wiig quickly catches onto his mistake.

"Not this movie. That's a different movie," Wiig clarifies, referring to her nude scene in "Welcome To Me."

The "Bridesmaids" actress ended up saving the totally awkward moment, listing off ridiculous plot twists that never actually happen in "The Skeleton Twins." Luckily, Parente was interviewing two actors with a sense of humor.

Watch the painfully awkward clip here:



[h/t E! News]

George Clooney Marries Amal Alamuddin In Italy

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Many congratulations go out to Hollywood's erstwhile most eligible bachelor!

George Clooney married Amal Alamuddin in Venice, Italy, on Saturday, Clooney's rep confirmed to the Associated Press.

People reports that the couple exchanged vows at the Aman Canal Grande luxury resort, where they were married by Walter Veltroni, the former mayor of Rome.

The star-studded ceremony was attended by Matt Damon, John Krasinski, Emily Blunt, Bill Murray, Anna Wintour, Bono and others.

Alamuddin, 36, was beaming when she arrived in Milan earlier this week, walking through the airport with a suitcase, a large box and a Stella McCartney garment bag.

Clooney, 53, shared wedding details while accepting a Humanitarian Award at Celebrity Fight Night in Tuscany earlier this month. "I met my lovely bride-to-be here in Italy, whom I will be marrying, in a couple of weeks, in Venice, of all places," he said. Clooney then proclaimed his love for Alamuddin: "I would just like to say to my bride-to-be, Amal, that I love you very much and I can't wait to be your husband."

This is the first marriage for attorney and activist Alamuddin and the second for Clooney, who was married to actress Talia Balsam from 1989 to 1993. He previously had long-term relationships with former model Sarah Larson, Italian actress Elisabetta Canalis and, most recently, Stacy Keibler, who tied the knot herself in March and welcomed a daughter in August.

Here's to George and Amal!
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