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Dolly Parton Chastises Christians For 'Judging' LGBT Community

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Dolly Parton never seems to let us queers down.

In a recent interview with Billboard, Parton opened up about her love for her gay fans -- as well as her feelings towards Christians that feel the need to "judge" the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community.

When questioned about why she thinks that she reached icon status within the queer world, Parton told Billboard:
They know that I completely love and accept them, as I do all people. I've struggled enough in my life to be appreciated and understood. I've had to go against all kinds of people through the years just to be myself. I think everybody should be allowed to be who they are, and to love who they love. I don't think we should be judgmental. Lord, I've got enough problems of my own to pass judgment on somebody else.


Parton elaborated on this further when Billboard questioned the singer about Dollywood and its appeal to the LGBT community (which some questioned after a controversial incident in 2011) -- as well as churches groups.

It's a place for entertainment, a place for all families, period. It's for all that. But as far as the Christians, if people want to pass judgment, they're already sinning. The sin of judging is just as bad as any other sin they might say somebody else is committing. I try to love everybody.


Read the full interview with Parton here.

Parton has been a long-time ally to queers, having spoken out a number of times in favor of the right to marry for same-sex couples. The singer has previously discussed a dance album specifically for her gay fans and joked about having a drag queen name.

Angela Bassett Opens Up About Aging And The 'Sensuality' Of 'American Horror Story'

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Angela Bassett is still as stunning as ever at 56, but the actress is mentally prepared for when her good looks fall by the wayside, she told HuffPost Live on Monday.

"Our culture is very youth-driven, but I think there is absolutely value and wisdom with experience," she said. "Youth is delightful, but experience is also. ... Your cute years will diminish, but have some wisdom left, some grace, some charm."

Bassett is currently starring in her second season of the frightening anthology "American Horror Story," and while last season's "Coven" included a hunger for immortality, Bassett told HuffPost Live's Caroline Modarressy-Tehrani that the three-breasted character she plays in this year's "Freak Show" allows her to leave concerns about aging behind.

"This particular season is all about her sensuality and the three breasts, three mammary glands. So she's very sensual and delightful, and it's still very much alive and present," she said.

Catch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Angela Bassett here.

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Dionne Warwick Explains Why She Doesn't 'Deserve To Be Called A Diva'

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Whatever you do, don't call Dionne Warwick a diva.

The "Do You Know The Way To San Jose" songstress and 50-year music veteran told HuffPost Live why she'd prefer to forego the diva title in a Monday appearance to discuss her latest album, "Feels So Good."

While Beyonce might define a diva as a "female version of a hustler," Warwick believes that the word signifies either an opera singer or something far less laudatory.

"I don't use it," she said of the term. "It's a specific identity, and it's given to the operatic world, and I am not an opera singer, nor do I deserve to be called a 'diva' because it has a very, very -- not a nice connotation, really, when you stop to think about it."

Watch the rest of Dionne Warwick's conversation with HuffPost Live here.


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Taylor Swift Explaining New York Vocabulary Is Beyond Cringeworthy

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Taylor Swift, the 24-year-old superstar who purchased a $20 million dollar Tribeca apartment in March, is now the Global Welcome Ambassador for New York City.

With her new song "Welcome To New York," the woman who has lived in NYC for less than a year is now qualified to give the low-down on the city to tourists and newcomers, because that makes sense.

One of Swift's duties as Global Welcome Ambassador was to participate in a series of such absolutely cringe-worthy videos.

Allow Swift, who originally hails from a Christmas tree farm in Wyomissing, Pennsylvania (before moving to Nashville as a teen), to school you on the vocabulary native to The Big Apple. (No one calls it The Big Apple, but she doesn't tell you that.)

Let Taylor Swift define the word "bodega" for you. It's painful, because, as she says, "Bodega's are our friends." Also, permit Swift to define the word "stoop" for you because NYC GO doesn't have much faith in you, apparently.

Head over to NYC GO to watch Swift inform you of important NYC vocabulary, and assure you that "people are very friendly and there's also a lot of heart here. And it's easy to get around. People will help you if you ask for help."

Trust her she's done it.

17 Ways Beyonce's Song Titles Could Inform Her Topshop Line

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Beyoncé's love affair with Topshop has been going strong for some time now. And for a woman with 17 Grammy's under her belt as well as countless endorsements and a successful foray into the fragrance business, it was only a matter of time before she broke into the retail game with one of her favorite stores, too.

But this partnership, an "ath-leisure" brand with the UK-based retailer is so much more than a collaboration -- it's the beginning of an entire Bey brand. And if you're anything like us, your minds are reeling at just the thought of sharing a wardrobe with Ms. Carter-Knowles.

The line, according to Women's Wear Daily, is targeted toward women "who go to yoga or the health club, as well as those who just want to look as if they do." With that in mind, we've put together a list of predicted items based on some of Destiny's Child and Beyoncé's greatest hits.

Just try not to rack up too many "Bills, Bills, Bills."

And because we can, here's a playlist to listen to while you "shop."



1. The "Lose My Breath" water bottle

beyonce 1


2. The "Countdown" stop watch

3. The "Baby Boy" blue sports bra

4. The "Bootylicious" Yoga Pants

booty


5. The "End of Time" sports watch

6. The "Halo" baseball cap

halo hat


7. The "Naughty Girl" skort

8. The "Jumpin' Jumpin'" jump rope

jumpin jumpin


9. The "Flawless" bodysuit

10. The "Get Me Bodied" leotard

11. The "Survivor" sweatband

beyonce sweatband



12. The "Drunk in Love" lap suit

shape mag bey


13. The "Dance For You" unitard

14. The "Lay Up Under Me" yoga mat

Thank y'all so much for my birthday wishes ! 33!!!!!

A photo posted by Beyoncé (@beyonce) on



15. The "Ring The Alarm" alarm clock (so you never miss a workout)

16. The "Run The World (Girls)" Sneakers

17. And of course, a surfboard.

A photo posted by Beyoncé (@beyonce) on

Dionne Warwick Sounds Off On Today's Music Industry

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We're ten months into 2014 and the year has yet to generate so much as one platinum single, a development suggesting that the era of singers racking up chart-topping songs left and right is a thing of the past.

So agreed Dionne Warwick, the 50-year music industry vet who accumulated enough platinum hits to compile an entire album of them.

"The industry has changed drastically," she declared in a HuffPost Live interview on Monday.

When host Nancy Redd mentioned that that there aren't any Dionne Warwicks in today's music scene, the "That's What Friends Are For" singer agreed.

"No, there aren't," she said.

The weakened music landscape, Warwick thinks, is a symptom of young artists denying their individuality -- something she refused to do.

"Everything is almost a cloning process today, and that's not the way it was when I started," she explained. "It's just a matter of the babies deciding they all want to be the same person. Everything is marketing. Everything is, you know, 'I want you to sound like,' instead of 'you sound like you.'"

Watch the rest of Dionne Warwick's conversation with HuffPost Live here.


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Hilary Swank Rocks A Polka Dot Bikini In Malibu

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Hilary Swank looked incredible as she hit the beach in Malibu, California, with her beau, Laurent Fleury, on Sunday.

The Academy Award-winning actress was all smiles in a black polka dot bikini top, pink shorts and a hat while tossing a ball around with Fleury's two children. Swank and Fleury, a French real estate broker, have been dating for nearly two years.

Swank, 40, has kept a low profile in recent years, despite starring in two new movies, "You're Not You," in theaters now, and "The Homesman," which co-stars Tommy Lee Jones, Meryl Streep and Streep's daughter, Grace Gummer.

hilary swank

Keira Knightley Opens Up About What Happened When She Kissed Her Best Friend At Prom

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Keira Knightley took a trip back to her past this week and revealed how her same-sex kiss with her prom date was called "disgusting" by school administrators.

During an interview with Vulture, the actress was asked if she had attended her own prom. She told the publication:
Yeah, I went to prom with my best mate, Emily. We both turned up an hour late, and I’d been filming "Bend It Like Beckham," and I turned up in leather pants and a crop top, and she was a model for a while, and she’d been in Paris shooting something, and she turned up as the boy, so she had a black tie with ripped jeans on, and everybody else was completely dressed up, obviously, in that kind of finery, and then we had our picture taken underneath the thing, and she’s kissing me, and we were told that that was disgusting. And one of the teachers took us both aside and said we were never going to come to anything if we didn’t know how to dress appropriately for events like that. So that was my prom. We had a great time!


Knightley went on to explain that the pair's photo wasn't "allowed" and wasn't displayed with other photos from her prom because she was told it wasn't "appropriate."

The "Bend It Like Beckham" star isn't alone when it comes to queer kisses causing problems. Earlier this month a gay couple in Texas was allegedly ejected from their cab for kissing and reportedly informed by the driver that they were going to hell. Additionally, a gay couple was allegedly kicked off a bus in London last week for the same reason.

In happier queer kissing news, a "kiss-in" at a United Kingdom grocery store recently sprung up as a public display of solidarity with two women who were reportedly kicked out of the establishment the week before for locking lips.

For more from Knightley, check out HuffPost's recent interview with the star.

Angela Bassett Really Doesn't Want To Sing On 'American Horror Story: Freak Show'

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"American Horror Story: Freak Show" features a fantastic ensemble of talented actors, but this season puts them in some of the most challenging and visually dynamic roles the series has ever attempted. Which brings us to Angela Bassett, who plays Desiree Dupree, or the three-breasted woman. Bassett sat down with HuffPost Entertainment to tell us that she really doesn't want a musical number this season and how her intersex character is in for a very big self-discovery:

bassett

We just met Desiree in Episode 2 and found out a little of her backstory. What more can you say about her past and what we’ll see next from her?
It was up to me where she’s from. Is she from the South, is she from Detroit, or migrated North from the South? In my mind, she travels around a lot. Like, what do I want her to sound like? What’s a Detroit accent in the ‘50s? I was trying to do this kind of research.

So she met Dell at one of the carnivals. In that world, it’s less about who you are and what you look like, black or white, or this or that. You really are sort of on the outskirts, outcasts or abnormal or different or unique. You know, the most creative and most embracing of people. So these two strange individuals come together and try to forge some sort of normalcy, as husband and wife. And her dreams and desires for being normal were so huge because she was for a period of time. And then with hormone changes and this and that.

Are we going to learn more about that and Desiree being, as she describes herself, a “full-blown hermaphrodite”?
Yes, yes. That’s going to come out because she’s going to go see a doctor and she’s going to find out something about herself that she hasn’t known. She just accepted who she was and being an outcast from her family and having to make her own family, which was Dell.

She seems so confident compared to the rest of the people in the Freak Show. Do you think she sees herself as a “freak”?
I think [she’s] embraced herself. Stares and whispers, that’s just a part of being different. I think with Desiree, and what I’ve noticed with one of my other castmates, is that I know you’re gonna talk so instead of waiting for you to talk I’m gonna come out big, bold, brazen and act assured so you can’t hurt me.

Some of the crew and I have gone to see one of our cast members, Mat Fraser, do burlesque. He also does burlesque and he’s a taekwondo black belt, and he sings. He’s amazing! He just comes out at you, just bold and fun. He kind of calms you down -- here, stare, you're invited to.

Last season, your character, Marie, was such a force and butted heads with Kathy Bates' and Jessica Lange’s characters. Are we going to see that with this season?
I will a little bit. I don’t know where it’s going, but we’ve shot up to a point where I do take matters into my hand. I have a lot of fun doing it. I enlist the other women and we do it ourselves, exact our revenge. But not as much as last year. We’ll see where we’re going.

So you don’t know yet how the season will end yet?
I don’t. I’m just up to Episode 9 and it’s getting good now. But what happens after that, I don’t know.

bassett chiklis

There’s been so much about Twisty and the fear of clowns. Are you afraid of clowns personally?
I [am not]. I’ve met [actor John Carroll Lynch] out of costume, and he’s a really, really nice guy. When I’m getting my boobs and stuff applied, I’m sitting right there staring at Twisty’s half face next to me. It’s a work of art, really.

What’s it like wearing that prosthetic piece?
I’ve gotten used to it now because they’ve changed it up a bit. The first incarnation was really uncomfortable, heavy and drooping. They changed it and I think it’s silicone now and it’s much lighter. But the initial one I thought, [sighs] This is gonna be bad. And if you don’t have to see it, then I just put a T-shirt with it on, or now we just cut off a third one and stick that on [laughs]. We’ve got about three different ways to go with it.

The musical numbers are great this season. Are you going to have a song of your own?
I hope not! I hope I can dodge that bullet. But if anyone was going to, it’d probably be Desiree.

This season is a lot less scarier than “Asylum” and less campy than “Coven” was. What would you say is the message or theme of this season?
I don’t know what [Ryan] has in mind, but I think it is about being more considerate and accommodating of the differences of individuals, whether they’re physical or emotional. Whether it’s who they choose to love or what choices they make, just having more compassion towards others. It’s interesting, you have the boobs, the arms, half a body, or you’re 20 inches tall -- we can’t even deal with color! [Laughs] But it’s wonderful to work with our special cast. I really wish my kids had more time to come down and be on the set and have that experience, just as a point of growth and exposure.

What about Season 5? Do you think you’ll return?
I don’t know anything yet. They probably have some idea what Season 5 will be. We’re just trying to figure out how we’ll wrap this one up.

The above interview has been edited and condensed.

“American Horror Story: Freak Show” airs on Wednesdays at 10:00 p.m. ET on FX.

Being Bill Murray Means 'What You See Is What You Get'

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The following article is provided by Rolling Stone.

By GAVIN EDWARDS

Many of us have random impulses, but Bill Murray is the man who acts on them, for all of us. Consider, for example, the time a couple of years ago when he caught a cab late at night in Oakland. Facing a long drive across the bay to Sausalito, he started talking with his cabbie and discovered that his driver was a frustrated saxophone player: He never had enough time to practice, because he was driving a taxi 14 hours a day. Murray told the cabbie to pull over and get his horn out of the trunk; the cabbie could play it in the back seat while Murray drove.

As he tells this story, Murray is sitting on a couch in a Toronto hotel. Wearing a rumpled shirt with purple stripes, he looks like he'd rather be playing golf than doing an interview. But his eyes light up as he remembers the sound of the cab's trunk opening: "This is gonna be a good one," he thought. "We're both going to dig the shit out of this." Then he decided to "go all the way" and asked the back-seat saxophonist if he was hungry. The cabbie knew a great late-night BBQ place, but worried that it was in a sketchy neighborhood. "I was like, 'Relax, you got the horn,'" says Murray. So around 2:15 a.m., Bill Murray ate Oakland barbecue while his cab driver blew on the saxophone for an astonished crowd. "It was awesome," Murray says. "I think we'd all do that."

Bill Murray Talks Turning Down 'Forrest Gump,' 'Philadelphia' Roles

In fact, most of us wouldn't (although we probably should). Most of us don't crash strangers' karaoke parties, or get behind a bar in Austin to fulfill all drink orders from whatever random bottle was handy, or give a kid $5 to ride his bike into a swimming pool. Murray has done all those things, and more. The world has an apparently bottomless hunger for true stories of Bill Murray making strangers' lives stranger, and he obliges, whether he's stealing a golf cart and driving it to a nightclub in Stockholm or reading poetry to construction workers. He makes our world a little bit weirder, the mundane routines of everyday life a little more exciting, or as Naomi Watts puts it, "Wherever he goes, he's leaving a trail of hysteria behind him."

When "Lost in Translation" was released in 2003 (Murray got an Oscar nomination for playing an aging movie star stranded in the same luxury Tokyo hotel as Scarlett Johansson), I asked director Sofia Coppola what her wish for the following year was. She looked startled. "My wish came true," she said. "Bill Murray did my movie."

Murray, 64, has not made it easy to get him to be in your movie. Unlike any other actor of his stature, he has no agent, no manager, no publicist. If you want to cast him, you get a friend of his to persuade him. Or you call his secret 1-800 number and leave your pitch after the tone. If he checks his voicemail, maybe he'll call you back. After he agrees to be in your movie, you may not hear from him again until the first day of shooting, when he'll show up in the makeup trailer, cracking jokes and giving back rubs. Sometimes his inaccessibility means that he misses out on films he would have excelled in – "Little Miss Sunshine," "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?," "Monsters, Inc." – but Murray isn't particularly concerned. It's a worthwhile trade-off for him, considering that what he gets in return is freedom.

"Bill's whole life is in the moment," says Ted Melfi, who directed Murray in the new movie "St. Vincent." "He doesn't care about what just happened. He doesn't think about what's going to happen. He doesn't even book round-trip tickets. Bill buys one-ways and then decides when he wants to go home."

To persuade Murray to be in his movie, Melfi left a dozen voicemail messages, sent a letter, mailed scripts to P.O. boxes all over the country – and then on a Sunday morning, he got a text asking him to meet Murray at LAX an hour later. They drove through the desert for three hours, stopping at an In-N-Out Burger for grilled-cheese sandwiches, and by the end of the ride Murray had signed on. Melfi had one request: Please tell somebody else that this happened, because nobody is ever going to believe me.

In Pics: A Short History of Bill Murray's Offscreen Antics

Murray plays the title role in "St. Vincent": a Vietnam vet with a weakness for booze and gambling. He becomes the cantankerous baby sitter for the kid next door, in a relationship that feels like a reprise of 1979's "Meatballs," if Murray's counselor character, Tripper Harrison, had a few decades of hard living under his belt. The movie walks the line of mawkishness, but it works because of Murray's unsentimental performance.

Like all of Murray's best film work, it originates in his stress-free mentality. "Someone told me some secrets early on about living," Murray tells a crowd of Canadian film fans celebrating "Bill Murray Day" that same weekend. "You can do the very best you can when you're very, very relaxed." He says that's why he got into acting: "I realized the more fun I had, the better I did." On the set, the pleasure he takes in performing doesn't end when the camera stops rolling.

"It was sometimes challenging to get Bill to come to set," Melfi says, "not because he's a diva but because we couldn't find him." He would wander away, or hop on a scooter, or drop by an Army recruiting center. The movie hired a production assistant just to follow Murray around, but he was always able to lose her.

Murray's "St. Vincent" co-star Melissa McCarthy confides, "Bill literally throws banana peels in front of people." I assume she's using "literally" to mean "metaphorically," as many people do, but it turns out to be true: Once during a break in filming when the lights were getting reset, Murray tossed banana peels in the paths of passing crew members. "Not to make them slip," McCarthy clarifies, "but for the look on their face when they're like, ‘Is that really a banana peel in front of me?'"

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Murray transforms even the most mundane interactions into opportunities for improvisational comedy. Peter Chatzky, a financial-software developer from Briarcliff Manor, New York, remembers being on vacation at a hotel in Naples, Florida, when his grade-school kids spotted Murray having a drink poolside and asked him for autographs. Murray gruffly offered to inscribe their forearms but ended up writing on a couple of napkins instead. Jake, a skinny kid, got "Maybe lose a little weight, bud," signed "Jim Belushi." Julia got "Looking good, princess. Call me," signed "Rob Lowe."

Murray grew up in the suburbs of Chicago, the fifth of nine children. His father, a lumber salesman, died when Bill was 17. He spent his 20th birthday in jail, having been busted at a Chicago airport with eight and a half pounds of weed. After he got out on probation, he pursued acting; six years later, he broke through on the second season of "Saturday Night Live." These days, Murray spends a lot of his time in Charleston, South Carolina, where he is part-owner of the minor-league baseball team the Charleston RiverDogs. As "director of fun," Murray will dress up in a hot dog costume, or even run around the tarp-covered diamond during a rain delay, concluding with a belly-flop slide – safe at home. So many people in Charleston have Bill Murray stories and sightings that a local radio station instituted a regular "Where's Bill?" feature.

Recently, Murray attended a birthday dinner in Jedburg, South Carolina, invited by the chef Brett McKee. "My youngest daughter used to date his youngest son," McKee says. "The party was in the middle of freaking nowhere, with people Bill didn't know, and he was great – he was just hanging out like a regular dude. A couple of the guests were old country people, and they were showing him their moose calls." After dinner, there was dancing; Murray commandeered the remote control and was captured on video getting down to his selections: Tommy Tutone's "867-5309/Jenny," and DJ Snake and Lil Jon's "Turn Down for What."

In Pics: The 20 Greatest Bill Murray Movies

In April, Ashley Donald and her fiancé, Erik Rogers, were in downtown Charleston, posing for their engagement photos in front of historic houses. "As our photographer took a picture," she recalls, "we noticed a guy standing behind him, lifting his shirt over his face and rubbing his belly." Then he pulled down his shirt, revealing that he was Bill Murray. The betrothed couple were flabbergasted, but had enough presence of mind to ask him to take a picture with them. Murray posed, congratulated them and kept walking.

Murray made international news in May when he gave a toast at tech-startup manager EJ Rumpke's bachelor party, at a steakhouse in Charleston. Murray didn't technically crash – one of Rumpke's friends spotted him at the restaurant and invited him – but he took the opportunity to drop some bona fide wisdom, telling the guys that just as funerals are actually for the living, bachelor parties are actually for unmarried friends. He advised the guests that if they found someone they thought they wanted to spend their lives with, they shouldn't plan a wedding and book a caterer, but should travel around the world. And if they were still in love on their return to the States, "get married at the airport."

"He grabbed my leg and threw me up in the air," Rumpke says. "And then he snuck out." Rumpke got married without a global journey, but Murray says that one of his own friends tried the scheme – and it worked out terribly. "The next time I saw him, he leapt all over me, because he was on his way down the slippery chute and he found out that was really the wrong thing," Murray says with a grin. "He was very happy about it."

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The website urban dictionary defines "Bill Murray Story" as "an outlandish (yet plausible) story that involves you witnessing Bill Murray doing something totally unusual, often followed by him walking up to you and whispering, 'No one will ever believe you.' " Ask Murray about his reputation as the master of surreal celebrity encounters and he grimaces, not eager to explain his motivations. But he will concede that he's aware of how his presence is received. "No one has an easy life," he says. "It's this face we put on, that we're not all getting rained on. But you can't start thinking about numbers – if I can change just one person, or I had three nice encounters. You can't think that way, because you're certainly going to have one where you say, ‘What did I just do?' You're a disappointment to yourself, and others, imminently. Any second."

Sitting at a table in the upscale Toronto restaurant Montecito, which he co-owns, filmmaker Ivan Reitman laughs as he remembers a day 40 years ago. He was producing a theatrical revue called "The National Lampoon Show," starring John Belushi, Gilda Radner, Harold Ramis, Bill Murray and Bill's brother Brian – before "SNL." Reitman walked down the streets of New York with Bill, who was totally unknown, but was already treating the universe as his own private playground. Murray adopted what they called "the honker voice" – the obnoxious voice he later used in "Caddyshack." "As we were walking across the street," Reitman says, "he would yell at the top of his lungs, ‘Watch out! There's a lobster loose!' He would see somebody in the street and say, ‘Hey, get some hot butter, it's the only way to get 'em!' They would start laughing. They didn't know who this crazy person was, but they knew he was funny."

Rolling Stone’s 50 Funniest People Now

In 1978, when Reitman was putting together "Meatballs," he spent a month persuading the 27-year-old Murray to do the movie. At that point, he had a phone number that you could actually get him on. Murray wanted to spend his summer off from "Saturday Night Live" playing baseball and golf, but Reitman pleaded, and Belushi advised Murray that it didn't matter what the movie was, so long as he was the star. "Meatballs" set the template for Murray's working methods: He closed his deal the day before the movie started shooting and routinely ignored the script. His first day, he improvised his way through a scene where he's introducing all the counselors-in-training – he showed up, read the pages and threw them away, saying, "I got this."

When Murray first saw an action scene cut together from 1984's "Ghostbusters," he says, "I knew then I was going to be rich and famous. Not only did I go back to work with a lot of attitude, I was late. I didn't care – I knew that we could be late every day for the rest of our lives."

Reitman leans back. "He lives his life to his standard, even though sometimes he's lazy and sometimes he's eccentric, and he's frustrating to other creative people, and, frankly, unfair, because everything has to go on his clock," he says. "But he's worth it."

Melfi says there's no difference between the public Murray and the private Murray: "What you see is what you get. He throws people in the pool in public, and he throws people in the pool in private."

Sitting in his hotel room, Murray gently disagrees. "The private me just gets lost and wanders, and is more easily bushwhacked and taken down for dreaming nonsensical stuff. The public me can get a bit more emotional because people are pushing my buttons. But when I'm at my best? The working part of me. I get a lot more done. By really getting into your work, the nonessential stuff drops away." Through this lens, Murray's ongoing adventures with the public can be considered an effort to make real life more like the movies.

In Pics: The 25 Funniest Movies of All Time

In 2011, Murray filmed a promotional video for the Trident Academy near Charleston; one of his six sons was a student there. (Murray has been married and divorced twice.) Director David W. Smith was working on the shoot. "He came in hot and a little grumpy," Smith says. "He was about 30 minutes late, and he complained that there were too many lights. He had a script, but he sat down in the school library and ad-libbed the whole thing. He got all these teddy bears and had a conversation with them. We're looking at each other – this guy is off-his-face crazy – but there was a method to his madness."

Murray loosened up as he played basketball with the school's kids, and stuck around for lunch (his request: a tuna sandwich with no crusts), ultimately signing autographs and taking pictures. Smith recalls, "As the shoot went on, he became more and more like the guy that everyone thinks they know, which I guess is who he actually is." Smith asked Murray if he would walk down the hall with the crew members so they could make a short film of it. Murray was confused, but he complied – when the camera cut, he kept walking, heading to his car without breaking stride.

Smith played the footage in slow motion, set an old Kinks song to it and had a short Bill Murray film that looked like an outtake from a Wes Anderson movie. Ultimately, about 2 million people watched an online one-minute film of Bill Murray (and four other guys) walking down a hallway in slow motion. Smith had internalized one of Murray's principles: Don't accept the world as it is, but find some way to inject life into its most mundane moments.

Another essential Murray principle: Wear your wisdom lightly, so insights arrive as punch lines. When pressed about his interactions with the public, he admits that the encounters are, to a certain extent, "selfish." Murray shifts his weight on the couch and explains, "My hope, always, is that it's going to wake me up. I'm only connected for seconds, minutes a day, sometimes. And suddenly, you go, ‘Holy cow, I've been asleep for two days. I've been doing things, but I'm just out.' If I see someone who's out cold on their feet, I'm going to try to wake that person up. It's what I'd want someone to do for me. Wake me the hell up and come back to the planet."

Doing a Q&A at a Toronto movie theater, Murray is asked, "How does it feel to be Bill Murray?" – and he takes the extremely meta query seriously, asking the audience to consider the sensation of self-awareness. "There's a wonderful sense of well-being that begins to circulate . . . up and down your spine," Murray says. "And you feel something that makes you almost want to smile. So what's it like to be me? Ask yourself, ‘What's it like to be me?' The only way we'll ever know what it's like to be you is if you work your best at being you as often as you can, and keep reminding yourself that's where home is." As the audience applauds, Bill Murray smiles inscrutably, alone in a crowded room, safe at home.

Police Report Details How Mama June's Ex Abused Her Daughter Anna Shannon

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Though she has repeatedly denied it, more evidence that June "Mama June" Shannon has rekindled her relationship with convicted child molester Mark McDaniel continues to emerge.

Mama June's 20-year-old daughter, Anna Shannon Cardwell, confirmed that McDaniel molested her when she was 8 years old, and now, RadarOnline has obtained the police report detailing the abuse she suffered at the hands of McDaniel.

In a March 2003 Spalding County Sheriff’s Office incident report, Officer Bauch wrote that it was a teacher at Anna's elementary school who first reported the abuse. Bauch wrote that while interviewing Anna, she told an officer and a child services counselor that “she had done the ‘s word’ with Mark.”

According to RadarOnline, McDaniel was indicted in Spalding County for "rape, child molestation, aggravated child molestation, enticing a child for indecent purposes and aggravated sexual battery."

As part of a plea deal, McDaniel pleaded guilty to aggravated child molestation. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison, and was released from Dodge State Prison on March 1, 2014.

Shannon has denied romantic involvement with McDaniel, but TMZ published photos of the 35-year-old sitting in a stairwell with her 9-year-old daughter, Alana Thompson, and the convicted child molester. TMZ also reports that Shannon allegedly bought her daughter's abuser a $25,000 used Nissan Altima, and allegedly went house-hunting with him last month in Hampton, Georgia.

Allegations that Shannon was involved with McDaniel prompted TLC to cancel "Here Comes Honey Boo Boo" last week, and a spokesperson for Georgia's Division of Family and Child Services warned that the alleged relationship puts the former reality star in danger of losing custody of her three underage daughters.

Neil Patrick Harris Talks Nude Scenes In 'Gone Girl'

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Neil Patrick Harris stopped by Conan O'Brien this week to discuss his role in the massively popular "Gone Girl," and took some time to open up about his much-discussed nude scene in the film.

Harris emphasized that he had to navigate the scene carefully, in an effort to not give too much away to the eager audience.

"We shot that particular scene for two days -- two days of that," Harris told O'Brien. "It was disarming... your butt is just out there. There's a camera crew and there's your butt. But that had to happen -- you just deal with it. I was more concerned with Rosamund Pike. I wanted to make sure that she... felt comfortable and didn't feel weird."

But it wasn't just his butt that he was worried about.

He also told Conan he wanted to make sure that no one "really, really" saw "his wang."

"You don’t mind a hint of the wang but you don’t want just a long, long moment of the wang. You’re conscious of that."

We don't know, NPH, we don't mind "really, really" seeing a little wang now and again.

Marvel Announces Black Panther, Captain Marvel & A Lot Of Other Movies

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Not to be outdone by DC Comics and Warner Bros., Marvel Studios and Disney set release dates for eight films on Tuesday, including new standalone features for Black Panther (played by Chadwick Boseman), Captain Marvel (who will lead the studio's first female superhero movie) and the Inhumans. Marvel also announced that the third and final Avengers film will actually get split into two parts: "Marvel's The Avengers: Infinity War Part 1" will be out on May 4, 2018, with "Part 2" following on on May 3, 2019. Also coming: a third and presumably final Thor movie, and the official release date for "Doctor Strange."

"Captain America: Civil War" (May 6, 2016)
"Doctor Strange" (Nov. 4, 2016)
"Guardians of the Galaxy 2" (May 5, 2017)
"Thor: Ragnarok" (July 27, 2017)
"Black Panther" (Nov. 3, 2017)
"Marvel's The Avengers: Infinity War Part 1" (May 4, 2018)
"Captain Marvel" (July 6, 2018)
"Inhumans" (Nov. 2, 2018)
"Marvel's The Avengers: Infinity War Part 2" (May 3, 2019)

According to Marvel Studios president Kevin Feige, Boseman's Black Panther will be a large part of "Captain America: Civil War." It was previously revealed that the third Captain America film would focus on the Marvel Civil War storyline and feature Robert Downey Jr.'s Tony Stark as an antagonist, of sorts.

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As for the rumor that Benedict Cumberbatch was in final talks to play Doctor Strange for that film, Feige told journalists at the Marvel event that if the actor were confirmed for the part, he would have been revealed on Tuesday.

No writer or director has been set for the Captain Marvel movie, but Feige expected that would change soon. The movie will follow Carol Danvers.




















Gina Neely On Divorce From Husband Pat: 'We Were Trying To Work On' Our Marriage

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Fans were shocked when the Food Network's golden couple, Pat and Gina Neely, announced they were calling it quits after 20 years of marriage back in September.

But during an appearance on "The Wendy Williams Show" Monday, Gina revealed that the split was a long time coming -- and that she and Pat are both taking the big life change in stride.

“Life happens, honey," the "Down Home With the Neelys" star told Williams of the divorce. "What are you going to do? Cry in a bowl of milk? At the end of the day, Pat and I are real people. Life happens. I had dinner with Pat on Friday. We’re still good friends, but it just happened. You don’t stop living because bad things happen. You keep going.”

The couple, known for their lovey-dovey dynamic on camera (episodes of their show were peppered with pet names and kisses), dated in high school and are parents to two grown daughters.

Gina told Williams that divorce wasn't a decision she and Pat took lightly and admitted she had moved out of their home two years prior in the hopes that change would do them good.

“We were trying to work on it and do some things differently, but it ended up that way," she told Williams. "I did family counseling, wanted everyone to be good. We’re all in a good place and at the end of the day, that’s what’s important to me.”

As for the fate of the Neelys' business ventures -- besides the TV show, the couple own a restaurant in New York City and have penned numerous cookbooks together -- the exes said in a statement that their focus moving forward would be on their "individual brands."

Gina summed it up a little differently when Williams asked about the future of their food empire: “Business is business," she said. "Let’s be clear about that!”

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Kate Walsh Shooting 'Bad Judge' In Skin-Colored Bikini Will Take The Mystery Out Of TV Nude Scenes

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On "Bad Judge," Kate Walsh does things that are too scandalous for regular judges: drinking hard, partying and wearing skin-colored bathing suits instead of being nude.

Daily Mail recently posted some behind-the-scenes video of Walsh's NBC show that will probably ruin all network TV nude scenes for you forever. Though Walsh's character is reportedly naked in the scene, in real life the actress is clearly wearing a bikini.

Even though network TV having restrictions on nudity isn't an earth-shattering revelation, the scene can definitely take some of the mystery out of nude scenes, coming as a shock for anyone who thought that shows like "Grey's Anatomy" and "Private Practice" showed actual nudity.

With some groups calling for "Bad Judge" to be canceled based on its portrayal of women, TV fans should enjoy clips like this while they can. It's a behind-the-scenes glimpse of everything you don't normally get to see. (Well, almost everything.)

H/T Daily Mail

States Expand Access To Lifesaving Drug After Philip Seymour Hoffman's Death

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NEW YORK -- Legal changes in the wake of actor Philip Seymour Hoffman's February death of a drug overdose have dramatically expanded access to a lifesaving drug that can reverse overdoses from prescription painkillers and heroin.

Eight states have passed laws allowing firefighters, police or members of the public to more easily administer the drug, called naloxone. Three more have passed so-called Good Samaritan laws allowing onlookers to call 911 without fear of being prosecuted themselves for drug crimes.

"After Hoffman's death, suddenly the time was right," said William Matthews, a program coordinator at New York City's Harm Reduction Coalition.

Naloxone is a safe prescription drug administered via needle or nasal inhaler that blocks the brain receptors to which heroin or other opioids bind. Researchers first developed it in the 1960s, and it has been widely used in emergency rooms. Since around 2000, its distribution has been broadened to members of the general public who are not themselves opioid users, as part of a larger shift toward more pragmatic approaches to drug use.

The trend has been accelerated by state laws passed in recent years shielding prescribers as well as those administering naloxone -- from cops to concerned parents -- from any fear of legal liability.

"The liability risk is, as far as I can tell, about none. We've given out hundreds of thousands of naloxone doses in the last few years alone, and there hasn't been a case of someone suing someone," said Peter Davidson, a medical sociologist at the University of California, San Diego.

Still, said Davidson, when he conducts naloxone trainings for doctors or other professionals, "Someone always sticks their hand out and asks, 'What's the liability risk?'"

So drug reformers across the country -- even in southern states like North Carolina -- have convinced legislatures to pass special laws granting legal immunity to those who administer naloxone. Rhode Island, New York and Washington also now allow pharmacists to dispense naloxone to anyone who needs it, as long as they have authorization from a physician.

A June change in state law in New York also allows community programs to dispense naloxone without a medical professional physically present. The legal change has been "incredibly wonderful," said Matt Curtis, policy director at the Brooklyn-based community group VOCAL-NY.

The product of the changes was evident one recent Wednesday at VOCAL's offices, where director of services Evelyn Milan explained to a small class how to use naloxone in an inhaler or a needle.

"How many cc's is that?" asked one participant, a former heroin addict, knowingly tossing off the abbreviation for cubic centimeters.

As she does nearly every week, Milan distributed the drug in a small plastic pouch to several participants at the end of the class. In the past, she said, she's had clients come back to her the same day to tell her they have saved a life.

(Click the video above to watch a naloxone training at VOCAL-NY's Brooklyn offices.)

Milan's training lasts only around 15 minutes. The drug's straightforward administration takes only a few seconds.

Working with the city health department, more than 25,000 naloxone kits have been distributed in New York since 2010. At least 500 overdoses have been reversed.

Similar community-based programs that target users, friends and family members helped reverse at least 10,000 overdoses between 1996 and 2010, according to research Davidson helped conduct. He is now in the midst of updating that research with more complete data showing that the number of lives saved has been "quite significantly larger."

States like New York and Maine have also pushed to expand the number of police and firefighters who carry naloxone since Hoffman's death. They are often the first to arrive at the scene of an overdose, even before emergency medical services.

The New York City Police Department received a grant from the state attorney general's office in May to equip 20,000 officers with naloxone. Both Attorney General Eric Schneiderman and Gov. Andrew Cuomo are supporting similar efforts elsewhere across the state.

Twenty-five states and the District of Columbia now have some form of naloxone access law, according to the LawAtlas. That's up from 18 in 2013 and just eight in 2012.

It's unlikely that Hoffman could have been saved by naloxone, since he died alone. But it is clear that his death has resulted in a dramatic attitude shift toward greater naloxone distribution.

After Hoffman's death, Gil Kerlikowske, then the White House drug czar, told HuffPost the actor's name came up constantly in conversations with lawmakers during the passage of New York's package of bills.

"Unfortunate as it is to say this, that kind of very high profile death does help because it pushes policymakers to look around for things that they can do," said Davidson. "They bump into the work that's being done with naloxone distribution."

Story by Matt Sledge and video by Emily Kassie.

12 Reasons to Love Blake Lively

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We first got to know Blake Lively as Serena in the hit series "Gossip Girl" but this girl has grown into quite the woman--now expecting a baby with her husband Ryan Reynolds. There are a dozen reasons Blake is a "woman to watch" and take notes on! Here's why we want to emulate this mama-to-be:

1. She keeps revealing her layers. She has been a proven model, actress and spokeswoman, but Blake shows us another side of her multidimensional self in her latest venture as the founder of an online creative community called Preserve. Serving as an art digital monthly magazine, part e-commerce venture, part video blog, the site will seek out and celebrate people all over America who are making things--food, outfits, pillows, plates, kitchen tables--with their hands. And she is full steam ahead with this vision.

2. She works with the obstacles. If you are under the impression celebrities have it easy when it comes to calling in sick, think again. A Vogue reporter tagged along to interview Blake while she was jet-lagged and suffering from possible food poisoning.

3. She found a new way to do what she loves: Blake's close friend and fellow entrepreneur, Ivanka Trump, says of her buddy's new online creative hub, "Through curation, storytelling, nurturing creativity, she's really sharing another side of herself with a much larger audience. I don't think there's such a disconnect between what she's traditionally done as an actress and this new platform. Her ability to story-tell is something that she's clearly cultivated since childhood" (Vogue).

4. She wears herself well. One of the reasons Blake has become a constant cover girl is due to her flawless fashion queues. Her stylishness is a large part of what made her famous. And get this...it literally is HER style--she doesn't have a stylist!

5. She creates the life she wants. When speaking of the tradition and sense of creation personified in the collections featured on her website, Preserve.us, Blake has said, "People want things with meaning. I know that because I want that. This space doesn't exist, so I'm creating it."

6. She utilizes her free time wisely. Actresses and models have a lot of time in between takes. Blake chose to use her time learning more about the art of homemaking, which better prepared her for her new venture.

7. She will never "retire." Blake has declared she will never just do ONE thing and will always do whatever inspires her, no matter her age.

8. She believes in mentorship. Although she's a roaring success at age 27, Blake knows to keep growing means to keep learning - and you learn from the best. She cites Martha Stewart herself as her homemaking adviser and friend.

9. She knows doing your research pays off. When she found out she nabbed a spot to audition for Ben Affleck's movie "The Town" she traveled to Charlestown on her own dime to get a feel of the city and embody a true Boston accent. Ben Affleck had never heard of Blake prior to the reading and was thoroughly impressed by how she nailed the audition. They even arranged the filming schedule to accommodate her existing schedule.

10. She defines her own kind of party. While it is easy and tempting for a young, attractive A-Lister to hit the Hollywood party scene with a vengeance, Blake actually doesn't drink...and never has.

11. She doesn't sweat her man's past. Her husband, Ryan Reynolds, was quite the ladies man with several Hollywood starlets in the day, which Blake considers a moot point. Instead of letting jealousy taint the stability of her relationship she embodies the attitude of a confident woman: "The fact that he lived so much before we got together, he's the exact realized person that he should be. And so I get to share my life with the person he's become, and we get to grow from there" (Vogue).

12. She defends her fellow woman. What a woman says about another woman tells you a lot about the woman she is. Blake has nothing but positive things to say about the women who share her spotlight: "People like to gossip. They bond over it. They don't bond over complimenting famous people. I'm always the first person to defend Gwyneth Paltrow. Or any woman in a position of power, like Martha Stewart or Oprah, who gets burned. Because they have paved the path for so many other women who are doing something they believe in" (Vogue).

Many of Blake's friends and family have compared her to an "old soul." While she is youthful as ever with a future bright as can be, we have to agree that her wisdom is just as impressive as her charm and talent.

Beyoncé & Jay Z Saw 'Nightcrawler' On Monday Night

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Beyoncé and Jay Z spent Monday night watching "Nightcrawler" with Jake Gyllenhaal. The world's favorite couple were guests of Gyllenhaal (they're friends in real life) and sat in the same row as the star and his sister, Maggie Gyllenhaal. Other famous faces at the New York premiere of "Nightcrawler" included Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson, "Sopranos" creator David Chase, Michael Shannon, director Doug Liman and "Nightcrawler" co-star Rene Russo. Beyoncé and Jay Z didn't attend the after-party to celebrate "Nightcrawler," but they reportedly did enjoy a box of popcorn during the movie. Chow down?

"Nightcrawler" is out on Oct. 31.

beyonce jay z nightcrawler
Photo provided to HuffPost Entertainment by Mammoth PR

Matthew McConaughey's Lincoln Ads Have Nothing On Rust Cohle For The Subway

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New Yorkers are painfully aware of the struggles that take place underground: the jam-packed subway cars, the sporadic construction, the mysterious "train traffic" causing delays. For anyone who's never experienced this special kind of hell, here's a pretty accurate look at the NYC tubes through the eyes of Matthew McConaughey's "True Detective" character.

In a new video by Brooklyn's Worst Sketch Comedy, impressionist Corey Scott Rutledge presents a spot-on parody of Rust Cohle's brooding monotone, spouting pessimism any Big Apple straphanger can relate to.

"It doesn't matter where you been or how you got here. We're all delayed because of train traffic -- whatever the hell that is, anyway."

Yes, time is a flat circle, aboard the New York subway.

9 Sandra Bullock Quotes That Prove She's The Most Relatable Woman In Hollywood

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We can all learn something from the lovely and talented Sandra Bullock. On top of her lengthy and diverse film career, the Academy Award-winning actress is equally accomplished in her outstanding philanthropic work. In addition to donating $1 million to the Red Cross for Japan's earthquake and tsunami relief fund in 2011, the New Orleans resident has been honored for her charity work in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. Plus, Bullock's down-to-earth personality just makes her someone we'd all want to grab a beer with.

Here are nine bits of wisdom from the one and only Sandra Bullock:

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