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Riff Raff Gains 55 Pounds Of Muscle And Is Completely Unrecognizable

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Riff Raff (aka Jody Highroller, aka the rapper who James Franco based his "Spring Breakers" character on) is almost completely unrecognizable after adding 55 pounds of muscle to his frame.

The 32-year-old, who was once featured on MTV's "From G's to Gents," has been training with Hulk Hogan since December to become a professional wrestler, and the results are kind of unbelievable:







"AT 6'2 224 POUNDS JODY HiGHROLLER iS LiTERALLY ONE OF THE BiGGEST ARTiSTS iN THE LEAGUE" - ESPN

A photo posted by RiFF RaFF JODY HiGHROLLER (@jodyhighroller) on




The rapper also recently became semi-sober, giving up cocaine and molly (but not weed), telling TMZ, "Whenever I have the urge to do coke or molly, I just pick up weights instead."

While Riff Raff has already undergone a massive transformation, he's not done yet. According to Vice, he is training in hopes of turning himself into "240 pounds of pure muscle."

Those unfamiliar with Riff Raff's music might best recall the rapper as Katy Perry's date to the 2014 MTV Video Music Awards, at which the couple paid tribute to Britney Spears and Justin Timberlake's matching denim look from the 2001 American Music Awards:

katy perry riff raff

H/T: Gawker

Leslye Headland, Queen Of Sexy Sundance, On Having Jason Sudeikis Teach Alison Brie To Masturbate

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Sitting down with Leslye Headland is like swigging an espresso shot, especially when you do it in the thick of the sleepless Sundance Film Festival. She barrels toward you with the zeal of someone who couldn’t possibly have anywhere else in the world to be. And she didn’t: Her latest film, “Sleeping with Other People,” had its world premiere on Saturday night of the fest, marking Headland’s second Sundance debut after the 2012 comedy “Bachelorette.”

By Sunday morning, the buzz in Park City, Utah, had christened this the year of Sexy Sundance. “The Bronze,” “The Overnight,” “The D Train,” “I Am Michael” and “The Diary of a Teenage Girl” not only contained sex scenes that swayed between increasing levels of humor and eroticism, but each, in its own way, was a movie about sex. If the title alone doesn’t make "Sleeping with Other People" an obvious addition to the Sexy Sundance catalogue, consider this: In its standout scene, Jason Sudeikis instructs Alison Brie about proper masturbation techniques using an empty green-tea bottle.

sleeping with other people

It might seem Headland, who wrote and directed the film, enjoys shock value. But like the outlandish “Bachelorette,” which featured Lizzy Caplan delivering a monologue about blow jobs, “Sleeping with Other People” tempers raunchy humor with a sweetness that belies its bawdiness. Which would double as a fitting Twitter bio for Headland.

“I think it’s just the way that I talk with people,” she said. “I am a big softie. I cry at the drop of a hat. I’m so vulnerable about what I do and the relationships that I have in my life. And then I will say the most shocking, offensive things. Like, I just can’t help it. It just comes out. And I’m not sure where I got that from. It might have been being raised religiously, being raised Catholic ..."

We’d been talking for only a few moments at this point, but someone from one of the broadcast-interview operations in Sundance’s press lounge walked over to ask we keep our voices down. “That’s not the first time that’s happened,” Headland said.

“Maybe there’s something about being emotional and vulnerable where you want to say the thing that nobody wants to hear,” she continued, again conjuring memories of her Catholic-school upbringing. “Not to be shocking to be shocking, but you want to be, like, 'How does this make you feel?' Like, 'How does it make you feel if we really talk in-depth about the vagina? If we talk really in-depth about where the cervix is and actually put a name on these things?' It’s the same thing with the blow-job monologue in ‘Bachelorette.’ If we actually name stuff, how uncomfortable are you guys going to get? These are the things that we are all thinking. We’re talking about them behind closed doors.”

In “Sleeping with Other People,” the characters are very much not thinking about these things from behind closed doors. Brie plays a neurotic sex addict with a hang-up on a married doctor (a mustachioed Adam Scott), with Sudeikis portraying the guy who deflowered her in college. When they reunite years later, they uphold a platonic relationship that carries an obvious romantic connection, á la “When Harry Met Sally,” one of the movies Headland counts as inspiration alongside “Carnal Knowledge,” “The Graduate,” “Punch-Drunk Love,” “Shampoo” and “Silver Linings Playbook” (as well as Jane Austen novels). She wanted sex to be the film's subject -- not to be vulgar, but in an effort to make a romantic comedy in which it does not serve solely as the couple’s reward at the end.

Having one character teach another how to pleasure herself -- if you don’t know what a “dirty DJ” is, visit Urban Dictionary before seeing the film -- is culled directly from Headland’s life. After moving during her sophomore year of high school, Headland attended public school, first on a Maryland campus with primarily black and Hispanic students and later with an all-white, BMW-driving population in Connecticut. While drunk at parties, Headland, who didn’t have sex until college, would find herself in the corner educating her female friends about how to masturbate and informing her male friends what womanly anatomy provides the most stimulation.

“I was like, 'Why don’t we just tell everyone where the fucking cervix is?'” she said. “'Why don’t we just tell everyone where the G-spot is?'”

She introduced that notion to Sudeikis and Brie, who helped to flesh out the scene during rehearsals. What resulted is the film’s highlight: a fast-paced conversation that acts as a raunchy bookend to the duo’s honeyed interactions.

“Jason, I feel, could sell a ketchup Popsicle to a woman wearing white gloves. He could play anything,” she said of directing the scene. “I just feel like he could make anything likeable and anything sexy and anything fun. And Alie, too -- just the right amount of turned on, but not too much. She’s just like, ‘Oh, oh, okay.’”

Headland will be the first to tell you it’s a sort of antidote to “Fifty Shades of Grey,” which she says, along with “Gone Girl,” is an example of the contemporary evolution of Austenian social satire.

“Can I just be honest? I couldn’t get through it,” she said when asked how she feels about E.L. James' novel. “I really was so ready to like it and be excited, and I was like, ‘This just isn’t sexy. It’s just not sexy.’ I was so intrigued by why people were loving it and I just didn’t find it as emotionally stimulating as I thought it was going to be.”

What “Sleeping with Other People” boasts that -- according to Headland -- something like “Fifty Shades” doesn’t, is an intimacy not tied exclusively to the removal of clothes. “I think the reason that scene really resonates with people is not just because it’s super funny and super button-pushing and crazy, but I think it’s also because it’s this weird analogy or visualization of him teaching her about herself, which is really what intimacy is. You know what I mean? That’s actually what intimacy is: into you, you see me. Your partner teaches you about yourself, and so it’s this ridiculous thing -- or the wedding dress in ‘Bachelorette.’ But I think people connect to it because it is emotional. It ultimately is an emotional scene. That’s how I directed it and that’s how they played it.”

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Watch Ava DuVernay's Perfect Response To Her 'Selma' Oscar Snub

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In an interview with Democracy Now!'s Amy Goodman, "Selma" director Ava DuVernay had a beautiful response to those who say she was snubbed by the Academy. She paid tribute to the "giants, real, bold, brave Americans of Color and otherwise, all kinds of people, who marched for something really important," and said that she had been telling people since October that she would not get nominated for Best Director.

"I just knew it wasn't going to be the case so I never took it into my heart. It didn't really bother me. I was more bothered by David not being nominated," she said, referring to David Oyelowo, who starred as Martin Luther King Jr. in "Selma." The film was nominated for Best Song and Best Picture, which DuVernay describes as "nothing to sneeze at."

Asked if she thought the Academy's lack of diversity had something to do with the snubs, DuVernay had the perfect response:

[T]he question is: Why was Selma the only film that was even in the running with people of color for the award? You know what I mean? I mean, why are there not -- not just black, brown people? You know what I mean? Asian people, indigenous people, representations that are more than just one voice, just one face, just one gaze? So, for me, it’s much less about the awards and the accolades, because, literally, next year no one cares. Right? I can’t even tell you who won the award for whatever three years ago. I don’t know.


Watch the entire interview (DuVernay begins to speak at 20:00):

Ludacris Wins Full Custody Of Daughter Cai

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Ludacris just got some very good news.

The rapper-actor – whose legal name is Chris Bridges – had been engaged in a court battle with Tamika Fuller regarding their 13-month-old daughter, Cai. On Monday, a judge granted Bridges full custody of Cai.

5 Kerry Washington Quotes That Prove She More Than 'Handles It'

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If you're a true "Scandal" fan you already know that 1.) Season 4's mid-season premiere is on Thursday and 2.) Olivia Pope is a total boss. But while you may already love Kerry Washington for playing the professional powerhouse with such conviction, you may not know that Washington is just as inspiring when she's offscreen. The actress' political activism, nonjudgmental demeanor and wonderful messages of self-love make her just as admirable as Pope -- with or without the chic power suit.

Here are five quotes that prove Washington more than handles it :

On valuing inner beauty:

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On the importance of diversity in television:

kerryquote2

On political activism:

kerryquote3

On self-acceptance:

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On feminism:

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Lorde Wears Her Golden Globes Crop Top Again Because YOLO

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Talented teen songstress Lorde is nothing if not practical. Accordingly, she took to Instagram Wednesday to teach her legions of fans about smart consumerism and reusing what's already in the closet -- that is, if what's in the closet is top designer garb.

Reese Witherspoon Hangs With Her 'Mini Me'

Courtney Love Admits To Using Heroin While Pregnant With Frances Bean Cobain

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Almost 23 years after Courtney Love vehemently denied Vanity Fair writer Lynn Hirschberg's claims that she had used heroin during her pregnancy, the singer is coming clean.

Love, 50, now admits to using heroin while pregnant with her daughter Frances Bean Cobain in the new HBO documentary "Kurt Cobain: Montage Of Heck."

"I used it once then stopped. I knew she would be fine," Love told the film's director Brett Morgen in an on-camera interview.

The fallout from Hirschberg's article was harsh: Love and Cobain temporarily lost custody of their daughter. Love struck back at the writer, releasing a bootleg CD entitled “Bring Me the Head of Lynn Hirschberg," and claimed Hirschberg was "obsessed" with her. The bad blood continued for some time; in 1995, Love reportedly grabbed Quentin Tarantino's Best Screenplay Oscar statuette for "Pulp Fiction" and threatened to attack Hirschberg with it.

Reps for Love and Cobain first put out a statement in 1992 denying that the singer used heroin after learning she was pregnant:

"We unequivocally deny this... As soon as Courtney found out she was pregnant, she immediately contacted an obstetrician and a doctor specializing in chemical dependency and has been under their care since then and has been assured that she can expect to have a healthy baby."

And as recently as 2011, Love told The Fix that she used heroin, but only during the first three weeks of her pregnancy, before she knew she was expecting.

"But so fucking what!? I didn't even know I was pregnant at the time! I also took a few puffs on a cigarette when my belly was out to here, but most of those nine months, I walked around with nicotine patches all over my body. When you have a baby inside you, you're not going to do drugs or something stupid," she said.


In that same interview, Love went on to go as far as blame Hirschberg for Cobain's suicide.

"My world was turned upside down by a very bitter, very ugly woman named Lynn Hirschberg, who published a hatchet job about Kurt and me in Vanity Fair. She’s more responsible for my husband’s death than anyone," she said. "She humiliated and emasculated him. She sent him over the edge. She deserves most of the blame for his death."

It's a sentiment that was somewhat echoed by "Montage of Heck" director Morgen in a recent interview with Vanity Fair. Of his decision to including Love's admission in his film, he said:

"At the same time, yeah they were junkies but they weren’t hurting anyone and the article really had a huge effect on Kurt’s psyche. I don’t think he ever recovered from it, because they took his child away. And the humiliation of losing your child given his background and his sensitivity to all of that stuff is just [fades off]."

Emma Watson Tells Young Fan To 'Be An Engineer' Even Though Her Dad Doesn't Want Her To

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Just when you thought Emma Watson couldn't possibly be more inspiring, she goes and inspires some more.

While at the World Economic Forum in Davos on Friday, Watson took to Twitter to answer some questions about the HeForShe campaign's Impact 10x10x10 initiative, which aims to involve governments, corporations and universities in taking action towards gender equality.

Along with discussing the campaign, she offered advice to someone whose issue hit particularly close to home. The young fan said she wants to become an engineer one day, but tweeted that her father told her it's a male profession. She asked Watson how to change that -- and the actress' response was on-point.




Female engineers then began responding to Watson's words of encouragement.













And that's why she's our heroine.

Iggy Azalea Responds To Eve & Jill Scott's 'Blaccent' Comments: 'I'm Myself'

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Following a heated Twitter exchange with Azealia Banks and being schooled on Hip Hop by Q-Tip, Iggy Azalea is back in headlines once again.

This time the Australian-born rapper is responding to recent comments by fellow rapper-actress Eve and singer Jill Scott, who recently shared their thoughts on Azalea, her “blaccent” and how it may all contribute to cultural appropriation during an appearance last week on “Sway In The Morning.”

“She’s representing a group of girls right now as well. And yeah, I think people right now are too quick to give too many accolades to new people,” Eve admitted to show host Sway Calloway. “That’s the one thing I just can’t stand. Let her do her thing. It’s not my cup of tea but she’s representing for somebody. She’s doing her thing. What are you gonna do?”

Jill Scott added; “It’s a little challenging for me, because I come from the era that she pulled from…To me it’s a mixture of Da Brat and Eve, the way that it sounds. That’s what it sounds like to me…it [the tone of her voice] also sounds like a big bite to me. The blaccent.” Eve continued Scott’s thoughts. “She’s from a different place, and it would be dope to hear with her swag.”

As expected, Iggy took to her personal Twitter account yesterday to respond to the Grammy Award-winning pair’s thoughts.



















You Can't Unsee How Justin Bieber's Calvin Klein Ad Looked 'Before' Photoshop

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Photoshop: taking celebrity beauty from No. 2 to No. 1.

You sensed something was up with Justin Bieber's Calvin Klein underwear ad. You couldn't put your finger on it, but something smelled off. Well, after some in-depth investigative journalism, we now know the truth.

CollegeHumor doesn't pull any punches in this reverse time-lapse video, revealing Justin Bieber's true identity, obscured by now-infamous photos for Calvin Klein.

Photoshop level: Magic.

Kanye, Bieber, Ellen And Sam Smith, AKA Your New Squad Goals

Larry Wilmore On Bill Cosby: 'He Was Never A Hero Of Mine'

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Larry Wilmore took down Bill Cosby on the second episode of "The Nightly Show," calling out fans who came to the comedian's defense amid sexual assault allegations. In a lengthy interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Wilmore explained why he had no allegiance to Cosby at a time when many comics have not spoken out against him.

"He was never a hero of mine," he told THR. "I liked Cosby, but I have a different relationship with him than a lot of people because I didn't grow up on 'The Cosby Show' ... I remember in the late '70s, early '80s, my mom met Bill Cosby down in San Diego at this tennis tournament. She came back and said, 'We asked him for his autograph, and he was so mean, so nasty.' He said, 'I don't do that.' I was like, 'Man, what an asshole.' My opinion of Cosby at that point was like, 'What a jerk.' I never even watched 'The Cosby Show.' I always thought, 'That's great that that show is on,' but about him I was like, 'Whatever, Cosby.' Richard Pryor was my hero."

In recent interviews, stars have spoken about admiring Cosby's work, but when asked about the mounting sexual assault allegations against him, they deflected. "His personal life has nothing to do with me," Kevin Hart told THR. "I can't control it. I will never try. It doesn't stop me from being an admirer of his work." Chris Rock responded similarly when New York Magazine asked about the situation: "I grew up on Cosby. I love Cosby, and I just hope it’s not true."

Check out Wilmore's full interview over at THR.

Nick Offerman Pumps Up America About NASCAR In Hilarious Super Bowl Ad

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NASCAR racing is patriotic, tough-as-nails, meat-on-the-grill fun.

At least, that’s the claim being made by comedian Nick Offerman in this over-the-top NASCAR ad created by NBC Sports.

“Welcome to the place where we speed all day, where we bump and grind in a non-sexual way,” Offerman recites in the clip. “Where scores are settled, and we break the rules, and everybody's got a set of badass tools.”

The ad, which has already been watched more than 900,000 times on YouTube, will make its TV debut during NBC’s coverage of the Super Bowl this weekend. Watch the entire spot in the video above.

Sean Penn Talks About Dating Charlize Theron And Possibly Marrying Again

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Sean Penn has been married twice before, but he doesn't see it that way.

"Yes, I’d get married again," Penn told Esquire U.K. for the March 2015 issue. "You say I’ve been married twice before but I’ve been married under circumstances where I was less informed than I am today, so I wouldn’t even consider it a third marriage, I’d consider it a first marriage on its own terms if I got married again. I mean, I like the tradition. A friend of mine wrote a line, 'Without tradition, new things die.' And I don’t want new things to die."

The 54-year-old actor had a tumultuous marriage to Madonna in the 1980s. After their split, he met Robin Wright. They welcomed two children and married in 1996. The pair had a rocky relationship and finally split in 2010. He has been dating Charlize Theron for over a year.

"Yeah, I’m surprised to be in love," he told Esquire U.K. "Lot of reasons. I’m self-proclaimed bad at mathematics but I can do two plus two: 53 years old plus finally beginning to figure out why you haven’t been happy in a single relationship? It could seem too late. But to run into somebody now who you care about is a much more passionate, deeper, truer and -– God! -– a much happier feeling. It’s a lot more romantic and a lot more fulfilling to be in a relationship and to think you’re a good person within it."

Theron was seemingly just as surprised their romance blossomed. In her own Esquire U.K. interview last year, she said she was not looking for a relationship, but her son, Jackson, got a bit older and she had more time.

“And it’s like if you are open to something, if you just let it happen, it will happen. When you least expect it," she said. "It was nice to be single and now it’s nice to be not single.”

For more with Sean Penn, head over to Esquire U.K.

sean penn

Dear Disney, Please Cast These Undiscovered Hawaii Teens For 'Moana'

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It's only been three months since Disney announced the 2016 release of "Moana," its next animated film, but we're already expecting success of "Frozen" proportions.

As we wait impatiently to hear Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson's singing voice (he's been cast as the voice of a demigod), the studio continues to scour the globe to crown the movie's first-ever Pacific Islander princess.

Moana, the eponymous film's heroine is a young and spirited Polynesian navigator from the South Pacific who sets out on an epic voyage in search of a fabled island.

disney

Unlike the last few Disney princesses -- who were played by pop stars, Tony-award winners and A-list actresses -- the studio's New Zealand-based casting agency went searching for an undiscovered talent for Moana. They held an open casting call on YouTube and described Moana as "smart, passionate, and funny. Brave, inquisitive, and confident. A teenager who yearns for something more. Strong singing voice a must.”

Hawaii-born teens Ciana Pelekai and Makamae Auwae both received official callbacks after submitting their YouTube auditions and have become instant Internet celebrities. Both girls are definitely eager to represent their culture and, as evidenced by audition videos, wildly talented:

Ciana Pelekai
"I relate to Moana because she's Polynesian and I'm Hawaiian and I know I could be an inspiration to others," Pelekai, 14, told The Huffington Post. "Down here in Hawaii, there's not a lot of opportunity to be recognized [nationally] like there is in Los Angeles. I just hope they choose a Hawaii girl."

(You may recognize Pelekai from Season 8 of "America's Got Talent.")



Makamae Auwae
"I would be honored to lead the role of Moana because it would be a big opportunity to represent where I come from," Auwae, 19, told HuffPost. "The Polynesian and Hawaiian cultures could teach the world the value of family and how respectful Polynesians are of the world around them, from navigating stars to taking care of the land that take cares of them."

Alyssa Milano Shares A '90s #TBT Photo With Reese Witherspoon

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Unless you have a great memory and a soft-spot for dramatic thrillers from the mid-'90s, you may not remember 1996's "Fear," starring Reese Witherspoon, Mark Wahlberg and Alyssa Milano. Luckily, Milano kindly reminded us of its existence with a precious throwback photo of herself and Witherspoon on the set, looking ever so '90s:

#TBT With my beautiful friend of 20 years, @reesewitherspoon...

A photo posted by Alyssa Milano (@milano_alyssa) on






To add to the #TBT party, we dug up photos of Witherspoon at the "Fear" premiere in Sydney, Australia. (Milano apparently wasn't in attendance.):

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And if you're really looking for some "Fear" nostalgia, head on over to Vulture.

ABC's 'Fresh Off The Boat' Deletes Offensive Promotional Tweet

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ABC's "Fresh off the Boat" set Twitter ablaze after sharing an offensive promotional image for the show on Thursday.

As captured by BuzzFeed, the account tweeted the below ad:

fob tweet

Eddie Huang, whose memoir "Fresh Off the Boat: A Memoir" served as inspiration for the show, railed against the promo on his Twitter account.



















The tweet has since been removed from the show's Twitter account. According to Jeff Yang, it was yanked once production learned of the tweet.




A representative for ABC said the marketing department had been made aware of the tweet, but did not have an official comment to pass along at this moment.

The tweet comes after the "Fresh off the Boat" team faced similar ignorance from a journalist at the Television Critics Association Winter Press Tour.

"I wanted to ask the question: I love Asian culture," a reporter said to the cast and crew. "And I was just talking about chopsticks, and I just love all that. Will I get to see that, or will it be more Americanized?”

Huang and showrunner Nahnatchka Khan responded to the question with sarcasm.

"It’s more about chopsticks,” said Huang.

“Wait till Episode 5, it’s all about chopsticks,” Khan added.
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