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Key And Peele Dish On Obama's Black Handshake

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Keegan-Michael Key and Jordan Peele dropped by HuffPost Live on Friday, and we couldn't let them go without some discussion of Barack Obama.

The president -- who has provided a wealth of material for the comedy duo -- was the subject of a recent "Key & Peele" sketch examining the difference between the way Obama greets white and black visitors. The idea stemmed from what Key and Peele have actually seen themselves, they told HuffPost Live's Ricky Camilleri on Friday.

"We witnessed that happen when we met him," Key said of Obama's greetings.

Key and Peele also have ideas for what Obama might do after he leaves the Oval Office, and it includes an arena tour.

Check out the presidential chatter in the video 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!

'Hollywood Game Night' Just Might Be The New 'Celebrity Jeopardy!' Of 'SNL'

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Last night, the "Saturday Night Live" cast figured out the most effective way to assemble all of their favorite celebrity impressions into a single sketch with a spoof of "Hollywood Game Night." Kate McKinnon was on point with her Jane Lynch in the role of the flabbergasted host. Kristen Wiig turned out an over-the top Kathie Lee Gifford, and Beck Bennett did a Nick Offerman impersonation rivaled only by Nick Offerman himself. Watch the absurdly stupid antics alla "Celebrity Jeopardy!" below.


Hozier's 'SNL' Performance Of 'Take Me To Church' Brings On The Soul

John Cleese Says What You Were Thinking About Taylor Swift's Cat

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If you've ever looked at Taylor Swift's cat and thought "What is wrong with that thing?" then maybe you are John Cleese. On "The Graham Norton" show, the audience swooned over a photo of Olivia Benson (because probably there was a cue card that told them to make an "ooh" sound), but Cleese stopped to say what everyone at home was really thinking.

"How did it have the accident?" he asked Swift. "Is that a proper cat? Or is it damaged irreparably? That's the weirdest cat I've ever seen in my life.” She was not amused.



Cleese then went on to compare cats to women, and things got less funny and kind of weird. He'll regret all of this when Taylor releases her new song about him: "The Purrfect Revenge."

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H/T Vanity Fair

'Gone Girl' Narrowly Beats Four Newcomers To Top Box Office For Second Weekend

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — Four new films couldn't catch "Gone Girl" at theaters this weekend.

The Fox thriller starring Ben Affleck as a man whose wife goes missing is poised to top the box office for a second week with $26.8 million in ticket sales, according to studio estimates Sunday. Also starring Rosamund Pike, "Gone Girl" is based on the best-selling novel by Gillian Flynn, who adapted her book for the screen.

"There's a mystery that's surrounding this movie," said Paul Dergarabedian, senior media analyst for box-office tracker Rentrak. "To have an adult drama like this hold up so well for two weekends in a row is really unusual."

Universal's "Dracula Untold" opened in second place with $23.4 million. The Disney family romp, "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day," debuted in third with $19.1 million.

Two Warner Bros. films round out the top five. The horror "Annabelle" claimed fourth place in its second week of release with $16.3 million, followed by the Robert Downey Jr.-Robert Duvall drama, "The Judge," which debuted with $13.3 million.

Lionsgate's erotic thriller "Addicted" opened in seventh place with $7.6 million.

The diversity of choices at theaters is making for robust post-summer ticket sales, Dergarabedian said: "Were making up a lot of ground after a summer season that was down 15 percent."

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Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. Where available, the latest international numbers are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Gone Girl," $26.8 million ($27 million international).

2. "Dracula Untold," $23.4 million ($33.9 million international).

3. "Alexander and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Day," $19.1 million ($2.8 million international).

4. "Annabelle," $16.3 million ($27 million international).

5. "The Judge," $13.3 million ($1.6 million international).

6. "The Equalizer," $9.7 million ($11.5 million international).

7. "Addicted," $7.6 million.

8. "The Maze Runner," $7.5 million ($13.7 million international).

9. "The Boxtrolls," $6.6 million ($3.6 million international).

10. "Meet the Mormons," $2.9 million.

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Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada), according to Rentrak:

1. "Dracula Untold," $33.9 million.

2. "Guardians of the Galaxy," $28 million.

3. (tie) "Gone Girl," $27 million.

(tie) "Annabelle," $27 million.

1. "The Maze Runner," $13.7 million.

2. "Breakup Buddies," $13 million.

3. "The Equalizer," $11.5 million.

4. (tie) "One Direction: Where We Are," $5 million.

(tie) "My Love, My Bride," $5 million.

1. "Bang Bang," $4.7 million.

2. "The Boxtrolls," $3.6 million.

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Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by 21st Century Fox; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

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

Larry David Responds To Jennifer Lawrence's Declaration Of Love

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In a recent profile in Vanity Fair, Jennifer Lawrence confessed her love for "Curb Your Enthusiasm" creator and star Larry David.

"I'm in love with him, and I have been for a really long time," the 24-year-old actress said. "I worship Woody Allen, but I don't feel it below the belt the way I do for Larry David."

At the New Yorker Festival on Saturday, David had the chance to respond to the young star's crush, saying the age difference would get in the way.

"Smart kid," David, 67, said. "It's a shame that I'm about 40 years older than she is." After hearing the "below the belt" part of the quote, David added: "Maybe she's referring to her knees."

"I don't think I could do it," he continued. "On one hand, it's very flattering and on another hand, it's kind of a shame -- in terms of timing. I'd have fun watching the reality show of it, though."

Well, it's settled: Lawrence will have to turn her attention elsewhere. Although the star has recently been linked to Chris Martin, so it's doubtful she'd have followed through on the declaration, anyway.

Conor Oberst's Upside Down Mountain in Los Angeles

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On May 19th of this year, the prolific songwriter Conor Oberst released his newest album, Upside Down Mountain, on Nonesuch Records. Upside Down Mountain is Oberst's latest solo venture and was recorded in Los Angeles, Omaha, and Nashville and was produced by Los Angeles local Jonathan Wilson. After finishing the first leg of his tour with backing band Dawes, Oberst embarked on a West Coast tour that included a new backing band and three very special shows in Los Angeles.

[All words and photographs by Lindsey Best]

On October 5th, Oberst and the legendary American songwriter John Prine played a joint headlining date at the Greek Theatre. Not only was this a special occasion for the audience, but both songwriters boasted about how happy they were to be sharing the stage with one another, and even treated the crowd to several collaborations throughout the night.

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On October 7th, Oberst and his band stopped at the GRAMMY Museum-- a semi-hidden Los Angeles treasure that encompasses both a museum that features different displays that share a part of music history, as well as a small, beautiful theatre where they conduct interviews and performances. All of the interviews and performances are documented and archived and available for future viewing pleasure.

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The following night, the staple Los Angeles radio station KCRW held a private event at Apogee Studios where Oberst and his band played their final Los Angeles date for this leg of their tour. Apogee Studios is an incredibly intimate and beautiful space that is home to legendary producer Bob Clearmountain, and features enough room for just the right amount of people to comfortably enjoy an intimate performance. Located in Santa Monica and with a track record of recording artists that run deeply across genres, you would be hard pressed to find a more desirable location to see an intimate performance. As with all of KCRW's Apogee Sessions, this performance was recorded and will air on Morning Becomes Eclectic on October 29th.

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Kendall And Kylie Jenner Make Time Magazine's 25 Most Influential Teens List

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It's official. Kylie and Kendall Jenner are very influential, according to Time magazine.

The reality stars made the magazine's 2014 list of the 25 Most Influential Teens, winning a spot alongside some very impressive names, including first daughters Sasha and Malia Obama, Nobel Peace Prize-winner Malala Yousafzai and all-around wunderkind Tavi Gevinson.

So what makes Kylie, 17, and Kendall, 18, influential? Well, it has something to do with their (and their mother's) quest for total world domination:

Together, the 'Keeping Up With the Kardashians' co-stars hosted red-carpet events, released clothing and nail polish lines and even published a dystopian young-adult novel this past summer (though yes, they had some help). But they’ve had solo success too -- Kendall with modeling (she’s walked the runway for designers like Marc Jacobs) and Kylie with pseudo-entrepreneurship (she’s launching a line of hair extensions and hopes to get into acting). Next up: a multimillion-dollar mobile game?


What a world we live in.

To see the full list, head over to Time.


8 Things You Didn't Know About Zombie Movies

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Brains. Brains. Put this trivia in your brains.

From their beginnings in Caribbean voodoo culture to a Brad Pitt blockbuster, the zombie has been reanimated many times over in the last couple centuries. Animal entrails have been eaten by eager extras, countless kids have been frightened out of their minds and Bill Murray even got to play a zombie.

With the updated and fully revised release of author and journalist Jamie Russell's "Book of the Dead: The Complete History of Zombie Cinema," HuffPost Entertainment spoke to Russell to learn a bit more about the phenomenon that's become ubiquitous in American culture in recent years.

When he began the first edition of this book, as Russell put it, "people weren't interested in zombies at all." He said it took him by complete surprise. At times his wife even threatened to turn him into a zombie. But now the zombie is unavoidable. Talking about how the zombie can serve as a "kind of a metaphor for the death we all face," Russell said: "No matter how hard you try to run away, it's always going to get you." In contemporary America, especially as Halloween quickly approaches, there's no escaping this monster.

Here are eight things you didn't know about zombie movies.

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1. The idea of zombies comes from Haitian voodoo and were popularized by a book called "The Magic Island."

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The word "zombie" first made its way into The Oxford English Dictionary in 1819, but as Russell explains in "Book of the Dead," the first full introduction of "zombies" into the English-speaking world was an 1889 article in a Harper's Magazine called "The Country of the Comers-Back" by a journalist named Lafcadio Hearn. While learning the local customs of the Caribbean, Hearn came across a legend of "corps cadavres" which means "walking dead." Unfortunately, Hearn was unable to figure out exactly what these zombies were, a mystery that would eventually be solved by an American author named William Seabrook.

"The Magic Island" was written by Seabrook and was released in 1929. Seabrook discovered that the fear of "zombies" was tied to the practices of voodoo where it is possible for their idea of a soul to be removed and replaced by a god or sorcerer. As voodoo was deeply connected with the forced work and slavery of the people of the Caribbean, the main fear was that it'd be possible, even after death, for a sorcerer to reanimate your corpse to be an obedient drone, capable of continuing to work in the fields. Richer Haitian families would bury their dead in more secure tombs to eliminate the risk of the bodies being stolen and reanimated. They were not afraid of a zombie attack, they were afraid of becoming a zombie.

Russell told HuffPost: "From my point of view, as a kind of movie historian and anthropologist, the ground zero for the zombie really is 'The Magic Island' and the publication of that is really what brought the zombie into American popular culture ... This is certainly the arrival of the zombie myth in all its glory. The idea of dead men walking. The idea of dead men working in the cane fields."

Seabrook actually met "zombies" as a Haitian famer named Polynice introduced him to three workers who seemed "unnatural and strange" and "plodding like brutes, like automatons." Although Seabrook did not think they were actually the reanimated dead -- and instead either had a medical condition or were heavily drugged -- he could not fully explain away their existence. As a result, his tales took hold in American imaginations.

Image Left: Amazon. Image Right: WikiCommons.



2. Zombie culture began taking off in the U.S. in the early 20th century, particularly with the film "White Zombie."

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"White Zombie" was released in 1932 and was directed by Victor Halperin. Bela Lugosi, who famously played Dracula the year before in 1931, starred as an evil voodoo master who takes over the body of a young woman.

R: "It was an independent movie, but 'White Zombie' was pretty huge ... 'White Zombie' is really interesting because she's a white zombie, a white woman whose kind of zombified. And she's not actually dead. And it's more a kind of hypnotized state."

In the 1936 sequel, "Revolt of the Zombies," the monster narrative began to adapt into something contemporary audiences are more familiar with.

R: "The followup movie was called 'Revolt of the Zombies' and that was kind of the first time it's not a solitary zombie. That's one of the first movies where it's like, 'Wow this is a big deal.'"

The next few decades brought dozens of mostly forgettable and cheaply made movies. Then George A. Romero's 1968 classic, "Night of the Living Dead," changed everything.

R: "A huge watershed moment in terms of it's the moment where the zombie myth changes, you certainly have the sense of it becoming this global apocalypse happening. Zombies go from being these Haitian slaves, a myth of slavery, into proper cannibals and that is the basis of the modern zombie myth. That they're not just dead but they want to eat you too ... "Revolt of the Zombies" is the first idea this can be a global phenomenon. And that expands in "Night of the Living Dead," the start of zombies as flesh eaters."

Image: WikiCommons.



3. Zombies can be very cheap to create in movies and therefore there's a long history of terrible zombie movies being made. This affects the quality control of the genre.

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Creating a passable "zombie" monster wasn't too expensive as it's fairly easy to convey the idea that someone is a zombie. Low production cost studios would just churn these movies out. As Russell elaborated, "The movies that came out of the Poverty Row studios at that time, 'Voodoo Man' and stuff like that, these were all very cheap things." Compared to other monster movies, zombie movies were relatively easy to make.

R: "The reason why zombies appealed was because you could take actors and slap a bit of makeup on them and all they need to do is stretch their arms out and everybody will believe that they're a zombie. They might not be the most convincing zombies ever, but in terms of the mechanics of the genre, that's all that's really needed. Doesn't require any special effects. Say if you're going to make a werewolf movie, you'd need the transformation of someone turning into a werewolf. With zombies, you don't need to do that. Put some flour on their faces and make them stretch their arms out and lumber around a bit."

Casting a zombie movie was also easier than the other monster movies.

R: "The zombies weren't speaking parts which means you didn't have to pay the actors as much to be monsters ... If you are going to cast a vampire role in those days -- everybody had seen 'Dracula,' so everybody expects Dracula to have a certain menace and presence and have a certain Bela Lugosi role. If you're going to make a Frankenstein, a mad science monster created kind of movie, you want someone who has the soul of Boris Karloff who makes you feel compassion to this monster. With zombies nobody cared. It didn't matter. They were there just to be grasping hands and to grab people and drag them down to the depths. So that was very simple."

This cheapness didn't help the zombie become a "respected" monster and became closely tied to these B movies in the public's mind.

R: "There's no simple way of getting around that, in terms of quality control, the zombie genre really does suck."



4. There's no strong literary history for the genre and therefore the idea of what a zombie is very malleable and can change to reflect the fears of the time.

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Unlike "Dracula" and "Frankenstein," there isn't a clear source material for the zombie genre. Seabrook's work isn't recognized the same way the great monster fiction writers are and simply doesn't hold the same influence.

R: "The fact that there isn't an established literary heritage or canon behind it -- there's no Mary Shelley or Bram Stoker -- means that filmmakers felt like they could write the roles as they went along and no one would mind too much. There was the essential zombie myth of voodoo work. That lasted for a little while, but that quickly fell by the wayside. It didn't take too long for people to change it around and mix it up. By the time you get to Romero, then voodoo isn't really a part of this at all ... Suddenly the whole genre is evolved and it's happened again recently. Zombies used to be the monsters that come out of the graveyard and in the last 15 years or so they stopped being that. They're now metaphors of contagion and plague and viruses ... Most zombies these days aren't even dead, they're plague carriers."

The zombie myth regularly updates and adapts to the times. Whatever we're most deeply afraid of, the zombie can embody with their reanimated bodies.

R: "What's interesting about the zombie myth is just how much it evolves. If you go back to the original Haitian myth, the fear of the zombie isn't so much a fear of death, it's a fear that death might not be a release from slavery. The worst thing as a slave is imagining, 'After my death I might still be reanimated to continue working in the cane fields, that there is no escape.' And that changes once [the myth] comes to America and that idea of the zombie then becoming an image of death itself is something very powerful."

Although the zombie originally started as a fear of eternal slavery, the zombie can constantly update to take on contemporary issues.

R: "It's a very malleable and flexible monster. It's very good at reflecting. Horror is generally very good at reflecting the kind of anxieties and fears of the audience that's watching it at the time. [But] the zombie in particular, as it evolves so much over time, really reflecting different fears in different eras in really interesting ways. So certainly for the original readers of 'The Magic Island' it was very much a fascination in fear about Haiti, this island that america at the time had invaded and was occupying and it was a military occupation. For those early stories it was that. Later it became American race relations in society ... What I love about this monster, is that it is very good barometer of the times in which the movies are being produced."

Image Left: WikiCommons.



5. Due to the always changing idea of what a zombie is, Roger Ebert once witnessed a ton of very young children being dropped off to see "A Night of the Living Dead" by unknowing parents. Needless to say, the kids were terrified.

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For decades creature movies like "Creature from the Black Lagoon" or "Attack of the Crab Monsters" dominated horror cinema which led to a bit of confusion when the zombie changed so radically in 1968, with Romero's "Night of the Living Dead." Russell talked about Roget Ebert's review of a screening of the movie as a funny instance of the public's initial confusion.

R: "Best of all is Roger Ebert's story of watching 'Night of the Living Dead' with a bunch of 7-year-olds at a Saturday matinee. They'd been dropped off while their parents when shopping -- the moms and dads assumed it was just another creature feature movie."

Here's an excerpt from Ebert's article describing the theater immediately following the ending:

The kids in the audience were stunned. There was almost complete silence. The movie had stopped being delightfully scary about halfway through, and had become unexpectedly terrifying. There was a little girl across the aisle from me, maybe nine years old, who was sitting very still in her seat and crying ... I felt real terror in that neighborhood theater last Saturday afternoon. I saw kids who had no resources they could draw upon to protect themselves from the dread and fear they felt.




6. In "Night of the Living Dead," the zombie extras were forced to eat actual animal entrails to make it look more real.

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When talking about random zombie trivia, Russell told of how Romero decided to go to a butcher and get real entrails for his zombie extras to eat.

R: "What I always loved about the Romero movies and in particular "Night of the Living Dead," what always amused me, was that the extras were so keen to be in a movie, they were willing to eat real entrails from the butcher shop. They shipped in this real stuff. The scene that Romero always refers to is the 'Last Supper,' where the young good-looking kids get barbecued in their truck as they're trying to escape from their farmhouse ... Not only do they get eaten, but Romero spends about five minutes of these zombie extras kind of munching down on these animal entrails. [I] always laugh at that a lot."

And apparently this sort of thing isn't too uncommon ...

R: "The entrails thing is funny, I love the idea how keen people are to be in the movies. That they're willing to do that kind of thing. Zombies cinema is full of these kind of cheap and cheerful productions like that. Just throw people together. I think that's a lot of the appeal."



7. Classic zombie director Lucio Fulci would use homeless winos as zombies.

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Continuing the zombie trivia conversation, Russell mentioned that the legendary Lucio Fulci would use the homeless as his extras while directing "The Beyond" and "Zombi 2." As mentioned earlier, zombies films are known for their frugality and Fulci's films were no exceptions. "Cheap to employ and I guess they had the zombie stagger perfected!" Russell said.

As movie reviewer Chris McEneany explained in AVForums:

Quite a few of his ambling zombie-targets, and that eerie assortment of desiccated corpses lying in the wastes of the Beyond, are actually local down-and-outs and homeless people lured in with the cheap promise of a meal and a few quid to get some more booze. You look at them –- they're not acting, are they?


Image Right: Flickr user gritphilm.



8. There's a movie called "Poultrygeist: Night of the Chicken Dead" that takes place in a sort of KFC built above a Native American battle ground.

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This movie came out in 2006 and according to the movie's website, Stephen King called it "hilarious."

"There's an awful lot of bad movies," said Russell. Here's a list of a few other campy and terrible zombie movies Russell mentioned:

  • "There's a great '60s movie called 'The Frozen Dead,' which is basically about Nazi zombies and the Fourth Reich being put into being by these reanimated zombie ghouls who've been kept in cryogenic suspension. Don Andrews plays a scientist whose trying to bring them back, but every time he resurrects them they're kind of falling apart mentally and unable to do very much in the way of recreating Hitler's vision."


  • "If you have five minutes you should Google a trailer for something called 'O.C. Babes and the Slasher of Zombietown.' If you see the trailer then you'll understand. This is a movie that basically most of the zombie action recycles the zombies of "Night of the Living dead." Just reuses the footage which is bizarre.


  • "There's something called 'The Curse of Pirate Death.' Which might be the worst zombie movie I've ever seen. Clearly shot cheaply in the hills of California somewhere. And it's a guy in a kind of jokester pirate outfit that is supposed to be a zombie who has come back for treasure that's been stolen. Basically [the pirate] just spends the movie chasing teens shouting "arghh where's my treasure?" and skewing them on his sword. The only moment of wit in the whole movie is when he discovers a swimming pool in someone's backyard and is really perplexed by it. He's like, 'What strange body of water is this, there's no sharks. This is great.' Then the movie just goes back to him chasing these poor kids around."


  • "There's rat zombie movies. Something called 'Mulberry St,' which is basically set in Manhattan. [The movie is] rats kind of turning people into rat zombie hybrids."


Russell also has a few contemporary deep cut recommendations to watch on Halloween, those being "Pontypool," "The Battery," "The Dead," the remake of "The Crazies" and "REC."

But as Russell admitted about the movies of the zombie genre, "Some are more amazing to read about and talk about than actually watch."

Images: WikiCommons.

The updated version of "Book of the Dead" is out October 14.

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All other images Getty unless otherwise noted.

15 Times Celebrities Crashed Weddings And Stole The Spotlight

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From Bill Nye to Beyonce, check out our favorite famous party crashers.

Tori Spelling Gets Some Marriage Real Talk From Dean McDermott's Ex-Wife

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How's this for some awkward lunchtime conversation?

In a sneak preview of "True Tori's" season two premiere, Tori Spelling gets some advice on her troubled marriage from a very interesting source: Mary Jo Eustace, the woman Dean McDermott was married to when he had an affair with Spelling in 2005.

"When you start a relationship with someone, you don't know the other person they're involved with," Spelling tells her husband's ex-wife over lunch. "You have one story that's painted for you and you made a pretty accurate portrait of him. It all became true in my own relationship. You can say I told you so."

Eustace, who has one son with McDermott, laughs off the suggestion. Although everyone around her thought she'd feel a tinge of satisfaction after hearing McDermott had cheated on Spelling, she ultimately sympathized.

"It's actually really horrible. It's not a great feeling," Eustace admits to Spelling. "[You] have four children. What does it mean at the end of the day? It doesn't make me feel any better."

When Eustace hands Spelling a love letter McDermott had written to her just before the affair rumors began, Spelling can't help but relate.

"It's just hard to think you can tell someone this one day and then months later, it just changes so drastically," Spelling tells Eustace after reading the note.

Spelling and McDermott have put their efforts to repair their marriage front and center for the Lifetime docu-series, "True Tori." The series, which they began filming a few days after McDermott left rehab for sex addiction, kicks off its second season on Oct. 21 on Lifetime.

Watch the video above to hear why Eustace thinks McDermott would have cheated on her even if Spelling hadn't entered the picture -- and to hear the choice word she uses to refer to her ex.

Keep in touch! Check out HuffPost Divorce on Facebook and Twitter. Sign up for our newsletter here.

Reese Witherspoon Opens Up About Her 2013 Disorderly Conduct Arrest

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As an Oscar-winning actress with a pristine image, Reese Witherspoon was one of the last people anyone expected to throw a fit and pull the fame card when her husband, Jim Toth, was pulled over and arrested for DUI in April 2013.

Her refusal to get back in the car after she was repeatedly told to do so by a police officer earned her a disorderly conduct charge, to which she plead no contest and paid a $213 fine.

While the actress already apologized long ago, on Monday, she opened up about the experience at a press conference for her latest film "Wild" at the BFI London Film Festival.



"I think it was a moment where people realized that I wasn't exactly what they thought I was," she told reporters. "I guess maybe we all like to define people by the way the media presents them, and I think that I showed I have a complexity that people didn't know about. It's part of human nature. I made a mistake. We all make mistakes. The best you can do is say sorry and learn from it and move on."

It's not the first time Witherspoon has spoken about the arrest. In May 2013 the actress appeared on "Good Morning America," where she told George Stephanopoulos:

"I saw him arresting my husband and I literally panicked. I said all kinds of crazy things. I told him I was pregnant. I'm not pregnant! I said crazy things. You only hear me laughing because I had no idea what I was talking about and I am so sorry. I was so disrespectful to him. I have police officers in my family. I work with police officers every day. I know better."

H/T The Hollywood Reporter

Sarah Silverman's Equal Pay Video Faces Backlash

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Sarah Silverman's viral video promoting a new campaign to close the wage gap is facing backlash over a premise some claim makes light of gender confirmation surgery and the plight of transgender people -- in a country where they can still be fired in 32 states simply for being trans.

In her video for the The National Women's Law Center's "Equal Payback Project," the comedian aimed to highlight the gender-based wage disparity by proposing a facetious way to close the gap for herself: having surgery to add a penis to her body. "I'm becoming a dude," Silverman says.



Among those to speak out against the video are LGBT organizations including The Jim Collins Foundation, a non-profit that funds gender-confirming surgeries for transgender people. The Foundation released a statement calling for the removal of the video:

We call upon NWLC to take down the video immediately. It was created at the expense of the transgender community, an already vulnerable, often misunderstood, and targeted population. And it does more than leave transgender women and men out from an important conversation on employment discrimination — it is dehumanizing and puts a stamp of approval on jokes about transgender people’s lives.


Sarah Kate Ellis, the President and CEO of the Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, also released a statement Thursday saying the video "missed the mark."

"I certainly get the video’s humor," Ellis wrote, "and I think we can all agree it’s well intended. But for transgender people and allies like me, it's difficult to watch without thinking about the dire employment situation trans people face in the workplace."

The video also prompted criticism on Twitter:







In response to the controversy, the National Women's Law Center released a statement last Thursday from Co-President Marcia D. Greenberger, who said it wasn't the organization's intent to gloss over trans discrimination:

The Equal Payback Project uses Silverman’s brand of absurd humor to draw attention to this ludicrous situation. It was not our intent to make light of the serious issues transgender people face. We will share statistics about job discrimination faced by transgender people as part of the Equal Payback Project. And we commit to using some of the resources raised by this project to bring awareness to the discrimination faced by transgender women and men.


Silverman also addressed the video last week, claiming the video was "transignorant" rather than transphobic.

If I literally got a sex change I would indeed find the work force far less friendly. The video wasn't transphobic it was transignorant - never crossed my mind. But to my *unintentional* credit - people are talking about it & so begins awareness. Please don't punish this cause because of my video. I certainly don't only fight for causes that concern or benefit me and I expect the same of the vital trans community.


Her statement prompted a fresh barrage of criticism on social media:










The Man Who Canceled 'Freaks And Geeks' Defended His Decision To Seth Rogen At 'SNL'

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Seth Rogen got the chance this weekend to do what many "Freaks and Geeks" fans have wanted to do for years: confront the person responsible for its unjust cancellation and ask what the hell happened.

When Rogen and his wife, Lauren Miller, joined HuffPost Live on Monday to discuss their advocacy work for Alzheimer's patients and their Hilarity for Charity event, host Marc Lamont Hill also took the time to ask about a tweet that Rogen wrote over the weekend:




It all went down at this week's episode of "Saturday Night Live," where Rogen and his wife were hanging out with Paul Rudd when Rogen pricked up his ears at a particular name.

"I overheard someone say the name of the guy who canceled 'Freaks and Geeks.' I know his name, obviously, because we've talked about how stupid he is for the last 15 years," Rogen said. The actor then took the opportunity to discuss the show with the unnamed executive.

"He was like, 'You know, Judd [Apatow, 'Freaks and Geeks' executive producer] wouldn't listen to my notes.' I was like, 'The notes probably were stupid,'" Rogen said. "He oddly dug in and kind of tried to justify it."

Find out what kind of network notes Apatow ignored in 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!

CORRECTION: An earlier version of this piece included speculation that Scott Sassa was the man Rogen talked to backstage at "Saturday Night Live." Sassa, however, was not the executive in question.

Some Kids Don't Quite Know What To Do With 'All About That Bass'

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Believe it or not, these kids may not be "All About That Bass."

In this clip from the Fine Brothers' "Kids React" series, a group of children respond to Meghan Trainor's undeniably catchy booty-lovin' anthem.

While 6-year-old Lucas sang along with all the right accompanying dance moves, Dash, 10, looked at the video askance: "This is painful," he said.

Reactions to the song's message were similarly varied; the derriere-centered lyrics were confusing for some.

"It's one of those songs that talks about fat butts," says Tyler, 11, "And for some reason everybody likes to hear about that."

But Elle, 12, loved the song's body positivity: "It has such an amazing message that I feel like everyone can relate to."





Shakira Talks Second Pregnancy, Trying For A Baby Girl And Her Next Spanish Album

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Big news for long-time fans of Shakira.

After almost five years since the Colombian singer's release of “Sale El Sol,” the star said she will be starting to work on her next Spanish album soon. Shak spoke to Spain’s EuropaPress, while promoting the release of her new fragrance in Madrid, and opened up about her second pregnancy, trying for a baby girl and her next record.

The Spanish edition of Cosmopolitan confirmed that Shakira was expecting her second baby in August. Shortly after, the star’s mother revealed the singer and her boyfriend Gerard Piqué were having another boy.

During the promotional stop for her new fragrance Rock!, the singer said she was “lucky to have good pregnancies” and that her second pregnancy was going smoothly. This seems like good news considering she'd like almost two dozen kids.

"One thing is what you want and the other is what you can do," Shakira said with a laugh. "With Gerard I'd have 20 children but I don't think I'll have the luxury to do it. For now we're going for the second one, we'll see what happens. We'll see if one day we get a girl. We'll see!"

On the topic of her second pregnancy, the star also said this time around she really hopes to be able to take step back from her work.

“Now that I’m pregnant I’m trying, for the first time in my life, to not do so many things at the same time,” Shakira told Europa Press. “Although, it’s always difficult and issues get in the way even when you don’t want them to. But the majority of the time I do dedicate myself to taking care of my belly, my pregnancy, [and] of Milan.”

As far as a name for her second baby, Shakira says they have yet to pick one.

The “Hips Don’t Lie” singer may be be taking a break to focus on family for the rest of the year, but she already has plans for after she welcomes her second son.

“And then next year, I think after the baby is born, I’ll start producing my new album. A Spanish album, which is what has me most excited right now,” the star added.

The record could be the first all-Spanish album since 2005’s “Fijación Oral, Vol. 1” or include a couple of English tracks like her 2010 album, “Sale El Sol.”

Shakira, a self-described perfectionist, released her self-titled album in January -- after more than two and a half years of production. So, it’s safe to say this next album is still a couple of years away.

But the wait may be bearable for fans who have been waiting for the Colombian superstar to go back to the Spanish songwriting roots that gave the world two of her most most memorable and successful records, “Pies Descalzos” (1996) and “Dónde Están los Ladrones?” (1998).

H/T Variety Latino

Run The Jewels Recruit Zack De La Rocha On 'Close Your Eyes (And Count To F--k)'

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Run The Jewels is possibly the most dynamic, hard-hitting duo in hip-hop today, and Killer Mike and El-P's new "RTJ2" track, "Close Your Eyes (And Count To F--k)," combines their intensity with one of the loudest, angriest and most inspiring vocalists to ever pick up a mic: Zack de la Rocha.

The Rage Against the Machine frontman hasn't been too active in music since the 2008 self-titled EP of his project "One Day as a Lion." Despite any absence, La Rocha is as furious as ever, spitting shrapnel lines with Killer Mike and El-P that target everything from preachers and politicians to corporations and prisons:

Dump cases with face and the cop pleas when we seizing a pump
With reason to dump on you global grand dragons
Still pilin' fast, plus Afghani toe taggin'
Now they trackin' me and we bustin' back, see
The only thing that close quicker than our caskets be the factory




El-P spoke to BuzzFeed about how the collaboration came about, explaining that he and La Rocha have more unreleased music from years back:

“We worked on music together in the late '90s after Rage broke up, but it never came out,” El-P said. “We remained friends, though, and when I was in L.A. working on the record I bumped in to him literally on the way to the studio. He came by and listened to what we had and a day later was recording with us.”

In other Run The Jewel news, the duo's "Meow The Jewels" Kickstarter has now surpassed three-quarters of its goal. What was initially a crowdfunding package joke, the duo has promised to re-record their "RTJ2" album with "nothing but cat sounds for music," and all funds raised are being donated to a charity directly benefiting the families of Eric Garner and Mike Brown. Just Blaze, The Alchemist, Geoff Barrow, Skywlkr, Zola Jesus, Nick Rook, Baauer, Prince Paul, Dan The Automator, Boots and Solidified Sun have all vowed to help El-P with production if the project is fully funded.

Fans can now preorder "RTJ2," which drops on Oct. 28.

Jennifer Lawrence Takes The Plunge At 'Serena' Premiere

Seth Rogen Discusses Getting Naked With James Franco

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Seth Rogen and his pal James Franco got everyone's attention earlier this month when they posted photos of themselves galavanting through the wilderness in the nude and referenced the TV show "Naked and Afraid."

Rogen and his wife Lauren Miller joined HuffPost Live's Marc Lamont Hill on Monday to discuss their Hilarity for Charity event to raise awareness for Alzheimer's, and we couldn't let them go without inquiring about Rogen and Franco's naked antics. Rogen said the pair filmed an installment "Naked and Afraid" set in North Korea to coincide with their film "The Interview," set for release this Christmas.

Check out the video above to hear Rogen describe all the NSFW fun, and click here for the full HuffPost Live conversation.

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!

Robert Downey Jr. Will Reportedly Star In 'Captain America 3'

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"There's no plans for an 'Iron Man 4,'" Robert Downey Jr. told David Letterman during an interview on Oct. 7. "There’s no script for 'Iron Man 4,' but they do have a plan, and I think [Marvel is] going to announce it. You know, they're very secretive about it." As it turns out, not secret enough: According to Variety, Downey will reprise his role of Tony Stark for "Captain America 3" in a storyline that will pit Stark against Captain America and set off a new wave of Marvel films. Downey's representatives had no comment on the story when contacted by HuffPost Entertainment.

Having Downey continue his reign as Tony Stark was far from a forgone conclusion. The 49-year-old had only two films left on his current Marvel deal, "Marvel's The Avengers: Age of Ultron" and "Marvel's The Avengers 3," and frequently discussed a desire to maybe back away from Iron Man.

"To me, it comes down to what’s the half-life of people enjoying a character?" Downey said to Deadline.com in a recent interview. "It’s different on TV, where you expect the longevity over seasons while movies get a two or three year break. Marvel keeps stepping up its game, and I appreciate the way Kevin Feige and all the creatives there think. They are as in the creative wheelhouse as any great studio has been at any point. So it becomes a matter of, at what point do I cease to be an asset to what they’re doing, and at what point do I feel I am spending so much time either shooting or promoting these films that I’m not actually able to get off the beachhead and do the kind of other stuff that is good for all of us. [...] It all has become this thing that has to be figured out. It has come to a head, right now, where the points of departure will be."

As it turns out, the departure for Downey will be in the character himself. According to Variety, Downey's starring role in "Captain America 3" will kick off Marvel's Civil War storyline, which will find Iron Man, as a de facto villain, battling Captain America over the Superhero Registration Act, "which forces anyone with superhuman abilities to reveal their identities to the U.S. government and agree to act as a police force for the authorities." The ensuing plot from the 2006 comic book connects multiple Marvel characters, including the current Avengers roster, Ant-Man and Luke Cage (as well as members of the "X-Men" and "Fantastic Four" franchises, neither of which are part of Marvel Studios at the moment). Earlier on Monday, Marvel tweeted that Civil War #1 was coming in the summer of 2015, but offered no further information about the comic beyond its artwork -- fittingly, a shot of Iron Man and Captain America in the throes of conflict:




Anthony and Joe Russo will return to direct "Captain America 3," which is due out May 6, 2016. The film was initially set to go against "Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice," but Warner Bros. moved that film to March 25, 2016 in an effort to move away from the Marvel blockbuster. Now that it's Iron Man vs. Captain America, that date change looks even smarter.

For more on Downey's "Captain America 3" role and how the negotiations went down, head to Variety.
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