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Here's Why Adam Pally Is Leaving 'The Mindy Project'

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Dr. Peter Prentice will soon be officially off-duty.

Shulman & Associates' resident bro, Adam Pally, is set to leave his regular series role on "The Mindy Project" in early 2015, according to TVLine. Pally's departure will take place after the thirteenth episode of Season 3. Pally's contract with the show was always set to end at this point in the series.

Fans shouldn't fret too much, though. In addition to reportedly making future guest appearances on "Mindy," Pally is returning to ABC after recently signing a two-year deal to produce projects through his company, Clone Wolf Productions. The actor previously starred on ABC's "Happy Endings."

As far Pally's future appearances, it looks like he'll have plenty of opportunities. Fox recently added 6 more episodes of "Mindy" for Season 3, bringing the season's total to 21, which is right around previous season totals of 22 and 24 episodes.

For more, head to TVLine.

"The Mindy Project" airs Tuesday at 9:30 p.m. ET on Fox.


Bill Cosby Says He Won't Answer To 'Innuendos'

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Before Bill Cosby took the stage at a sold-out theater in Melbourne, Florida on Friday night, he broke his silence on the recent sexual assault allegations.

While speaking with Florida Today, the 77-year-old comedian addressed the claims and revealed his reason for silence. "I know people are tired of me not saying anything, but a guy doesn't have to answer to innuendos," Cosby told the publication. "People should fact check. People shouldn't have to go through that and shouldn't answer to innuendos."

In addition to the Florida Today interview, Cosby's lawyer, Marty Singer, released a statement to ABC News on Friday about his client:

"This situation is an unprecedented example of the media’s breakneck rush to run stories without any corroboration or adherence to traditional journalistic standards. Over and over again, we have refuted these new unsubstantiated stories with documentary evidence, only to have a new uncorroborated story crop up out of the woodwork. When will it end?"


Cosby has previously refused to answer questions regarding allegations that he sexually assaulted several women. In an interview with NPR's Scott Simon broadcast on Nov. 15, Cosby shook his head and remained silent when asked to respond to the claims. Cosby also refused to respond to the AP's Brett Zongker regarding the allegations, saying, "No, no, we don't answer that." He later requested, still on the record, that the AP interview be "scuttled."

For more from Cosby, head to Florida Today. Singer's full statement is available at ABC.

Bill Maher Surprisingly Reveals A Plan To Save Christmas

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From Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer to Buddy the Elf, Christmas has had a lot of unlikely heroes over the years, but this may be the most shocking of all.

On the last "Real Time with Bill Maher" episode of 2014, the host dedicated some time to outline his three-point plan for saving Christmas. The comedian is pretty outspoken in his disapproval of religion, as outlined in his 2008 movie "Religulous," so he admitted himself that he's a surprising choice to come to Christmas' aid.

The comedian explained that it's not about the religious aspect of the holiday, though. Maher said, "It's about family, memories and the looks on the carolers' faces when I set the dogs on them."

Watch the full clip above, which has some NSFW language.

"Real Time with Bill Maher" returns Friday, January 9, 2015.

Jimmy Fallon Thanks Turkeys For Being Really Well Fed

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In Jimmy Fallon's latest "Thank You Notes" segment on "The Tonight Show," the host channeled the true spirit of Thanksgiving and gave a special shoutout to all the turkeys out there.

"Thank you, turkeys, for being really well fed all this week," Fallon said, "and probably thinking, 'Man, November is the best!'" The poor turkeys have no idea what's coming, but at least they get to spend their final days eating, right?

Other thank you notes included Fallon thanking the new "Star Wars VII" trailer for debuting before the upcoming final "Hobbit" film, the Snapchat logo and the woman marrying Charles Manson. "Thank you for making Charles Manson look like the non-crazy one in the relationship." Perfectly said, Fallon.

"The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" airs weeknights at 11:35 p.m. ET on NBC.

Kris Jenner Says Boyfriend Is Not A Stalker

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Kris Jenner doesn't care her new boyfriend's ex claims he's a stalker ... because the BF has convinced Kris she's crazy.

Robert Pattinson & FKA Twigs Spend Time At Chateau Marmont

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Robert Pattinson and his girlfriend FKA twigs try to go unnoticed while heading to a chauffeured car at celeb hotspot Chateau Marmont on Friday (November 21) in West Hollywood, Calif.

Ian Somerhalder Is Handing Out Human Hearts For A Good Cause

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Trying to save the world isn't something new for Ian Somerhalder, but he's really grabbed our attention with his latest, very bloody Instagram post.

Ariana Grande And Big Sean Kissing In New Photo

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Ariana Grande and Big Sean are not afraid to show a little PDA. In a new picture posted by Sean on Saturday, the couple is seen kissing. “Me n my Ari,” he wrote. See the photo at right and a larger version of it below.

Bill Cosby Controversy: A Decade In The Making

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The sexual assault allegations that recently resurfaced against Bill Cosby first became public in 2005 when a former employee of his alma mater, Temple University, claimed he had drugged and abused her a year earlier at his suburban Philadelphia home. Here's how the controversy over the allegations, some dating to the 1960s, has unfolded since then:

___ Andrea Constand tells police in her native Ontario, Canada, on Jan. 13, 2005, that Cosby assaulted her a year earlier at his mansion in Cheltenham, Pennsylvania. She said he invited her home after a restaurant dinner, gave her pills for stress and tension, then helped her to a sofa when she became dizzy and sick. She recalled him touching her breast and placing her hand on his penis, and said she awoke with her clothing in disarray and bra undone. She said she drove herself home and decided not to report to police what happened due to Cosby's fame and her position as a Temple women's basketball administrator. Instead, she said she contacted a lawyer who deals with sexual assaults.

Montgomery County District Attorney Bruce L. Castor Jr. decides after a monthlong investigation that there's not enough "credible and admissible evidence," a year after the alleged crime, to prove any charges. Castor adds that he won't divulge details to avoid tainting a possible civil action by Constand, and says "Much exists in this investigation that could be used to portray persons on both sides of the issue in a less than flattering light."

Cosby's lawyer says the comedian "looks forward to moving on with his life," and Cosby makes his only published comments to date about these allegations, telling the National Enquirer that "I am not going to give in to people who try to exploit me because of my celebrity status."

Constand then sues Cosby alleging battery, assault, infliction of emotional distress, defamation and invasion of privacy. She makes the same allegations cited in the summary of her complaint to Canadian police, but also alleges that he "digitally penetrated her." Her suit eventually names nine women — Tamara Green and eight Jane Does — as witnesses who would testify about prior sexual assaults.

___

Tamara Green appears on NBC's "Today" show on Feb. 10, 2005, saying that Constand's allegation about being drugged and assaulted compelled her to speak publicly about an encounter she said she had with Cosby in the 1970s. She says Cosby groped and fondled her at her Los Angeles apartment after immobilizing her with what he said was cold medicine. Cosby's lawyer calls the allegations "absolutely false," and says Cosby did not even recognize her name.

___

Beth Ferrier, identified as Jane Doe No. 5, goes public on June 23, 2005, alleging that as a model in New York in 1984, she met Cosby and they had a brief affair. She claims Cosby drugged her coffee during an encounter in Denver and she woke up hours later in the backseat of her car with her clothes disheveled.

___

Janice Dickinson, in a June 6, 2006, radio interview with Howard Stern, describes Cosby as a "bad guy" and says he "preys on women." She says her publishing company forced her to downplay passages in a 2002 memoir about an alleged encounter the model and comedian had 20 years earlier. The book says Cosby was upset when she declined to go to his hotel room, saying "After all I've done for you, that's what I get?"

___

Barbara Bowman is named in a June 9, 2006, Philadelphia magazine report as one of the Jane Does giving depositions or statements in support of Constand's lawsuit. Constand and Cosby settle their claims out of court for an undisclosed sum that November, but it doesn't stop People magazine from publishing a detailed account of Bowman's allegations a month later. Bowman tells People that Cosby won her trust as an 18-year-old aspiring actress in 1985 and drugged and assaulted her multiple times in Reno, Nevada and Atlantic City, New Jersey.

___

Eight years pass.

___

In January 2014, The New York Times publishes an open letter by Dylan Farrow accusing another celebrity — her stepfather, Woody Allen — of abusing her as a child. Newsweek magazine follows in February, reviving the allegations from the one-time "Jane Does," publishing interviews in February with Green and Bowman.

Comedian Hannibal Buress makes "you rape women, Bill Cosby" a laugh line in his standup routine. Cosby's planned return to television begins to implode.

Bowman then writes in The Washington Post that "Cosby had drugged and raped me, too." Her Nov. 13 essay questions why it took a male comedian's comments to create the public outcry.

___

Joan Tarshis comes forward on Nov. 16, alleging that Cosby drugged and assaulted her in 1969, when she was 19. She says Cosby forced her to perform oral sex on him during one encounter, and then drugged and raped her in another. Cosby's lawyer issues a blanket denial of "decade-old, discredited allegations," stating that "the fact that they are being repeated does not make them true." The next day, Cosby's lawyer clarifies that his statement does not apply to Constand.

Dickinson then reappears, telling "Entertainment Tonight" on Nov. 18 that Cosby sexually assaulted her in 1982. She says Cosby gave her red wine and a pill in a Lake Tahoe, California, hotel room. Dickinson says she wrote about the alleged assault in a draft of her 2002 autobiography, "No Lifeguard on Duty: The Accidental Life of the World's First Supermodel," but that Cosby and his lawyers pressured her and the publisher to remove the claim.

Netflix indefinitely postpones the Nov. 27 premiere of a Cosby comedy special, "Bill Cosby 77." NBC then scraps a Cosby comedy series under development, and TV Land stops airing reruns of "The Cosby Show."

Castor — the prosecutor who decided not to bring charges in 2005 — reveals that Cosby had been evasive during his investigation. "I think when he said that he didn't do anything improper or illegal, I thought then he was lying and I still do," he tells The Associated Press. But Castor says there was not enough evidence to prove anything.

___

Therese Serignese, named in documents as a "Jane Doe," comes forward as Cosby's 7th named accuser, alleging that he drugged and assaulted her in 1976 when she was 19. The same day, Nov. 20, the AP releases video from a Nov. 6 interview with Cosby and his wife, Camille, when they were being asked about their decision to loan paintings and other artworks to the Smithsonian's National Museum of African Art in Washington, D.C. When asked about the sex allegations resurfacing, Cosby refuses to discuss them. Later, with a microphone still attached and the camera rolling, he questions the news organization's integrity for raising the issue and says, "I would appreciate if it was scuttled."

Woody Harrelson Didn't Know Liam & Chris Hemsworth Were Brothers At One Point

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Everyone knows who Chris Hemsworth is. Not only does the actor play Thor, but he was just named People's Sexiest Man Alive. Woody Harrelson, however, didn't realize that his "Hunger Games" co-star Liam Hemsworth was the "Thor" star's brother.

In an interview for "The Hunger Games: Catching Fire" from last year that's been making the rounds again, Harrelson has the major realization that the Hemsworth brothers are related. As Liam is talking to the interviewer, whose first name is also Chris, about his brother's upcoming film, you can see a look of astonishment cross Harrelson's face. “Jesus, I never got that he was your brother,” Harrelson says to Hemsworth. “Until just now. I honestly never put that together."

Harrelson may have helped solved one of TV's greatest murder mysteries earlier this year in "True Detective," but when it comes to last names, things go right over his head.

Watch the interview above and fast forward to 3:52 to witness Harrleson's discovery.

H/T MTV.

Cameron Diaz Answers Weird Questions In 'SNL' Monologue

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Cameron Diaz hosted this weekend's episode of "Saturday Night Live" in promotion for the upcoming remake of "Annie." Diaz kicked off the show with a sub-three-minute monologue that felt like it had been cooked up an hour before she hit the stage. After talking about lighting up the "big turkey" in Rockefeller Center, Diaz fielded several silly questions from the "SNL" cast, like "I think you're hot," "Was filming 'The Other Woman' so much fun?" and "Is Shrek just as grumpy in real life?" After answering all of them seriously, sex with Tony Danza came about and that was Diaz's cue to wrap it up. Watch the clip above.

Bruno Mars Became A Backup Singer While Mystikal Rapped On 'SNL'

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Bruno Mars and Mark Ronson turned the "Saturday Night Live" stage into the funkiest dance club in New York City last night during the performance of their new hit, "Uptown Funk." But for Mars and Ronson's second song, a very unexpected guest joined the duo.

For "Feel Right," Mars took the backseat and joined his backup singers while rapper Mystikal took over. For those who remember, Mystikal is the rapper best known for the early '00s songs "Shake Ya Ass" (or the edited version, "Shake It Fast"), "Danger" and "Bouncin' Back." Mystikal is back and used his aggressive rap-yelling to bring a lively James Brown-esque vibe to the "SNL" stage for "Feel Right."

Watch the full clip above as Mystikal raps and Mars twirls and sings in the background, trying to pretend he's still not the star of the show.

11 Things You Didn't Know About 'iCarly'

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In 5 ... 4 ... 3 ... 2 ...

With his hit shows "Drake & Josh" and "Zoey 101" coming to an end, Dan Schneider was focused on his next project. The new series starred "Drake & Josh" alum Miranda Cosgrove as a girl making her own web series with her best friends, played by Jennette McCurdy and Nathan Kress. After debuting in early September 2007, "iCarly" opened to strong ratings and never looked back, eventually overtaking "SpongeBob" as the network's most-watched show.

Schneider recalled the experience on his blog:

I never dreamed the audience would embrace "iCarly" the way it has ... within less than a year, we saw "iCarly" become more than just a successful show. Thanks to the fans, "iCarly" became part of American pop culture.


emma
Emma Stone on "iCarly."



"iCarly" ran on Nickelodeon for seven seasons. The series received critical acclaim and even drew huge celebrity guest stars like Emma Stone, Jack Black and Jimmy Fallon on its way to becoming one of the Nickelodeon's most successful shows of all time. Fan's loved the series' interactivity, but now, even two years after series finale "iGoodbye" aired Nov. 23, 2012, there is still a lot viewers don't know.

She's Carly. She's Sam. And these are 11 things you didn't know about "iCarly":



Image: Giphy



1. Jennette McCurdy hated a lot of the food she had to eat.


sam

On the show, Sam eats pretty much everything she can get her hands on, but McCurdy told RadioFree.com that she definitely differs with her character there:

There are times when I have had to eat food that I hate, like for example the pie. Or on the first episode, I had to eat so much ham I threw up, and then had to go eat more. That was horrible! I had to eat Cheez Whiz ... Didn't like that.


The actress said the props department worked hard to make the food great, but she revealed to Rosie O'Donnell in a 2012 interview that she hasn't had ham since the first episode.


2. You can actually call Sam's phone number.



Image: Giphy


According to iCarly Facts Tumblr, the episode "iLost My Mind" gives out an actual working number for Sam Puckett.

Calling the number "503-664-0452" connects you to a voicemail message from Sam basically saying to hang up because she'll never check her messages.


3. No one knows what the goat did to Carly.


goat

One of the greatest mysteries from "iCarly" comes in the episode "iGot A Hot Room." In one particular scene, Carly mentions an infamous incident with a goat at a petting zoo.

Schneider wrote in his blog that he gets asked a lot about what the goat actually did to Carly, sometimes even by Cosgrove herself, but that it will probably always remain a mystery:

When we wrote that script, the writers and I had fun thinking about things the goat might have done ... but we all had different ideas. And, as you know, it was never stated in the episode. So, this one is up to your own imagination. There is no correct answer. It's anyone's guess.





4. Carly was very close to being named Sam or Josie.


tv show gifs
Image: YouTube


When answering fan questions about how he decided on a name for the series, Schneider said it came from talking with Steve Molaro, who's now executive producer for "The Big Bang Theory." The show creator said the main character's name in his original script was Sam. That would have been Carly's name, except the URL for iSam was already registered. Schneider said he then bought the URL for iJosie.com, but he later decided on iCarly.

Had Schneider been able to buy iSam.com, Carly and Sam would likely have been Sam and Kira, respectively, which were the characters in the original script.


5. "iCarly" gets away with a lot of hidden adult jokes.


guppy

Whether it's Disney movies or Nick, a lot of kids programming has been shown to have hidden adult humor in it, and "iCarly" isn't any different. Smosh outlines a lot seemingly innocent jokes that could be taken to have a double meaning. Others more blatant examples are the "Fifty Shades of Grey" reference above and Freddie's apartment number, which you can see in this scene from "Sam & Cat" bares a striking resemblance to certain texting emoticon:

freddie


6. There's even more "Drake & Josh" crossover than you think.


drake

"Drake & Josh" references are scattered throughout "iCarly." Examples include Carly and Spencer (Jeremy Trainer) both watching themselves on "Drake & Josh," visual references like pictures and even this gem from Drake Bell, which appeared on the episode "iBloop":



Before "iCarly" debuted, there were also references to the show in "Drake & Josh." Most notably, a movie marquee in "Drake & Josh: Really Big Shrimp" had a message from Schneider thanking Molaro and also saying, "Now She's Carly."


7. The cast's reactions to fan videos were real.



Image: Giphy


Fans could actually go on iCarly.com to send in videos, suggestions and interact with the show. The "iCarly" writers then incorporated fan feedback into the programming, which made the show a very real experience.

In an interview with Jimmy Kimmel, Cosgrove talked about the crazy videos fans would send in and said the cast's reactions to these videos on the show were real. She recalled one fan video that involved someone squirting milk out of their eyes that made the cast scream "at the top of their lungs."

Cosgrove also told Kimmel that in her spare time she makes funny videos with her friends, which basically means she's Carly Shay in real life, too.


8. You can visit the Shay's apartment building, but it's not where you think.


bushwekk

Though the Shay's supposedly live in Bushwell Plaza in Seattle, the actual building seen on the show is nowhere near there.

A variety of sources report exterior shots of the Shay's apartment building are actually from the Eastern Columbia Building in Los Angeles. Images of the building are said to be digitally altered for the show.

maps


9. "iCarly" had a secret "Harry Potter" connection.



Image: Giphy


To win a bet against Freddie in "iFence," Sam reads a book called "The Penny Treasure." Previously, she hasn't been interested in reading, but Sam learns to enjoy it and describes the experience as "TV in your head."

In real life, "The Penny Treasure" doesn't actually exist. Apparently the book used in the episode was a copy of "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" with a fake cover put on it.


10. You can actually visit websites from the show ... sort of.


computer

Since the show is all about a girl and her friends making a web series, a variety of other made up websites are also mentioned. These include iGibby.com, Nevilocity.com, SamPuckett.com and many others.

You can actually visit these sites, but Carly's nemesis Neville will probably "rue the day" when he finds out that these sites are all set up to redirect to iCarly.com.


11. "iCarly" creator Dan Schneider always knew how the show would end.


tv show gifs
Image: Tumblr




Schneider wrote on his "iGoodbye" blog entry that he knew how he wanted the series to end from the very first season, and that's exactly how it turned out:

I had this vision of the front door opening, Carly hearing her dad's voice, turning, breaking into a huge smile, yelling "Dad!" and running into his arms. I saw that scene in my head back in 2008. So, it was kind of surreal when we filmed that very scene, in 2012.


And ... we're out.

'Back Home Ballers' Shows The Ladies Of 'SNL' Living It Big On Mom & Dad

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As the college kids begin to head home for Thanksgiving, the ladies of "Saturday Night Live" and host Cameron Diaz laid down some raps explaining what it's like to be a "Back Home Baller." Decked out in furs, giant hoop earrings and chains, they praised running the washer with only one sock in it, eating tacos made by mom and "getting free wifi like a dope-ass hoe." But most importantly, "bowls, all types of bowls." Watch the Thanksgiving anthem above.

Miley Cyrus Had A Giant Pizza Cake For Her 22nd Birthday

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There's truly only one way to pose for a birthday photo if you're Miley Cyrus -- do we even have to explain?

The singer turned 22 on Sunday and kicked off her birthday festivities on Saturday night in Hollywood. Cyrus was seen with rumored boyfriend Patrick Schwarzenegger wearing a variety of colorful fur, silver leggings and an assortment of objects in her hair.

Cyrus posted a photo to her Instagram of herself doing her signature stuck-out-tongue pose in front of a giant pizza cake.

It's my buuuurffffdayyyy

Ett foto publicerat av Miley Cyrus (@mileycyrus)





Cyrus has clearly been turning up on her birthday since the beginning.

Turn uppp!

A photo posted by Miley Cyrus (@mileycyrus) on





The 22-year-old singer also posted a collage of old photos of herself for her birthday.

lezzzzz do all kinds bday editzzz

A photo posted by Miley Cyrus (@mileycyrus) on



Katy Perry Slams 'Perverted & Disgusting' Australian Paparazzi, Posts Pictures Of 'Stalkers'

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Stopping in Sydney, Australia during her Prismatic World Tour, Katy Perry tolerated about all of the "perverted & disgusting" paparazzi she could stand and decided to turn the camera back on them.

Posting a note on her Twitter, Perry explained how the paparazzi followed her around on the beach, "laughing" at her pleas for privacy, and offering her a "deal" that they would leave for a bathing suit shot.




Perry then tweeted out a picture of three of the different "stalkers."







H/T Jezebel

KC James And Ry Doon Describe The 'Pandemonium' Of Being A Vine Star

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For Vine personalities like KC James and Ry Doon, who have millions of followers on the social media app, posting hilarious six-second videos has given them a shot at fame. In a HuffPost Live interview, the pair discussed their newfound celebrity and their interactions with their die-hard fan bases.

“If you go out of your room to the lobby and try to get a Starbucks, it can turn into pandemonium,” James told host Alyona Minkovski.

Most of the chaos is fueled by zealous fans looking to snap a photo with the online personalities.

“[There are] a lot of selfies,” Doon added.

Despite the craziness, James said that he loves being approached by fans because it gives him an opportunity to put a face to the users with whom they interact online.

“It’s cool because you get to see a lot of people who know your videos that you might not actually know about because when you see comments online, you don’t look at them sometimes as real people,” he said. “But when you see 50 people that know your lines from your videos, it’s super cool.”

As much as they love their fans, James and Doon said greeting their fans’ parents is actually the most exciting part of the gig.

“That’s, like, the biggest compliment,” they chimed in unison.

Learn more about life as a Vine star by clicking here to check out HuffPost Live's conversation with KC James and Ry Doon.

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!

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John Oliver Is As Confused By Presidential Turkey Pardons As You Are

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So goes one turkey, so should they all.

In a "Last Week Tonight" Web exclusive, John Oliver revealed his true feelings on the tradition of presidential turkey pardoning. From what he can understand, the president pardons one turkey and that turkey "presumably moves to Mexico with Tim Robbins to be together as they promised each other," but then the U.S. goes on to eat 46 million other turkeys?

According to Oliver, either we pardon all the turkeys or we prosecute all the turkeys. Choose your side, America! Or, if we cook them all ... choose your sides, America:

thanksgiving sides

The One Episode Of 'The Comeback' You Have To Watch

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"The Comeback" and "Outlander" have almost nothing in common as television shows. The HBO show is a half-hour comedy, the Starz show is an hourlong drama; one's a modern-day showbiz satire and the other is an epic period piece.

And yet the third episode of "The Comeback's" new season functions as a companion piece to the seventh episode of "Outlander's" first season. Both of those episodes explore how women's bodies and female sexuality are used in American television. Both are worth watching, even if you're not a regular viewer of either show.

It can be so difficult to write about the male gaze and the female gaze and objectification and things like that -- how do I take on these charged, knotty subjects without straying into ponderousness? That's why episodes like these are not just important -- it's actually a relief when they come along. They allow critics who care about issues of gender and representation to say, "Please, just look at this. This is what I am talking about. Just watch."

These episodes aren't the final word on these issues, mind you; they're just necessary conversation starters. I hope Sunday's "The Comeback" started a lot of conversations.

If you did see "Outlander's" wedding episode, the Nov. 23 installment of "The Comeback" functions as its dark opposite, its dispiriting mirror image. It wasn't depressing because it was badly done; quite the opposite. It had its broad moments, but it was still an accurate and necessary indictment of certain attitudes that are disturbingly persistent in various segments of the entertainment industry.

"Outlander's" wedding episode meticulously and joyously depicted a sexual and emotional journey between two consenting adults, and it shouldn't be revolutionary that it did so from a woman's point of view, but it was. By so wholeheartedly embracing the female perspective and honoring a woman's sexuality, "Outlander" made it clear that there is an enormous amount to be gained from incorporating and sometimes prioritizing the viewpoint and desires of female characters. The viewer was complicit in that female gaze, but the experience, at least from my point of view, was uplifting and exciting.

"The Comeback's" third episode, on the other hand, is valuable because it functions as a quietly savage indictment of sexist attitudes dressed up as Quality Drama. One of Prestige TV's most sacred tenets is the idea that anti-heroes should be allowed special latitude and treatment because of their Deep and Profound Issues, etc. When watching one of "The Comeback's" male characters try to reconstruct his selfish past as resonant, sexually charged tragedy, it's hard not to think of Emily Nussbaum's smart essay about "True Detective": "[I]f a show has something smart to say about sex, bring it on. But, after years of watching 'Boardwalk Empire,' 'Ray Donovan,' 'House of Lies,' and so on, I’ve turned prickly, and tired of trying to be, in the novelist Gillian Flynn’s useful phrase, the Cool Girl: a good sport when something smells like macho nonsense."

Much of what Valerie Cherish has been put through this season has been in the service of macho, self-serving nonsense; she's too passive-aggressive to address this bullsh*t in a systematic way, but the show itself, in this episode and elsewhere, is quite happy to eviscerate various sacred cows.

I have my issues with "The Comeback"; its broader aspects grate on me, its characterizations are often perfunctory at best and stereotypical at worst, and it can be hard to take its air of self-congratulation. It's not the first behind-the-scenes TV show to shed light on the fact that people in Hollywood are often tawdry, clueless or self-absorbed, but it seems to want credit for being especially perceptive in this regard, even though sometimes it isn't.

And then there's Valerie Cherish of it all. Valerie is the attention-starved actress who occupies the center of "The Comeback," and though Lisa Kudrow plays her with exceptional skill, she still can be a lot to take. She's the kind of character who consumes almost all the oxygen in whatever room she's in, and, to be honest, that's a personality type I generally try to avoid in real life.

But the new season is an improvement on the first one, in part because of the twin satellites orbiting around Valerie. At this point, I'm deeply fascinated by Paulie G. (Lance Barber) and Jane Benson (Laura Silverman). Their skirmishes about who gets to control Valerie's story and presentation speak to a larger battle about the soul of Hollywood and whether women get to have a seat at that male-dominated table. I don't much care about Valerie's career, but I do care about Paulie and Jane's strangely riveting proxy war, which is fought with two sets of dueling cameras.

Paulie G. was, of course, one of the lead writers of Valerie's failed sitcom "Room and Board." That show's short life span occupied "The Comeback's" first season in 2005, and Paulie's dead eyes haunted me during the intervening decade. Though he is a fictional creation, I could almost feel his profound cynicism coming at me via the scripts of real shows that made it on to various networks' schedules. Paulie may be a fictional construct, but his toxic attitudes and soulless cynicism aren't hard to find if you watch TV long enough.

Every year, TV audiences are subjected to shows that make it amply clear that nobody in charge has any kind of a vision, the network doesn't know what it wants and everyone involved is either overwhelmed or in it for the money. In the first season of "The Comeback," Paulie G. was the human embodiment of all the worst tendencies of the television industry. A substantial percentage of TV writers and producers are not cruel, misogynist, contemptuous assholes, but on my darker days as a critic, it's hard not to feel that too many Paulie G's still exist in powerful positions throughout the industry.

These days Paulie embodies a slightly different array of the industry's tropes and tendencies (or maybe they're the same tendencies, just rearranged and given moodier lighting). Having kicked a heroin habit and allegedly made peace with his demons, his reputation is that of a reformed bad boy with hidden depths, a tortured artist whose flameout makes him appear to be complicated and special. Paulie G.'s well-known troubles didn't land him on the unemployment line, they led to a plum deal with HBO, and the new show he's working on with Valerie is a thinly veiled tell-all about their time on "Room and Board" -- from his point of view, of course.

As fascinated as I am by Paulie G. and his inability to demonstrate any real insight into his weird fascination with Valerie, the quiet observations from Jane, the producer of Valerie's reality show, are often the most interesting thing about "The Comeback." In a show with so many meta layers that it can start to feel like an especially untethered "Twilight Zone" episode, there is something grounded about her knowing gaze (which is actually the camera's unblinking gaze). Jane sees everything that Valerie does and everything that is done to her, and, in the way she deploys her cameras, the act of seeing becomes a form of commentary, especially in this episode.

Throughout the episode, people keep referring to the blow-job scene, and all those mentions of it understandably increase Valerie's nervousness about it. As an actress, it must be nerve-wracking to think about having to perform that kind of act on camera, but Valerie is also concerned about the fact that Paulie, through his new show, is getting a chance to rewrite their shared history. What will it feel like to participate in that fictional narrative -- even as it radically changes perceptions of her own life? How respectful will the new Paulie be of her impressions of the past and her feelings in the present, on that soundstage? Those kinds of questions gave the episode a special charge well before it arrived at the key sequences.

Of course, Valerie and Paulie's relationship a decade ago wasn't sexual, but once the HBO show airs, she knows it will be more difficult for her to get people to believe that. One point "The Comeback" makes over and over again is that an actress has to work hard to control her own story and image, lest they be turned into albatrosses that sink her career and even her personal life. On the set of his HBO show, Paulie has an enormous amount of control over what happens to Valerie, but when that crucial scene arrives, he is typically dismissive of her. The narrative is his alone.

So much about the last 10 minutes of the episode is brutal; it's hard to watch. But everything that transpires in it is so informed by the characters' histories that it's impossible to look away.

We're supposed to believe that this is a different Paulie -- one who vapes rather than shoots up -- but he's ice cold as he tersely informs Valerie that her character has no motivation when it comes to performing the sex act. Valerie is just an object to Seth Rogen's character. Paulie hasn't thought about whether the fictional version of Valerie, Mallory, should appear to be coerced or eager; he doesn't care what it means to Valerie/Mallory to perform the act on his alter ego. She's just a prop -- piece of furniture that performs a function.

At another point, when Valerie is flanked by two naked women, Jane's camera moves away from shooting the trio directly. Her camera slides over to the monitor, where the women's images are washed out -- they become almost featureless, hard to tell apart. These are the faceless, personality-free images that Paulie appears to want. These women, including Valerie, have little individuality; they are objects.

Hearing the naked women make fake orgasm sounds, having that scene last for what felt like ages, seeing the look on Valerie's face, seeing the varied yet strained reactions of the crew; it all made for one of the most uncomfortable moment in the history of "The Comeback." It was a discomfort we were meant to feel, and we were meant to think about all the porn-y and semi-porn-y moments that the TV industry (not just HBO) has manufactured over the years. Everyone on that soundstage -- aside from Paulie, presumably -- appeared to feel a prickly, ungenerous complicity, and so did I as an audience member.

As I noted, HBO is far from alone when it comes to this kind of imagery, but the fact that Jane's unblinking gaze quietly underlined these kinds of scenes on this network felt appropriate. HBO's track record when it comes to female creators and people of color as creators is abysmal (though HBO is far from alone when it comes to problems with diversity), and that history of favoring straight white men as creators has resulted in skewed, sexist and even offensive moments on HBO's shows -- sometimes on ambitious shows, like "Game of Thrones," that are otherwise worthwhile. Though these kinds of problems clearly go far beyond one network, it was smart of "The Comeback" to focus on the minutiae of this situation on this self-aggrandizing show. The Paulie-Valerie situation is a well-constructed microcosm, and the way Paulie's vision plays out is almost banal and predictable in its particulars, and yet the situation is devastating to the women involved.

Jane is clearly upset and angry, but instead of speaking up, as she did a bit earlier, all she can really do is bear witness to the indignities that Valerie suffers. She does not look away.

Valerie is a product of an industry that rewards people who look away from serious problems. Her ability to ignore or shrug off incidents that are painful or humiliating is part of what's allowed her to survive in show business. That's always been a barrier that has stood between me as a viewer and her as a character; it can be hard to care about a person who is so unable or unwilling to stand up for herself, even if, intellectually, I know what keeps her silent. But in this episode, her silence was used effectively.

Valerie tried to have a voice, but she was repeatedly shut down. Paulie didn't want to hear from her, he didn't want to truly engage her and he still obviously thinks of her as a screechy problem in a tracksuit. Paulie isn't necessarily a monster for thinking this -- I think it sometimes too. Paulie is no longer a one-dimensional nightmare person, and that's a scary prospect: He was almost easier to dismiss when he was the worst. Now that he's trying to be a human being, seeing him deny Valerie her humanity is harder to watch.

He wasn't technically wrong, however, to think that only his vision mattered; that's what the network bought. He had license to control the narrative of their shared past, and found it annoying that Valerie might have something to say about that. It didn't help that he showered praise on Rogen while having her taken to task for getting a word or two wrong. Valerie wasn't raped, obviously, but that word escaped her mouth almost involuntarily in an improvisational moment. It didn't matter what Valerie said or did, Paulie was not going to hear her. On a show about her life in which she was essentially playing herself, she had been turned into a non-person, which had to be both frightening and surreal.

The indignities continued. Once the on-screen blow-job moment arrived, Valerie had to stand by quietly while a man rode to her rescue. Seth Rogen (or "The Comeback's" version of the actor) saw Valerie's obvious distress, and he deployed all his most affable bro skills in an attempt to salvage the situation between Paulie and Valerie.

And yet who had the last word? Jane did -- or rather, her cameras did.

Paulie's monitor showed Seth's face as he mimed sexual pleasure. But Jane's camera moved away from Seth and to focus on Valerie's face. Jane held Valerie's gaze for a long time. It's not unusual for "The Comeback" to underline certain moments too broadly, and the show did that by playing "Under Pressure" as the episode ended. But such was the undeniable force of the entire sequence that the too-obvious soundtrack choice couldn't undo its power. Jane said to Valerie, through her camera, "I see you."

This episode of TV matters because this isn't just about how one fictional guy treats one fictional woman on the set of their fictional show(s). If you've watched TV for a while, if you've read a fair sampling of critics for a while, hell, if you've even read op-ed pieces by noted actresses, you know that the kinds of attitudes on display here are not rare. The problem isn't one pretend guy with a fake show; the problem is that guys with attitudes similar to Paulie's aren't hard to find, not just in writers rooms and but in executive suites at all kinds of media companies. And what these people collectively create matters.

It matters because the content produced by television, by the film industry and by the gaming industry, let's face it, often functions as a cultural instruction manual.

"Our culture socializes young men to believe that they are entitled to sexual attention from women, and that women go about their lives with that as their primary purpose - as opposed to just being other people, with their own plans, priorities and desires," Patrick Blanchfield recently wrote in the New York Daily News.

"We teach men to see women as objects, not other human beings. Their bodies are things men are entitled to: to judge, to assess, and to dispose of - in other words, to treat as pornographic playthings, to have access to and, if the women resist, to threaten, to destroy."

So who's doing the teaching? I love television with all my heart and have spent 15 years singing its praises. So much of it is fantastic and compassionate and smart, but I can't deny that, at its worst, segments of the industry are part of the instructional process Blanchfield discusses. Paulies get platforms. Their gazes matter. Who and what they ignore matters too.

I'd like to think that things are changing, but it's hard to know how much of that is wishful thinking.

I'd like to think that the Janes of the entertainment world will get their shot -- or are getting their shot -- at making TV shows. They have a few stories to tell.

One Of These 20 People Will Probably Win Best Director At The 2015 Oscars

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Welcome to For Your Consideration, HuffPost Entertainment's breakdown of all things Oscar. Between now and Feb. 22, 2015, entertainment managing editor Christopher Rosen and entertainment editor Matthew Jacobs will pore over awards season and discuss which films will make the most noise at the 87th annual Academy Awards.

One of the year's most well-regarded directors took 12 years to make his movie. Another spent $165 million constructing new planets and advanced dimensions. Yet another took mere weeks to make a feverish film about jazz for just over $3 million. Now they may find themselves newly minted Oscar nominees. This year's Best Director crop could make history: Ava DuVernay may become the first black female nominee, and if Angelina Jolie joins her, it will be the first time in history that two women are recognized in the same year. But unlike Best Actor and Best Actress, this category's odds are more of a gamble. Regardless, when the Oscar nominations are announced Jan. 15, 2015, here are the 20 people most likely to garner recognition as Best Director:

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