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Bill Cosby Met With Protests At Denver Show

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UPDATE: Bill Cosby spoke with NBC News before he took the stage at the Buell Theater in Denver, Colorado on Saturday night, which was surrounded by protestors. Cosby told NBC, "What you'll see tonight is history, you'll get to see me on stage." The comedian wouldn't address the recent sexual assault accusations directly. "You will see this wonderful gift on stage tonight [at the show] as well as the people of Denver," he said. "You will see a master at work."

EARLIER: Protesters descended on a Denver theater hosting a pair of Bill Cosby comedy performances on Saturday night, chanting "Turn back Cosby" and "Rape is not a joke" in response to the numerous accusations of sexual assault against the embattled comedian.






Approximately 100 protesters chanted and brandished signs outside Buell Theater, which was hosting two performances by Cosby on Saturday night, the Associated Press reported. "Don't drink the water," some chanted, referencing claims Cosby drugged his alleged victims' drinks. A brass band joined people holding signs critical of Cosby. Attendees of the performances were waved down with metal detectors by security guards. Before the 8 p.m. showing, police officers took positions near protesters outside the theater. No arrests were reported.

Despite the hectic setting, hundreds of ticket-holders turned out for the performances. Cosby was met with a standing ovation and he thanked the audience, Reuters reported.







Los Angeles attorney Gloria Allred, who has been representing some of the women accusing Cosby, held a press conference before the shows with a Denver woman who said Cosby sexually assaulted her in 1986, KUSA reported. Beth Ferrier, who was in her 20s at the time of the alleged incident, claimed Cosby drugged her coffee when he was visiting Denver, causing her to lose consciousness. She said she woke up "practically naked" in the back of her car. Ferrier had accused Cosby of assault before, in 2005, alleging they had an affair in 1984, the Associated Press reported. Allred also led demonstration to the theater before the show.




The 77-year-old entertainer had performed the previous night in Pueblo to little protest and before a packed audience.

Cosby has been accused of sexually assaulting dozens of women over a span of several decades. For years, allegations against Cosby went with little notice. But over the past year, more and more women have come forward accusing the entertainer of sexual misconduct.

The accusations against Cosby escalated in the past week, as model Chloe Goins met with police to pursue criminal charges against the comedian, alleging he drugged and sexually abused her at the Playboy Mansion in 2008. Goins would be the first woman accusing Cosby of sexual assault whose case may fall within the statute of limitations, according to her attorney. Cosby's lawyer, Martin Singer, has stated Cosby was not in Los Angeles at the time of the alleged assault. (Prior attempts to charge Cosby have been rejected, and Cosby has maintained his innocence.)

Numerous Cosby performances have been canceled or postponed as the controversy around him has grown.

Several of the shows that have not been canceled have been interrupted by protests inside the venue and out (audience members at a Jan. 9 show in Canada shouted "We believe the women!"). Prior to his Colorado performances, Cosby issued a statement saying that the North American comedy tour would continue despite the backlash against him.

In addition to canceled performances, institutions and media networks have cut ties with Cosby. On Friday, NBC stated it would not work with Cosby ever again.

Donny Osmond's Mormon Faith Keeps Him ‘Grounded'

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Despite all the fame and fortune that has come with his decades-long career, Donny Osmond has managed to stay grounded, and he has his faith to thank for that.

In a HuffPost Live interview on Wednesday, the 57-year-old singer credited his Mormon faith for his down-to-earth attitude.

“I have such a firm belief in God, Jesus Christ. I’m a true Christian,” he told host Nancy Redd. “I want to be careful that I don’t shove it down anybody’s throats.”

Although Osmond never served a two-year mission, which for many is considered a hallmark of the Mormon experience, he said his ties to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints have served him well.

“It’s kept me grounded in life. As long as you have a belief in a higher power, in God, and you recognize that, it keeps you humble,” he said. “It keeps your … feet on the ground, it keeps your perspective on life.”

Watch more of HuffPost Live’s full interview with Donny Osmond here.

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

Israeli Selfie From Miss Universe Contest Causes Stir In Lebanon

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BEIRUT (Reuters) - A Israeli beauty queen's selfie has caused a stir in Lebanon, with some Lebanese saying their country's contestant at the Miss Universe pageant should be stripped of her title for consorting with the enemy.
Miss Israel Doron Matalon posted a photo of herself and Miss Lebanon Saly Greige smiling together at pageant preparations in Miami, where the winner will be picked on January 25.
The two countries are technically at war, although the border has been largely quiet since their 2006 conflict. The Lebanese risk prison if they call or travel to Israel and all Israeli products are banned in Lebanon.
Some Lebanese have demanded on social media that Greige lose her title for contacts with a citizen of the enemy state.
Greige defended herself on the photo-sharing service Instagram on Saturday, saying Matalon had pestered her for a picture together and finally photobombed her.
"Since the first day of my arrival to participate to Miss Universe, I was very cautious to avoid being in any photo or communication with Miss Israel, who tried several times to take a photo with me," Greige said.
"I was having a photo with Miss Japan, Miss Slovenia, suddenly Miss Israel jumped in and took a selfie, and uploaded it on her social media."


(Reporting by Oliver Holmes)


7 Things We Love About Kevin Costner On His 60th

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Actor Kevin Costner turns 60 today, and let's just say it out loud: He's one fine dude. Here are seven reasons we admire him:



1. He was the real star of "The Big Chill," even if we didn't see him.
Costner played the character Alex, around whose funeral the 30-somethings gather for the weekend. Unfortunately for Costner, all his scenes were cut from the final movie. His career, of course, didn't die on the cutting room floor. He went on to win two Academy Awards, three Golden Globe Awards, and one Emmy. Not bad for a corpse, we'd say.

2. He moved past "Waterworld" (1995) and "The Postman" (1997).
Both were financial disappointments and pretty much got dissed by everyone. But the point is, he survived the scathing reviews, the ribbing on Saturday Night Live, and moved on. He inspires us with his resiliency -- and apparently we are not alone. He has two films on the American Film Institute's 100 Most Inspiring Movies of All Time list -- "Dances with Wolves" (1990) and "Field of Dreams (1989)."

3. He doesn't just act and direct -- he's also a country music crooner.
Costner sings in a country rock band he formed called Kevin Costner & Modern West. They did a world tour in 2007 that included shows in Istanbul and Rome and released an album in 2008 called "Untold Truths."

4. He loves baseball.
Costner has made multiple movies with a baseball theme and we've loved them all: "Chasing Dreams," "Bull Durham," "Field of Dreams," "For Love of the Game" and "The Upside of Anger," where he plays a former pro-ball player. Costner has a house in Austin and sometimes shows up at Texas Longhorns baseball practices and games.

5. He loves Westerns.
And since John Wayne is gone, who else even tries to make one anymore?

6. He has perfected the scruffy beard look.
While others have tried, nobody but nobody in our book wears a 5 o'clock shadow the way Costner does. He has elevated it to an art form.

7. By all accounts, he's a good dad.
While we aren't one of his seven children, we do like how he talked about his kids and fatherhood when we caught up with him.

Sia's Dancers Give Emotional Performance Of 'Elastic Heart' On 'SNL'

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Sia let her performers take the spotlight as usual on "Saturday Night Live" this weekend. The singer performed her hits "Elastic Heart" and "Chandelier," singing with a her eyes covered by a short black veil as her dancers and a mime interpreted the music.

For "Elastic Heart," Sia's 12-year-old dancer Maddie Ziegler recreated the controversial music video (sans Shia LaBeouf this time), with an older dancer in the same nude leotard and blonde wig. We've had our fair share of Sia dancer parodies, from Jim Carrey and Kate McKinnon's dance-off to Lena Dunham's rendition," but this was an incredibly emotional performance.

For "Chandelier," Sia switched things up this time and instead of having Ziegler do her usual dance routine, opted for a mime to perform beside her. The mime, with a painted sad face, translated the song in American Sign Language as she sang on stage with him.

Mike Huckabee Isn't Done Talking About Beyonce

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WASHINGTON -- Former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee (R) on Sunday expanded on his recent criticism of President Barack Obama and first lady Michelle Obama for letting their daughters listen to hip-hop.

Huckabee said that he thinks the Obamas are "great parents," but he can't understand why they would let their daughters listen to artists like Beyonce, whose music he has called "mental poison."

"It was President Obama who said in an interview with 'Glamour' who said that some of the lyrics he won't listen to with his daughter because it embarrasses him," Huckabee told Martha Raddatz on ABC's "This Week."

"Well, here's my point," he went on. "If it embarrasses you, then why would you possibly think it's wholesome for your children to put it into their heads?"

In 2012, Obama told Glamour that he and Michelle don't restrict the music that his daughter Malia, who is now 16, listens to. But, said the president, they expect her to show "good judgment."

"We actually share tastes in hip-hop and rap music but we don’t listen to it together, because some of the language in there would embarrass me -- at least while I’m listening to it with her," he said. "Folks like Jay Z, Nas, we both like them, but when it comes on and I’m sitting with her and Sasha, then I fast-forward because it would make me blush."

Huckabee suggested on Sunday that keeping an eye on your children's pop-culture intake is part of being a responsible parent.

"They're great parents, they're careful about making sure that their kids get a lot of vegetables and eat right, that's terrific," Huckabee said of the Obamas. "Well, what you put in your brain is also important as well as what you put into your body, and that was my point based on what the president himself said."

Even though Huckabee thinks Queen Bey's lyrics aren't wholesome, he also thinks that the singer, who has received more Grammy nominations than any other woman in history, is incredibly talented.

"My point is, she doesn't have to do some of the things that she does in the lyrics because it's not necessary," he said Sunday. "She has nothing to make up for. She's an amazing talent."

In his new book God, Guns, Grits, and Gravy, due out Tuesday, Huckabee reportedly accuses Beyonce's husband, the rapper and entrepreneur Jay Z, of "crossing the line from husband to pimp by exploiting his wife as a sex object" in performances like the couple's duet at the 2014 Grammy Awards.

Amber Rose's Impossibly Teeny Swimsuit Is Making The Internet's Jaw Drop

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Amber Rose's outfits continuously make headlines, and her swimsuit on Saturday was no exception.

The 31-year-old model set the Internet abuzz after she posted the racy photos to her Instagram account. Technically, we think this is a one-piece, which probably makes it the tiniest one-piece ever:

Fleekin

Een foto die is geplaatst door Amber Rose (@amberrose) op




MILFIN

Ein von Amber Rose (@amberrose) gepostetes Foto am



Slayin

A photo posted by Amber Rose (@amberrose) on



Stifler's Mom

Ein von Amber Rose (@amberrose) gepostetes Foto am





And this isn't Rose's first time rocking barely-there swimsuits. The money-printed one she donned back in October was giving us Kim K vibes:



'SNL' Parodied Justin Bieber's New Calvin Klein Ads, Because He's A Big Boy Now


Founding A$AP Mob Member A$AP Yams Dead At 26

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A$AP Yams, founding member of rap collective A$AP Mob, has died at age 26. Though no details have emerged surrounding the rapper's death, fellow A$AP Mob members have taken to social media to confirm the news.

Born Steven Rodriguez, A$AP Yams was a rapper and executive producer of A$AP Rocky's 2011 mixtape, "Live.Love.A$AP."

A$AP Rocky paid tribute to the late rapper on his Instagram account on Sunday, writing "R.I.P YAMS, I LOVE YOU BROTHER."


R.I.P YAMS, I LOVE YOU BROTHER

A photo posted by PRETTY FLACKO (@asvpxrocky) on





Fellow A$AP Mob member A$AP Ferg also posted an Instagram photo of Yams. "You will be missed Bro. We done touched a lot of ground together, landed on a lot of different soil!!! You will always be loved & your spirit will live on!!! #asapmob #asapferg #asapworldwide #yams," he wrote in the photo caption:






Ferg also posted a video on his Twitter account of an interview featuring the late rapper:



Kim Kardashian, Kanye West, Beyonce And Jay Z Have Date Night

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It looks like Kimye have forgiven Beyoncé and Jay Z for ditching them on their wedding day.

Bravo Star Greg Plitt Dead After Being Struck By Train At Age 37

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"Work Out" star Greg Plitt was killed on Saturday, Jan. 17 after he was hit by a Metrolink train in Burbank, California.

MTV Takes A Bold And Powerful Approach To Discuss Race On MLK Day

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On Monday, MTV will air twelve hours of programming in black and white -- and no, this is no accidental glitch.

The television network will kick off a momentous campaign, identified as #TheTalk, to honor Dr. King’s legacy by using their massive platform to address -- and help resolve -- racial issues in America.

#TheTalk is a strong effort attempting to eliminate bias by inviting and encouraging others, especially millennials, to join the discussion and have candid and ‘color brave’ conversations on race.

Beginning at 9:00 a.m. ET/PT, all programming on MTV will air in black and white, marking the first time this has ever been done in network history.

To encourage viewers to have #TheTalk, each commercial block will begin with a brief feature from some of today’s greatest cultural and political figures who share their own personal reflections on race relations in America. Some of those names include: Kendrick Lamar, Big Sean, Ava DuVernay, David Oyelowo, Lee Daniels, Rep. John Lewis, Sen. Cory Booker and more.

“Underlying some of the blindness around bias and prejudice is a lack of understanding of the history – of why we are where we are today,” MTV President Stephen Friedman told The Huffington Post.

“That’s why Martin Luther King, Jr. Day is so critical. It’s a day when we’re immersed in the history and his great legacy, and we can look back at how far we’ve come and, very importantly, look ahead at how far we still need to go.”

However, while this campaign is certainly a historic one, it isn’t the network’s first attempt to highlight the importance of diversity with its slot on the silver screen.

Instead, #TheTalk is an expansion of MTV’s “Look Different” project, a multiyear anti-bias campaign that launched in April and has since aired dozens of specials dedicated to denouncing discrimination across race, gender and sexual orientation.

“We did a study and found that 73% of 14 to 24-year-olds believe that having more open, constructive conversations about bias will help people become less prejudiced, yet only 10% report having those conversations often,” Friedman said. “That’s just not good enough.”

Friedman says understanding and uncovering bias is the first step to confronting and addressing it -- and #TheTalk is a one solution MTV has proposed to help bridge this divide.

Especially, Friedman says, when viewers will be encouraged to start these conversations after watching segments of Cory Booker discussing how race has affected his ability to date, Kendrick Lamar talking about his conversations with his father on prejudice or listening to David Oyelowo talking about the bias he confronts every day by being in an interracial marriage.

“We hope it will be a stark and eye-opening moment to understand on one level how far we’ve come, but also to hear from national figures how much things have not changed and how far we need to go,” Friedman said. “I think the audience will be surprised.”

Here is an exclusive video of Rep. John Lewis and his powerful reflections as part of MTV's campaign:

Get More:
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Christina Aguilera Shares First Photo Of Baby Girl Summer

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All together now: Awwwwww!

Christina Aguilera welcomed a baby girl, Summer Rain, with fiance Matthew Rutler in August, and now the singer is ready to show her little one to the world. Aguilera shared the adorable shot of her daughter with her 13 million Twitter followers on Sunday, writing, "Watch out...another one's getting ready to conquer the world! #driven #diva2."




Looks like she'll be following in her mom's footsteps -- once she can walk, of course.

The "Beautiful" singer is also a mom to son Max, 7, from her previous marriage to Jordan Bratman.

Naya Rivera Slams Justin Bieber

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Naya Rivera had some not-so-nice things to say about the Biebs on "The View" on Friday.

Let's Talk About Hannah Vs. Lena Dunham In That 'Triggering' Episode Of 'Girls'

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Sunday night's "Girls" finally took us to Iowa with Hannah, the now grad student (yes, it's really happening). Besides unsuccessfully riding her bike through campus, the episode marked one of the biggest parallels between Hannah and Lena Dunham that the show has seen yet. There's a lot to discuss and unpack, so HuffPost Entertainment editors Lauren Duca and Erin Whitney are here to hash it out:

Spoiler alert if you haven't seen "Girls" Season 4, Episode 2 "Triggering."

Lauren Duca: Okay, we need to discuss the Lena Dunham meta commentary that went down in Sunday night's episode. This is a *TRIGGER WARNING* for anyone currently experiencing Lena Dunham at critical mass. For me, the whole writers' workshop was a deliberate dissection of criticism and the role it plays in the way Dunham perceived as a public figure. Dunham has explicitly tried separate herself from Hannah before (despite being ambivalent about conflation when the show first started). Although, now -- perhaps more than ever -- there is a clear intersection between the semi-autobiographical character of Hannah Horvath and Lena Dunham, the happy to share author of Not That Kind of Girl and a rapidly-rising celebrity figure (who is constantly responding to controversy surrounding her work).

What do you think that writers' workshop scene in "Trigger" had to say about how Dunham sees herself through the vessel of Hannah, and how she publicly and privately deals with the onslaught of backlash (which we're somehow still seeing in response to her book)?

girls classroom

Erin Whitney: Well, before we even get into the criticism Hannah receives in her class workshop (which I agree is a commentary on Dunham's own experience with critics) I think we need to talk about the story itself.

Hannah's story is about a girl experiencing a form sexual assault from her boyfriend -- but she insists it's unrelated to her while the rest of Hannah's class can't get over how autobiographical the character seems. While this story is nothing close to the sexual assault events described in Dunham's book last year, it does raise questions. Is Dunham trying to express how she, as a writer and a personality, grapples with the blurry lines of fiction and reality? Hannah refuses to publicly admit her work is personal, so perhaps Dunham feels this same lack of responsibility to fess up to what's inspired by real life and what's not? But why raise eyebrows with a story of sexual assault, especially one which Hannah says her character wanted from the boyfriend, instead of coloring it as wholly unacceptable? Hannah seems to be playing with the notions of inviting sexual violence into a relationship, but not victimizing herself -- especially since she distances her story from her classmate who she assumes is a victim. What's she doing here, Lauren?

LD: Okay, side note, I didn't think the other student was necessarily a victim as much as Hannah assuming she was a victim, because "LOL, how else could Hannah be wrong?" But either way, I think the auto-biographical elements come in to play at a more complex level than what is real and what is fiction. Not That Kind of Girl is not fiction. There has been a nauseating amount of fact-checking from the Republicans (okay, fine, Republican blogs), but what's more prescient here is the handling of that criticism in terms of what its impact is and ought to be.

That's why I think the classroom setting is so crucial. A lot of interpretation can be drawn from that environment. For Hannah, there is a choice to be in the classroom, yet also a sense of sort of guilty obligation that compels her to stay and listen, even when things are difficult or unpleasant. I read the scene as being a version of the way Dunham handles criticism. In a way, it was like setting up a round-table read for her book.

The only word used less often than "privilege" in discussions of Dunham is "naked." One of the students likens Hannah to a privileged girl who just wants her boyfriend to hit her. Bringing that up is such a deliberate confrontation of the way Dunham is perceived. And you touch on that in talking about sexual violence, Erin. It's all such a wildly complex and sensitive realm of discussing the ideas of safety inherent in privilege, and that's what it seems like she's set out to contemplate here. Do you think there's a clear message about what that means in the context of her or Hannah's story or is "triggering" just a studied deliberation of it (inspired by her public persona)?

hannah iowa

EW: You bring up something significant about the metaphor of the classroom setting -- a place where Hannah willingly subjects herself and her writing to others' opinions. It's one of the rare times Hannah has done that on the show (Donald Glover's character took her to task in Season 2, and it led to their breakup.) But while Hannah may place herself in this vulnerable position, she's unwilling to accept or even acknowledge any of the criticism. Even after the professor reminds her to stay silent, she burts out defending herself. Is this Dunham's frustration with critics and her unwavering desire/need to constantly defend her work? Maybe the real Dunham is sick of being on the defensive, maybe she and her work are just not willing to hear what anyone has to say anymore.

And I think my own muddled thoughts about all of this only goes to show that Dunham doesn't have a clear message with this episode -- and that's fine! I know it may sound like I'm sitting here saying, "Dunham wrote Hannah's story to act as a direct meta commentary on her own experience with sexual assault." But I think the lines are more open to interpretation and that this perhaps is Dunham's own hashing out of her analysis and contemplation of what criticism and personal storytelling mean to her as a writer, a woman and a public figure. I also think it's important to remember that the Hannah we're watching on TV can't be perceived as just a vessel for Dunham. Like Marnie, Jessa, Shosh, Adam and everyone else in "Girls," Hannah is just one facet of Dunham. Who know's how much or which one she is actually is, and I love that we can still discuss that four seasons in.

LD: Wow, yeah, our ability to gauge whether she is a good writer has really been totally missing!

To respond to your main point, I think that what we're seeing here is a really intentional intersection of Dunham and Hannah though. At what point did the awareness of Dunham start interfering with our reading of Hannah? Seeing this struggling woman-girl figure of a 20-something in search of success and stronger sense of self is hard to process when it is so divorced from the wildly successful Dunham with a $3.7 million book deal.

Yeah, yeah, she's "all her characters -- what are you on her PR team or something? Yet, there's a major conflation first and foremost with Hannah, and she's recognizing that (and even poking fun at it) in so blatantly being the girl who needs to eat every two hours or she passes out.

This is what I think: Hannah is not just a character that she plays. Dunham is a writer, so Hannah is really a writer reading her lines. And that's specific and important in a way it could never be with the rest of the cast.

At the end of the day, the question is almost: How many Lenas are there? How do we think about Hannah vs. book Lena vs. media-presence Lena vs. Twitter-averse Lena? Not that we necessarily have the right to access that truth. What I'm trying to hit on is way she functions as a public figure through the different mediums through which she has chosen to reveal herself. Sometimes literally. [Insert Bad Nakedness Joke]

hannah elijah

EW: Oh crap, you caught me. (Quits PR job.) But really, I stand by the perspective everyone in "Girls" still continues to defy being full humans and more so amalgamations of all the shameful, embarrassing, screwed up, and -- at times -- decent versions of people viewers can relate to. But we're getting off topic here ...

I love this complicated idea of how many Lena's there are. If only she's let us actually hear more of Hannah's stories and writing then perhaps we could have even more facets of Lena/Hannah to dissect and compare and contrast. But what's also interesting is thinking of Dunham in context of other great comedy writers she's inspired by, from Larry David to Louis C.K., both of whom use their fictional counterparts as vessels for expression and commentary. The only major difference is Lena isn't playing a fictional Lena on TV, per se, but through Hannah she has more room to play, showing us different versions of herself. And as you pointed out, Lauren, versions at very different levels of success.

This rudimentary, still undeveloped Hannah is someone not used to getting criticism towards her writing, and I think all writers know how necessary it is to at least hear it, whether we agree or not. Hannah still has a long way to go as far as growing up (and I'm really hoping this season follows through with its optimistic tagline), and I think Dunham as a writer is aware of that. Will Hannah evolve to the status and success of Dunham the writer? Regardless, my hope is that Dunham uses her opportunity as a writer to create Hannah into more of a full character that we can perceive on her own, functioning free of her connections to real-life Lena. Because after all, if Dunham wanted a fictionalized vessel to speak through, why doesn't she just make "The Lena Dunham Show"?

LD: Oh, my Internet hurts just thinking about the plausibility of "The Lena Dunham Show." The idea of the way artist interacts with their autobiographical work is really interesting. How does it differ when it's blatantly a bizzaro version of the artist verses a character with less easily inferred similarities (Woody Allen is another example there).

It's also interesting you mention Larry David. I won't go into that too much, since you wrote that great piece comparing him and Hannah (and that's all available for posterity), except to note that the sexist double standard at play with those unlikeable protagonists is only compounded by Dunham's public standing as a celebrity. In a lot of ways, she is the ultimate reflection of all the crap double standards we impose on women in Hollywood, and Hannah is not immune to that (as a result of the way we conflate them).

And that idea brings us back to criticism (here we are again!). When I think about it through that idea of unfairness, we can get at a nugget of the message Dunham is trying to float in this scene (and later in the season, though let's not spoil it here). If there is a thesis statement for "Triggering" it may be that through Hannah, Dunham feels an obligation to listen to criticism, because she feels it can be important to her art. But she ultimately struggles to listen to it when it seems to be coming from the effect of her being "pigeon-holed" by her reputation.

EW: I agree that Dunham exhibits her need or obligation to listen to criticism through Hannah, but I don't think Hannah (because of her reaction) agrees with it -- and here is where the character and the "real" Dunham differ the most in this episode for me. Again, Hannah continues to be the much more immature, naive college version of Dunham. But this is only the start and our first episode in Iowa. The coming episodes will definitely lend more light into the direction Hannah is moving, and perhaps what that says about Dunham as well.

LD: Well, apparently, there's nowhere to grow but up.

"Girls" airs Sunday at 9:00 p.m. ET on HBO.

Billy Crystal: Gay Scenes On TV Sometimes 'Too Much For Me' (UPDATED)

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Billy Crystal was one of the first actors to play a gay character on television, but that doesn't mean he isn't wary of some of the gay content that ends up on the small screen.

The beloved comedian opened up about his feelings regarding the nature of gay scenes on television while speaking at a panel for the Television Critics Association on Sunday in Pasadena, California, the Independent reports.

"Sometimes I think, 'Ah that’s too much for me,'" Crystal said. "Sometimes, it’s just pushing it a little too far for my taste and I’m not going to reveal to you which ones they are."

As Deadline reports, Crystal also spoke about his groundbreaking gay character, Jodie Dallas, which he played on ABC's "Soap" from 1977 to 1981.

Crystal spoke about the role on Sunday, ET Canada reports:

There were times where I would say to [the actor who played his boyfriend], 'Bob, “I love you,' and the audience would laugh nervously, because, you know, it’s a long time ago, that I’d feel this anger. I wanted to stop the tape and go, 'What is your problem?' Because it made you sort of very self-conscious about what we were trying to do then. And now it’s just, I see it and I just hope people don’t abuse it and shove it in our face -- well, that sounds terrible -- to the point of it just feels like an everyday kind of thing.


Crystal is currently promoting his upcoming new FX series "The Comedians," which is his first television series since "Soap."

In recent years, more and more queer content is making its way onto the airwaves. Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender characters and storylines can be seen in popular shows like "Looking," "Modern Family," "Empire," "Transparent," "Orange is the New Black," "American Horror Story" and "Glee."

Earlier this month, comedian Kevin Hart also sounded off on gay roles in Hollywood. "I can't [play a gay character] because I don't think I'm really going to dive into that role 100 percent, because of the insecurities about myself trying to play that part," he told hosts of the Breakfast Club on New York's Power 105.1. "What I think people are going to think while I'm trying to do this is going to stop me from playing that part the way I'm supposed to."

UPDATE: In an interview conducted after the Television Critics Association panel, Crystal addressed his comments in an interview published on Xfinity's tv blog, saying in part:
"First of all, I don’t understand why there would be anything offensive that I said. When it gets too far either visually…now, that world exists because it does for the hetero world, it exists, and I don’t want to see that either. But when I feel it’s a cause, when I feel it’s “You’re going to like my lifestyle,” no matter what it is, I’m going to have a problem and there were a couple of shows I went ‘I couldn’t watch that with somebody else.” That’s fine. If whoever writes it or produces it…totally get it. It’s all about personal taste...

...

We live in a very scary time in many ways. You can’t say this, you can’t say that, you can’t offend this group, that group. People come up to you and ask if you were offended. I don’t understand that. I understand it why everyone is watching out for the other person. That’s offensive to me."

To read the full interview, head here.

Dorota From 'Gossip Girl' Was On Last Night's 'Girls'

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Sunday night's episode of "Girls" provided a lot of seemingly meta commentary on Lena Dunham and the reactions critics have to the personal nature of her work, but few puns. That's too bad, since Dorota from "Gossip Girl" was one of the guest stars.

DOROTA

Dorota, whose real name is Zuzanna Szadkowski, plays Priya on the new season of "Girls," a classmate of Hannah's at the Iowa Writers' Workshop. Here was her take on Hannah's first story: "It's about a really privileged girl deciding she's going to let someone abuse her."

DOROTA
Image: Ask Dorota

During the episode, the official "Girls" Twitter account gave Szadkowski a plug befitting her status as a "Gossip Girl" alum:




Szadkowski, who has also appeared on "Elementary" and "The Knick," was pleased:




Xoxo.

Dorota
Image: ET Online

Jesse Eisenberg Maybe Shaved His Head To Play Lex Luthor

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Jesse Eisenberg's hair is not something you probably think about too often, but comic book fans have been curious about his locks ever since the actor was cast to play Lex Luthor in "Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice." The supervillain is famously bald, but it remains unclear whether or not Eisenberg shaved his head for the part.

For what it's worth, Eisenberg was photographed with hair that looked like this on Sept. 5, 2014:

jesse eisenberg

One day earlier, however, Eisenberg's hair was noticeably shorter, leading many to speculate that he was wearing a wig to cover his character's baldness.

Now months later, Eisenberg is back -- this time with a buzz cut. The actor was shown in a new image from "Now You See Me 2" with the cropped hair of a man who may have shaved his head recently:

Surreal. Truly. #NowYouSeeMe2

Jon M Chu(@jonmchu)張貼的相片 於 張貼





"Batman V Superman: Dawn of Justice" isn't out in theaters until March 25, 2016, but it's likely we'll get a look at Eisenberg in character long before that. A representative for Eisenberg was not immediately available for comment on his hair.

Mike Huckabee: I Love Beyonce, But ...

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Mike Huckabee is walking back from his Beyonce comments, but just a little bit ... calling Bey a "mega-talent."

Jennifer Aniston Discusses Kate Hudson's 'Irresistible Tush' On 'Ellen'

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Jennifer Aniston got pretty handsy with Kate Hudson on the Golden Globes red carpet last Sunday. As the two switched off between interviews with Ryan Seacrest, Aniston reached out and executed something between a grope and a slap. (Hudson just giggled, because, really, what are you supposed to do when Jennifer Aniston is touching your behind on live TV?)

"Well, my gosh, look at that ass," Aniston said of her interaction with Hudson on "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" in an interview airing Monday. "It's such an irresistible tush."

"I'm allowed!" Aniston continued. "Ryan Seacrest tried to get in. Kate actually did say, 'Oh well, that's gonna go everywhere.'"

224aniston

The 45-year-old also discussed her Oscar snub, which she is not broken up about at all. "I'm the number one snubbed!" she said. "That's the silver lining, right?"

Aniston was similarly candid in a recent interview with HuffPost Entertainment. “I found it quite endearing and flattering that I had so many people rooting for me," she said. "It was almost just as good to be No. 1 snubbed than to be nominated."
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