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Britney Spears Has Her Own Holiday On November 5

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It was only a matter of time.

Britney Spears officially has her own holiday now, thanks to the city of Las Vegas. Because of her successful ongoing residency at Planet Hollywood, the Clark County commission chairman is honoring Spears with her own "Britney Day" on Nov. 5, along with a key to the Vegas strip. In the spirt of "Britney Day," the "Toxic" singer will spend the day hanging with fans at the LINQ promenade.

But wait -- there's more! The pop icon is also extending a special invitation to the fellow Britneys of the world, or anyone named Britney with any variation of spelling. The first 100 “Britney’s” who check in at the High Roller Wheel House with an I.D. starting at 8 a.m. on Nov. 5 will receive a pair of tickets to her Vegas show that night.

Get more details on our new favorite holiday here.

Until then, let's live every day like it's Britney Day.

britneycircus
Image via Giphy

'Duck Dynasty' Star Jep Robertson Hospitalized Following Seizure

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Jep Robertson says he's glad to be alive after suffering a seizure last weekend.

TMZ reports that the "Duck Dynasty" star was in a stand hunting with friends when the seizure took place. He was then immediately taken to the hospital.

Robertson tweeted about the incident, thanking everyone for the support he received:



Jep is the youngest of Phil Robertson's sons and frequently appears on the family's A&E show along with his wife Jessica. He will reportedly remain hospitalized for further tests.

A request for comment from Robertson's reps was not immediately retuned.

H/T TMZ

Lake Bell Welcomes Baby Girl With Husband Scott Campbell

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Lake Bell is officially a mom!

The 35-year-old actress and her husband Scott Campbell welcomed a baby girl, her rep told UsWeekly on Saturday. This is the first child for the pair, who got married in June 2013.

Bell first revealed her pregnancy at the Vanity Fair Tribeca Film Festival party in April, where she cradled her growing belly while posing in a tight crimson jumpsuit on the red carpet. The "Man Up" actress later told Access Hollywood that she found out she was pregnant the day of her topless photoshoot for Esquire Magazine.

Our congratulations go out to the new parents.


Kate Hudson's Matthew McConaughey Impression Is Spot On

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Alright, alright, alright, we all know there's a surplus of Matthew McConaughey impressions out there, but Kate Hudson's may just be the best.

At the American Cinematheque honors earlier this week, McConaughey was joined by Hudson and a handful of his other leading ladies, including Reese Witherspoon (who took a selfie with Hudson), Anne Hathaway, Jessica Chastain and Jennifer Garner. His "How to Lose a Guy in 10 Days" co-star took the stage to reminisce about some memories with the actor, including the time the two were getting certified for scuba diving in Australia for "Fool's Gold."

Hudson was having a rough day since her divorce had been finalized when suddenly things changed. “Out of the water pops Matthew -- no shirt, full gear, spits out the regulator," Hudson said. She then went into a full-on McConaughey, Texas drawl impression. It's too good to describe, so enjoy for yourself in the video above.

Hudson also shared another great story while on stage about the time she found McConaughey completely naked, howling on top of a rock in the dark. Classic McConaughey.

For more, head to Yahoo.

Rita Wilson On Life After 50 And The Lesson She Learned From Oprah

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Happy birthday, Rita Wilson! The actress, producer, writer, singer and Huff/Post50 editor-at-large turns 58 on Sunday, Oct. 26. In her own birthday well wishes to us here at Huff/Post50, Rita recalled a toast her dear friend Nora Ephron gave her on her 50th birthday: "I am here to tell you good things can happen after turning 50." And no one illustrates this message better than Rita, who has gone from actress-producer to singer-songwriter -- with great success.

Not only does Rita enjoy a recurring role on "The Good Wife," but she also has a new album coming out in 2015 featuring original songs she co-wrote. In addition, she just completed a two-week run singing those songs at the Café Carlyle in New York City. She garnered great reviews. As Theater Mania put it, it's impossible not to like Rita, noting that "her honesty and sincerity make you root for her as she unveils each new song."

Whether it's performing live or launching Huff/Post50's 50 Over 50 initiative, Rita has taught us that you can live your best life at any age. And that's just one of many things we love about her. She also inspires us as a mother and as part of one of Hollywood's most popular long-running couples. (She married actor Tom Hanks in 1988.)

To celebrate her birthday, Huff/Post50 asked Rita a few questions about life and what's best about being over 50.


What's most surprising about life after 50?

There is so much good stuff that happens after fifty. You have a sense of who you are and what you want. I have enjoyed it so much. Along with all that I have found that being an empty nester also has its challenges. Seeing friends has to be scheduled since everyone is scattered with their own interests and finding time together takes effort. If you have aging parents, you must take care of them which is something many of us are dealing with. Still, I find that there's a gratitude for life that seems to really kick in.

What are some things you are doing now that you never imagined you'd be doing?

After I made my first album of cover songs, AM/FM, in 2012, I never imagined I would be doing a second album of original songs I have co-written with some incredible songwriters. I never dreamed I would have a concert at Disney Concert Hall or play the Bluebird in Nashville singing my own songs. Life is full of surprises and you have to be open to them. I read something Oprah said that influenced me a lot about five years ago. She said something along the lines of ... If you know what you want you can get it. Most people don't know what they want. I remember thinking how can I possibly want anything when I already feel so blessed and so grateful. I wouldn't even allow myself the fantasy of answering the question. But, I realized it was a question that went deeper than any superficial desire. It was about purpose. And listening to your heart without distraction.

Do you have any particular secret for staying and looking so young?

I laugh a lot! I try to exercise everyday but don't always make it. I don't do anything like Botox or collagen. No judgment on it, it's just not for me at this point in my life. I have cut down a lot on sugar and carbs. Tom [Hanks] is a Type Two diabetic so I'm trying to live with less sugar. I went to a nutritionist and got some education about how best to do that. I'm obsessed with paddle boarding. It's like walking, but on water with your friends. Hours go by before you even realize it! I ski in the winter. I have been doing that since I was fifteen. Generally, though, I am extremely grateful for my husband, kids, family, health and that I can still be a creative person because as a very talented artist said to me, "Creativity is time independent."

Is there a mantra you live by?

I love the quote Polonius speaks in Hamlet: "To thine own self be true." It is vital to make sure you are listening to yourself and hearing what it is your body is telling you. When you hear what it is saying, do something about it. I have learned to say "no." I am, by nature, a people pleaser, so saying "no" has been a tough lesson for me to learn. Usually, this means I am saying "yes" to something else, something that would be better for my spirit. I still struggle with it but it's getting better. You can't be everywhere at once.


Happy birthday Rita! You inspire us every day!

Paris Hilton Dressed Up As A Sexy Bunny For Halloween, Seems To Be Low On Ideas This Year

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Last year, Paris Hilton's Halloween costumes included but were not limited to: Barbie, Madonna in "Like A Virgin," Miley Cyrus at the VMAs, a sexy ballerina, a sexy mermaid, a sexy fairy, a sexy warrior and a sexy cheetah / possibly a sexy member of "The Cheetah Girls." Indeed, Paris Hilton celebrates eight nights of Halloween, and she has begun this year with Minnie Mouse ... and a sexy bunny.

We still have time (and approximately six costumes) for redemption here, but Minnie Mouse and a sexy bunny is not a great start. It's a sexy start, but not a very clever or inspired start, considering she's working with thousands of dollars of resources. Maybe the latter costume is intended as a commentary on the tired reality of treating women as objects and expecting them to be hyper-sexual in certain contexts but condemning it in others? Maybe it is just a bunny.

#BunnyLove

Ett foto publicerat av Paris Hilton (@parishilton) den



#Bunny

Una foto publicada por Paris Hilton (@parishilton) el



Minnie Mouse

A photo posted by Paris Hilton (@parishilton) on

'SNL' Hosts Jim Carrey's 'Family Reunion' With Some Very Familiar Faces

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Alllll righty then!

Jim Carrey was reunited with his most memorable characters on "Saturday Night Live" this weekend, including a special cameo by his "Dumb & Dumber To" co-star Jeff Daniels -- this time playing Lloyd Christmas.

"SNL" cast members got to try out their best "Ace Ventura," "The Cable Guy" and even Fire Marshall Bill from "In Living Color" impressions in a sketch that had more '90s catch phrases than we ever thought could fit in one episode.

Oh, and Bobby Moynihan's take on "The Mask" is something you won't soon forget. Watch the video above!

"Saturday Night Live" airs Saturdays at 11:30 a.m. ET on NBC.

Naya Rivera Dressed Up As A Mail-Order Bride For Halloween

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Here we have a great last-minute costume for anyone who has a casual wedding gown and also receives mail.

Naya Rivera dressed as a mail-order bride this weekend, wearing a white dress with an envelope stuck to her stomach. Her husband, Ryan Dorsey, played the role of the mail man, which maybe explains the whole thing. A mail man and a bride is not a very good couple's costume. You can imagine they both walked out from dressing up, and Naya was just like "Um, how is this going to work?!" But then she realized the piece of mail that had become stuck to her marital lingerie was actually perfect for the classic pair of a mail man and mail-order bride.

Mail order...Happy Halloween!!

A photo posted by Naya Rivera Dorsey (@nayarivera) on



Always a Dorsey. ❤️

Una foto pubblicata da Naya Rivera Dorsey (@nayarivera) in data


Taylor Swift Used A 'Gremlin Voice' While Writing '1989'

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Taylor Swift's "1989" has already received glowing reviews, and despite the fact that the album isn't out until Monday, we think we know the singer-songwriter's secret weapon.

For the upcoming album, Swift collaborated with Bleachers frontman Jack Antonoff on "Out of the Woods," as well as the songs "I Wish You Would" and "You Are In Love." That last song is a bonus track off the deluxe album and actually about Antonoff and his girlfriend, Lena Dunham. The connections between Antonoff and Swift don't end there: he sat down with Swift to interview her for MTV and revealed one of her weird quirks in the process.

Swift said that while writing with Antonoff she began using what the two call a "gremlin voice." "When we would be writing and you would send me an instrumental track," she said to Antonoff, with a laugh. "I'd send you back me singing over it. And at the end of it I would always find myself going [transitions to creepy, crackly voice] 'I hope you like it.'" It apparently became a thing between the two. They even made gremlin memes.

So while spending your entire Monday (and likely all of next week) listening to "1989" non-stop, remember the inspiration behind Swift and Antonoff's songs. Also, don't get this discovery confused with Swift's other gremlin connection -- the dog parody video of "Shake It Off" starring a rescue pit bull named Gremlin.



For more head to MTV.

Watch Jim Carrey And Kate McKinnon Have A 'Chandelier' Dance-Off

Iggy Azalea Performed Her New Song 'Beg For It' On 'SNL'

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Iggy Azalea dropped her latest song, "Beg For It," on Thursday. The track will appear on her upcoming album "Reclassified," the reissue of "The New Classic."

To celebrate, the Australian rapper performed the new single on this weekend's "Saturday Night Live" alongside Danish singer-songwriter MØ, who sings the hook. Azalea sat in a black throne surrounded by two giant panther statues, giving the set a futuristic "Jungle Book" meets "Chicago" vibe.



The rapper also performed a medley of her hits "Fancy" and "Black Widow" on the show. Charli XCX wasn't there to sing about L.A. and Toyko, but Rita Ora showed up to provide the hook to "Black Window" and dance against a chain-link fence.

Jim Carrey Brilliantly Mocks Matthew McConaughey's Lincoln Ads On 'SNL'

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Finally, a car commercial that makes total sense.

Jim Carrey hosted "SNL" on Saturday and one of his first sketches out of the gate was a pretty hilarious parody of those weird Lincoln car ads Matthew McConaughey has been doing lately. Who knows why he's doing them. Maybe McConaughey IS secretly an Uber driver?

Don't miss the three-part Carrey-McConaughey car commercial sketch up top, and watch out for an appearance by the All State insurance commercial guy Dennis Haysbert. No, seriously, WATCH OUT!

Kelly Clarkson Covered 'Shake It Off' And Taylor Swift Loved It

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Kelly Clarkson performed in Buffalo, New York on Saturday and decided to pay tribute to Taylor Swift. Clarkson broke into a soulful cover of Swift's "Shake It Off" during her set, which then set off screams of excitement from the crowd.

Swift saw a video of the performance on YouTube (in which you can fully see Clarkson's face, unlike the one above) and loved it. The singer, whose "1989" drops tomorrow, tweeted Saturday night.




H/T MTV

Jessica Simpson Chops Off Her Hair

Allison Janney Improvised The Best Line In '10 Things I Hate About You'

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In a recent interview with Buzzfeed, Allison Janney admitted to improvising her best-remembered line in '90s teen hit, "10 Things I Hate About You." Your refresher course: After Kat gets in trouble at school, Janney's character, high school principal Ms. Perky, pauses her lecture to point out the connection between Kat's name and the cat on her coffee mug. She then lets out a purring noise.

“I ad-libbed, ‘Kat. Meow,'" Janney told Buzzfeed. "That was me. I do that on some movies when I feel like the atmosphere is right and [director] Gil Junger was open to it and just let me do whatever I wanted to do. I was really thrilled about that one."

Check out the scene in the clip below, and head over to Buzzfeed to read Janney's full interview.


Taylor Swift Is New York's New Global Welcome Ambassador

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Taylor Swift is many things -- singer, songwriter, actress and proud cat lady. And as of Monday, she can add one more title to her incredible resume -- ambassador.

Perfectly timed with the release of her newest album, 1989, NYC & Company announced that the star will be New York City's Global Welcome Ambassador for 2014–2015.

taylor swift

The campaign, entitled "Welcome To New York", is the latest global tourism initiative by NYC & Company. The campaign's slogan was inspired by a song by the same name on her album, which Swift wrote after moving to NYC as an ode to the city's "unparalleled vibrancy," according to a press release.

As Global Welcome Ambassador, Swift showcases her love for the city in a multitude of videos and will also perform in Times Square on New Years for Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve with Ryan Seacrest.

And if you're a Taylor Swift super fan, here are 9 best places we suspect you'll find TSwift on your next trip to NYC:

1. Tribeca
taylor swift tribeca
Swift has an insanely cool penthouse in the neighborhood with neighbors like Jay-Z and Beyoncé.

2. Russ & Daughters
russ and daughters
We're not sure how Swift feels about New York City's bottomless brunches, but we're pretty sure she would wait in line for a Russ & Daughters everything bagel with lox and cream cheese.

3. Brooklyn Bridge

We can totally see Tay taking an artsy Insta like everyone else in New York.

4. The Lincoln Center
new york city ballet swan lake
Ever the ballerina (you saw "Shake It Off") we bet Swift has a few friends at the ballet who could show her a thing or two at the barre.

5. Sheep Meadow, Central Park
With the crisp NYC weather, we bet Swift hangs around Central park laying around with friends, doing a little AcroYoga and writing song lyrics in her journal.

6. Levain Bakery

The Levain Bakery cookies that turned my day around. #WelcomeToNewYork

A photo posted by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) on




TSwift has made no secret of her love for these truly delectable treats (they're worth the $4, trust us).



7. Eataly
From all those tasty Instagrams she posts, we bet Swift enjoys taking cooking classes here, rubbing shoulders with Mario Batali or browsing the shelves for cool new kitchen tools.


8. Museum of Modern Art (MoMa)
moma nyc
Swift said that the city's art is one of the things she finds most inspiring about NYC, so naturally she'll be at the MoMa to brainstorm the art for her next album.

9. Madison Square Garden
taylor swift madison square garden
She'll be headlining. Duh.

So book your ticket and head to New York -- it's been waiting for you.

Benedict Cumberbatch Is Reportedly Playing Doctor Strange

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Benedict Cumberbatch is a superhero now. According to Deadline.com, Cumberbatch is in "final negotiations" to play Doctor Strange for Marvel in a new movie about the Sorcerer Supreme. HuffPost Entertainment contacted representation for Cumberbatch to see if they had any comment on the report; this post will be updated if and when they respond.

CUMBERONYCE
GIF via YouTube

Cumberbatch has long been rumored for Doctor Strange; his name was first attached to the project in a June 6 posting by Deadline.com. "As far as I'm aware, even if that was the case, it couldn't work out because I'm doing a little play called 'Hamlet' in London," Cumberbatch said to MTV in July. "So I don't think I could even if that was in the cards. It sounds like a fantastic project. It's a shame if I miss out, but who knows?" (Cumberbatch's "Hamlet" commitments end on Oct. 31.)

Cumberbatch, Tom Hardy and Jared Leto were all early candidates to star in "Doctor Strange," but it was Joaquin Phoenix who became a focal point of Marvel's search this summer. Phoenix was reportedly selected for the role just before Comic-Con, but negotiations between him and Marvel never crossed the finish line. (His talks with the studio ended in early October.) After Phoenix fell out, Cumberbatch, Hardy and other actors such as Matthew McConaughey and Ethan Hawke wound up on the Marvel short list.

For more on Cumberbatch and "Doctor Strange," head to Deadline.com. The film will likely arrive in theaters in 2016. Party.

CUMBERBATCH STRANGE

Tommy Davidson Looks Back On Being Adopted Into A White Family In The '60s

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Nearly every comedian looks to personal experience to help craft a comedic personality. For “In Living Color” alum Tommy Davidson, his unique experience growing up in a mixed family during the civil rights era shaped not only his jokes, but his views on race as well.

Following his adoption by a white family in 1966, Davidson moved from Colorado to Wyoming to Oregon until he was about 5 years old. After bouncing from state to state, his family made the move to the East Coast at an inopportune moment.

“We moved to Washington, D.C., the week Martin Luther King [Jr.] got shot. So we move into one of the worst black cities,” he told HuffPost Live host Marc Lamont Hill. “There’s a riot, tear gas, tanks and federal troops are there. Me, my sister and my brother were laying on the floor in the car wondering what the hell was going on.”

Navigating life as a person of color in the era of Jim Crow wasn’t easy for Davidson, especially while living with a family that he didn’t resemble.

“Here I was, a great, bright-eyed kid who had never heard the N-word, who had never heard ‘white cracker’ and was being called that by both [races],” he said. “I thought it was so stupid because, when I was a kid, I didn't think that black people were black, I thought that we were brown like a crayon. And my sister was like peach, with the crayon.”

Although Davidson was surrounded by a volatile environment, he didn’t feel any resentment.

“The love that I got didn’t have any color,” he said.

Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with comedian Tommy Davidson 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!

Here's What Everyone Is Saying About 'Interstellar' So Far

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"Interstellar," Christopher Nolan's $165 million space epic, rockets into wide release Nov. 7, but some critics have already filed their reviews. The consensus so far? Most agree the visuals are stunning and that Matthew McConaughey is great as an engineer who ventures to another galaxy to research potential inhabitable worlds. But the first reactions haven't been as favorable toward the film's emotional heft and the pacing of its third act.

Consensus may shift as more reviews pour in before the opening -- many critics still haven't seen the film -- but here are a few first reactions to "Interstellar":

1. "'Interstellar' so bulges with ideas, ambitions, theories, melodrama, technical wizardry, wondrous imagery and core emotions that it was almost inevitable that some of it would stick while other stuff would fall to the floor. Feeling very much like Christopher Nolan's personal response to his favorite film, '2001: A Space Odyssey,' this grandly conceived and executed epic tries to give equal weight to intimate human emotions and speculation about the cosmos, with mixed results, but is never less than engrossing, and sometimes more than that." -- Todd McCarthy, The Hollywood Reporter

2. As with the twisty chronologies and unreliable narrators of his earlier films, Nolan trusts in the audience’s ability to get the gist and follow along, even if it doesn’t glean every last nuance on a first viewing. It’s hard to think of a mainstream Hollywood film that has so successfully translated complex mathematical and scientific ideas to a lay audience ... or done so in more vivid, immediate human terms. -- Scott Foundas, Variety

3. "‘Interstellar’ is about saving humanity, despite humanity. It disguises itself in science, but ‘Interstellar’ isn’t really about science. There’s a lot more Emotion in ‘Interstellar’ than I expected -- its core foundation, really -- but there’s almost too much going on in ‘Interstellar’ to the point that, at times, in retrospect, nothing is really happening even though it kind of seemed like something was happening." -- Mike Ryan, ScreenCrush

4. "While the film builds intrigue and tension in terms of establishing the stakes of the outer-space exploration as well as the perilous science behind it, the picture rushes into space only to slow to a relative crawl once it gets there. There are a few dazzling images and at least one solid action sequence late in the game, and it is always fun to see the real-world implications of somewhat abstract scientific theory. Yet the film feels less like a grand original work than it does a buttoned-down and overly 'realistic' variation on 'go into space to save the world' pictures." -- Scott Mendelson, Forbes

5. "All the setup is fascinating, as is the space travel, particularly when they journey to planets near a black hole, meaning that for every hour that the landing party spends on the surface, seven years will elapse for the crew member orbiting in the spacecraft. Cliifhanger sequences involving slow, giant tidal waves and docking with an out-of-control ship demonstrate the director's (and editor Lee Smith's) proficiency. For much of the film, Nolan (who co-wrote with his brother Jonathan) seems to be unafraid to allow this big-budget extravaganza to tell a story that's about pain and loss and melancholy and sacrifice. Until it's not that anymore, and “Interstellar” becomes thuddingly prosaic." -- Alonso Duralde, The Wrap

6. "Often when we talk about cinema being a ‘ride’, we’re hinting at a lack of substance, an absence of ideas, an opportunity to switch off. Not so here. ‘Interstellar’ is, in large part, a spectacle. But it also asks you to think hard, look hard and urges you to return for more. Why only ask for the stars when you can have moons, distant planets, extra dimensions, lectures on psychics and a sobering shot of terror? ‘Interstellar’ has it all." -- Dave Calhoun, Time Out London

7. "'Interstellar,' a near three-hour whopper of a picture, powers through its plot holes and barrels through the corn. It’s a glorious spectacle, but a slight drama, with few characters and too-rare flashes of humor. It wants to awe us into submission, to concede our insignificance in the face of such grand-scale art. It achieves that with ease. Yet on his way to making an epic, Nolan forgot to let us have fun." -- Henry Barnes, The Guardian

8. "'Interstellar' makes its far-reaching concept utterly believable, right down to an outrageous climax that stretches across time and space with bursts of psychedelic imagery that still winds up making sense. In its final scenes, 'Interstellar' struggles to bring every piece in play to a tidy conclusion, but it's comforting to watch Nolan give it a shot. -- Eric Kohn, IndieWire

9. "The space travel stuff is beautiful and realized though largely physical means. It works both inside the ships and outside, and there's a lot of "Interstellar," particularly in 70MM IMAX, that is just jaw-dropping." -- Drew McWeeny, HitFix

10. "'Interstellar' tackles some big ideas along the way. Some are fascinating -- fifth-dimensional space represented in three dimensions -- and some are cringe-worthy -- love as a universal constant -- but all of the ideas are approached with honesty and intelligence. That alone makes me like and admire the movie. I just wish I could love it; 'Inception' blew me away the first time through and has remained a film that moves me intellectually, cinematically and even emotionally. 'Interstellar' stimulates intellectually, is dead on arrival emotionally and works well enough cinematically without truly wowing in the way it should." -- Devin Faraci, Badass Digest

Shakira On Why There Are ‘No Shortcuts' To Learning How To Be A Parent

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After watching her 21-month-old son Milan enthusiastically play with a Fisher-Price Kick ‘n Play Piano gym, Shakira decided to take hands-on parenting to a whole new level.

The Colombian singer promptly approached Fisher-Price about partnering with the company, and soon will release a First Steps collection of baby toys and gear aimed at encouraging well-rounded child development. On Monday, a 12-part web series featuring the star also will premiere.

Shakira, 37, became a first-time mother in January 2012 and is currently expecting her second son. The “Hips Don’t Lie” singer, known partly for posting videos teaching baby Milan how to read, is the first celebrity that the company, which is owned by Mattel, Inc., has ever partnered with.

The Shakira First Steps Collection will be made up of six products, which the artist co-developed, including alphabet blocks, a soft book, a musical soccer ball and more. Proceeds will go to the singer’s Barefoot Foundation in Colombia, which partners with schools to provide education and nutrition to thousands of kids.

In a web series to complement the toy collection, Shakira will share personal reflections on motherhood and the importance of early childhood development. The webisodes, some featuring son Milan, will be available on the Fisher-Price website and are targeted at millennial mothers.

In an exclusive e-mail interview with The Huffington Post about her new partnership, Shakira spoke candidly about her experience as a mother and her thoughts on raising multilingual children in the digital age.

shakira fisher price

What inspired you to join forces with Fisher Price? What are your hopes for this collection of toys?

I’ve always been a student of education and an advocate for early childhood development, but when I had my own child, I became fascinated with the role that the right toys could play in the development of a child during those crucial early stages of life. I found myself looking for toys that not only entertained but stimulated and fostered his development, and then thought, why not work on a line specifically for this purpose? I wanted to work with Fisher Price because I was looking for the most innovative and most stringent when it comes to quality, and learning about their research and development process and the staff of ECD [Early Childhood Development] specialists they have on board convinced me that they were the right partner for this endeavor.

They say that motherhood often changes your perception of life and the world. Did that happen with you when Milan was born?

Absolutely. For one thing, it shows you a whole other dimension to love that’s like nothing else. But there are also other, smaller changes that although they don’t seem as profound, carry significant weight too. Since I became a mom, it’s obligated me bit by bit to reevaluate my priorities; I no longer sit in a studio till 3 a.m. tweaking a single drum line, because I’ve had to learn to let go of the reins a little bit. Now I have a family at home, and they need me. But instead of feeling like I’ve had to choose between one and the other, having a child has really helped me reorganize my time and give everything I do more purpose -- it’s brought more discipline and structure to my life, which have contributed to an overall feeling of balance.

What’s the most surprising thing that Milan has ever done? A moment that just made you stop and think, “These kids just get smarter and smarter every generation.”

More so than one particular instance are probably all the little moments that we’ve spent on language together -- reading, learning to recognize numbers and letters. I’ve been doing it with him since before he could sit up on his own and I’m continually astonished when I see that little spark of recognition in his eyes of understanding, even at such a young age. When he was finally able to verbalize the words he was recognizing around the 18-month mark, it was one of the greatest moments ever for us as parents.

Often, mothers read endless books on what to expect when their child is born. What’s something you feel you could have never prepared for?

Well I will admit that I am definitely one of those mothers. I probably read every book and downloaded every pregnancy app out there. And they are informative, and I am glad I read them. I think it’s an advantage to inform yourself. But trying to predict what your child will be like is about as effective as consulting a crystal ball. There are no shortcuts, in the end, to learning how to be a parent. I’m sure I’ve made mistakes, and there are probably many things I will continue to try doing better. But if one thing could stand out to me as something no book could have prepared me for, it’s the way your heart explodes over and over, in the best way possible, from the first moment you meet your child and every time after they begin revealing their personality as they grow.

You’ve posted videos of yourself teaching Milan how to read and giving him a small history lesson in Washington, D.C. During these important first years, what do you think is the best thing a mother can do to stimulate the mind of her child?

I think engaging as much as possible with your child and trying to make play and interaction meaningful is really the best thing you can do. Whether we are trained to be or not, as mothers, we’re our children’s first educators. That doesn’t mean every moment of every day has to be planned or documented, but I think forming a bond early on that is based on an exchange of information between mother and baby ensures that they will enjoy the best environment possible for maximum learning as they grow older, and will see it in a positive light as well because they associate it with those early moments of bonding.

I think one question multilingual mothers always have is how to make sure their child grows up mastering (at least) two languages. In the videos you’ve spoken to Milan in both English and Spanish. What is your advice for mothers struggling to raise their kids with more than one language?

This is a tough one. I’m not sure even the experts in the field are in agreement when it comes to techniques of multilingual parenting, and for me in my case it’s probably a little too early to say. All I can really tell you is that kids have an immense capacity for language learning in their early years, so if it’s at all possible to take advantage of that time and introduce them to other languages early, it’s a great advantage. The key from what I can tell is making sure they’re exposed consistently to any language you’re trying to teach -- again, it’s all about engaging and interaction.

I’m always amazed at how kids interact with the world in this new digital era. Growing up I never even had a flip phone, and now I see children playing on iPads from the age of 2. Some people think it’s the best way to prepare a child for an even more digital future, but others feel it can hinder development. How do you feel about the use of technology at such a young age?

Another tough one. It’s nearly impossible to deny the myriad ways technology has become integrated into even the most mundane activities, and kids are naturally attracted to things like iPads because they offer stimuli. I don’t think it hinders development and there are many educational apps that can be useful as teaching tools, but addiction isn’t good either. No matter what, kids still need time to be outside and play with others, and just be kids. I view technology the same way I view television: everything in moderation.

You launched Fundación Pies Descalzos at the age of 18, and since then you’ve helped hundreds of kids who were victims of poverty, violence and displacement due to the internal conflict in Colombia. Beside the effect an education can have on an individual, what kind of effect can it have on the country?

Out of all the causes I’ve come across over the years, education is the only one that has the power to transform entire populations and societies. That’s why I really believe in it. Not only does it provide incredible return on investment, by ensuring kids become better citizens and more productive members of society, but it also helps prevent so many of the social problems that are pervasive in the developing world, like violence and petty crime. It’s not always an easy endeavor, and it requires patience and resources. But when you do the math -- there’s no better investment you can make.

Check out the first webisode above.

This interview has been edited for clarity.
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