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Kate McKinnon's Hillary Clinton Addresses Email Controversy In 'SNL' Cold Open

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Kate McKinnon's Hillary Clinton addressed the nation in the "Saturday Night Live" cold open this week as "a relatable woman on a couch" to clear up questions about her emails.

The former secretary of state has been under fire since Monday over the use of her private email account to conduct business. But McKinnon's Clinton said on "SNL" that she just used it for "fun woman talk" and to send the unsexiest email ever to Bill Clinton. And her Netflix account? Totally clean -- she's just been binging "House of Cards" and preparing to run for president, if she runs. "I am," she whispers.

'SNL' Mocks Iggy Azalea's Feud With Azealia Banks

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If she hadn't quit Twitter, we'd love to know Iggy Azalea's thoughts on this one.

Armed with an Australian accent and some questionable lyrics, Kate McKinnon hilariously imitated the 24-year-old rapper and her hip-hop feuds on "Saturday Night Live."

In the sketch, Azalea tries -- and fails -- to make amends with fellow rapper Azealia Banks (Sasheer Zamata).

When that doesn't work out, Azalea enlists the help of Rafti Jones (Chris Hemsworth), who apparently taught her everything she knows about rap. For example, if you're ever at a loss for words mid-verse, just make a gun sound.

With James Corden, The Era Of Late-Night Feuds May Finally Be Over

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Last fall, CBS announced that Tony Award-winner James Corden would take over “The Late Late Show,” replacing Craig Ferguson. Corden is best known for his roles in “Into the Woods,” "Begin Again" and for his award-winning performance in the play “One Man, Two Guvnors,” which was a West End and Broadway hit.

But that's not the typical CV for a late night American talk show host. CBS Entertainment chairwoman Nina Tassler told The New York Times, “The identity and the quality of the host informs the kind of show you’re going to do. Once we knew that James was our guy, the format was going to be developed and derived from who James is.”

That sounds like a whole lot of pressure. But his lack of experience in the hosting world, mixed with his anonymity within American culture, might just prove to be a blessing.

“There's a freedom to it,” he said in an interview with The Huffington Post. “You really have an opportunity to come with no baggage and speak to people and say this is us, this is our show, and we would love for you to spend the last hour of your day here. We are going to try our best to make you smile.”

But it’s a double-edged sword, he continued. “The bad side is how do you get them there to hear that message? We can only do so much to get people to tune in. From what I can see, the television habits of people in America is all about the lead-in.”

Fortunately, Corden has two of those, at least during this first year. His “Late Late Show” starts on March 23, two months before David Letterman steps away from "The Late Show"; come fall, Corden will directly follow Stephen Colbert’s new show on CBS. Corden recently said that he wants his show to be like “Stephen Colbert’s younger brother with ADHD,” but told us that they don’t even know what Colbert's show will be like just yet.

“I don’t know if Stephen knows yet. I think it’s our job to make it feel like two hours of television,” he said. “So Stephen is going to make his show and we’ll mold ours after we see what that is. I think we have to give people a reason to stick with us. But I’m talking like I have a clue -- I have no idea what I’m talking about!”

Corden is horribly likable. He is warm and welcoming. He takes off his sneakers before curling up on his sofa for our interview. He wears jeans and a T-shirt. He has two other pairs of shoes lined up side by side at the foot of his desk -- a pair of sneakers and a pair of shiny, formal black dress shoes. His laugh is like hitting the jackpot, every time. In some ways, he feels like a younger, cheerier Ricky Gervais.

His office is bare and looks like he just got there. A Tom Ford gift bag rests on top of a dresser, next to a lit candle and a fancy box of Dom Pérignon champagne. In fact, there are so many candles lit in the office that it has started to smell like a working log cabin.

“I am going to do something with this room,” he said emphatically. But right now it's crunch time to get the show up and running this month. Even sleep has taken a back seat. "There’s been no time for naps," Corden said.

Next door (just a brisk walk past the CBS helipad), the set to his future is being built. Dozens upon dozens of crew members hammer, saw, shift lights and tweak the Hollywood Hills backdrop that Corden will sit in front of each night. His request for a working bar has been granted and already put in place.

james corden

Corden joins the late-night scene during a crucial time of change. Letterman and Jon Stewart are stepping down, Colbert is embarking upon a new era as “himself,” Jimmy Fallon and Seth Meyers are rolling in ratings and fellow Brit, John Oliver -- whom Corden calls “fiercely bright" -- is making every executive at HBO practically giddy.

But aside from a joke about his weight from Letterman, it appears that the days of late-night feuds are over. Corden says Meyers was the first person to congratulate him on his new job and that they email regularly about their favorite soccer team.

“He is the nicest man on the planet,” Corden said. “I don’t even know if that’s our competition really. I think our competition is people falling asleep.” The show airs at 12:35 a.m. (a time so late that Corden’s own father practically went into shock when he heard the news) and Corden knows that it will be an uphill battle.

“I’m here in Los Angeles now and I have lived in New York before, and you can feel when you’re in these places that this is ‘America.’ But I’m aware that it isn’t. How do I reach the kid or the couple or the grandparents in Ohio or Nebraska? How do I talk to them?” he asked.

“The truth is, that’s just going to take time. The nature of these shows is that they are bred on familiarity. You’re checking in with someone you know and like," Corden said. "Which is why, almost always, when people launch these shows, they do not get good reviews.”

When asked if he’s prepared for that, Corden said, “100 percent. How do you review it? It’s like cooking a steak for 30 seconds and then eating it and saying, ‘Uh, this isn’t ready.’ This is going to evolve.”

james corden

Corden believes they could spend a full year prepping for the show, but will inevitably learn more in their first two weeks of doing it. He is shockingly calm and open minded. In Variety’s cover story, he alluded to good nerves versus bad nerves and just hoping that the good nerves show up.

And it’s not like he’s never performed before. He’s just never hosted. During the run of “One Man, Two Guvnors,” he remembers feeling like the whole play sat on his shoulders. “I got into some crazy superstitions. Oh my god, it was too much,” he said.

“I had to put my socks on in a certain order. I couldn’t start getting dressed until the band started playing. I had to wait until a particular moment to walk out of the room and then do a special little dance. My wife would just be like, ‘What are you doing?’”

He asked a sports psychologist about it at a party and was told that his behavior was all about eliminating doubt. It’s quite common with professional athletes, too. “Because however much you do it, it’s always alien,” Corden said. “It’s an alien thing to say I’m going to try and run this 100 meters faster than these guys. This is not normal.”

In many ways, Corden must feel like a bit of an alien being dropped into Hollywood. During the morning our interview took place, his gigantic billboard was raised over CBS studios at rush hour. He stood on a crane with a bullhorn shouting down at pedestrians, “Hi. I am James Corden.”

james corden

He moved to Los Angeles with his wife and two young children only two months ago. “I’m enjoying it very much,” he said, playing with his wedding band on his finger. “It’s funny -- I feel like I can see how life could be. But that’s so reliant on this working out!”

Expect a fierce first week of the show. They have confirmed guests Tom Hanks, Kerry Washington, Will Ferrell and Kevin Hart. “I’m not afraid of any of them,” he said. “I never feel afraid. Should I be afraid? I don’t feel like I should.”

“The Late Late Show with James Corden” premieres March 23 on CBS.

'Jane The Virgin' Returns With Romance, Big Twists And Big Hair

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It has been weeks since we've had a fresh episode of "Jane the Virgin," which aired its last installment in mid-February, but the wait is over: "Jane the Virgin" is back on Monday night.

At times, the gloriously versatile show -- which stars Gina Rodriguez as the accidentally pregnant Jane Villanueva -- is quite serious, but it's also known for its flights of fancy. All things considered, Monday's funny but emotionally grounded chapter is a nice balance of the show's many different modes.

"[If there is] a classic version of our show, Episode 15 is that. I really love it. It’s very romantic," Jennie Snyder Urman, the show's executive producer, said in a recent interview in her Los Angeles office. "It has, I think, some of Gina’s funniest comedy, both physical and just sort of small [moments]."

Without giving away too much, Urman said she and Rodriguez got to talking about one of the actress' past jobs, and Urman said she just had to find a way to incorporate that skill set into the show.

In the episode, Jane's favorite romance writer is in town, which leads to a few enjoyably surreal moments. In one of them, viewers get a glimpse of Juana and Rafe, a lusty, fantasy version of Jane and her boyfriend/father of her child Rafael (Justin Baldoni).

Jane is "working on her book and when she’s writing these romance novels, she turns into this romance-writing alter ego," Urman said. Not only will viewers get to see Rafe and Juana's shaggy, epic-romance hair, there's also a glimpse of Rogelio de la Vega (Jaime Camil) on the set at his new job, where he plays an outer-space detective (and here are a couple of pictures of these stellar moments).

Though Rafe and Juana may enjoy a passionate romance, for Jane and Rafael, things are a little bit rockier. Urman is certainly not the type of showrunner to toss around major spoilers, but she did offer some hints about where the rest of the show's first season will go.

"People aren’t only one thing," Urman noted, "but for a while, it's been easy to see Rafael as this fantasy. That’s what Jane is seeing in him and the audience [sees that too]. He’s got to get more real, and their relationship's not going to always be on this fantasy level." Also, by the end of the season, we'll see Jane encounter the "cult of new mommyhood, which is quite overwhelming with what you should be doing."

The good news is that the show's narrator is in top form when the show returns: Though the "Jane the Virgin" cast is wonderful, I may have missed the Latin Lover Narrator most of all. Urman talks about the key role of the narrator, the show's ambitious shooting structure and its unusual directing roster in the Q&A below (and by the way, I'll have much more from the rest of the cast in coming weeks). This interview edited and condensed: an expanded version of my conversation with Urman is available in podcast form.

It feels to me like "Jane" is doing things different, in that the way that you’re presenting information to the audience is actually fairly complex. You’ve got the narrator, the on-screen information, the way that you frame and edit things, and then what’s happening in the stories themselves. Am I making too grandiose a claim by saying that this is kind of a new thing on television?
You know, I hope it is. I was really inspired by the books of Martin Amis and where they do things like that. Where you take the form of TV and [it's about watching TV] and at the same time you’re following the story internally. I wanted it to be an homage to the telenovela, so it always had that meta-telenovela build into its bones.

To me, part of the narration and the text on screen is the storyteller vibe that I wanted you to get. So much of life now is -- we’re constantly on our screens, we’re constantly checking. It’s such an intertextual kind of place, so I was trying to do some of that for TV.

And my dad told me after my last project ["Emily Owns MD"], "No, it was really good, but I was thinking you should do something a little more original next time." He goes, "How about '24'? That was so new." I was like, "Oh, thanks."

It’s parental encouragement like that that keeps so many writers going.
[Laughing] I was like, "It's really hard to get a show on the air."

Not to side with your dad, but I do think "24" was doing something really interesting. Alan Sepinwall did a whole chapter on that in his book. They were had multiple cameras shooting a scene at once, and then because of the editing technology that was around then, they could have split screens. You could have characters different places and how they dealt with each other was actually different from the norm at that time when you experienced the story.
Totally. And my dad, [he watches] the Top 10 shows on the air. He’s right in the pocket. For him, "24" was high adrenaline and exciting. So when he watched “Emily Owens,” I think he felt like, "This is nice, but I’ve seen a medical show done really well and that’s 'Grey’s Anatomy.'"

It did really sit with me -- when that show was cancelled, I just thought, I want to do something different. You don’t know where it’ll end up, but that’s what sort of inspired me about “Jane” -- that it would be a different kind of world.

There’s this of wave of shows that play with the fact that you know that you’re watching a TV show. There are these meta layers. But sometimes those are used for kind of distancing reasons, or with an ironic stance, whereas your show is very much immersing the viewer in emotional states and in the stories that are swirling around. Does that make it even harder?
Yeah. I didn’t want distance. Our show has so many crazy things to it -- you have to connect to the characters, emotionally connect to them. Otherwise I feel like it would just be a sketch. So for me, the narrator is guiding us through the story, but he’s also the audience in a lot of ways, and will mimic their reactions. To me, it’s just sort of embracing the form that we’re all watching it together, but I want the narrator to have that sense of [acknowledging], "I know this is crazy. I’m going to remark on it too, so that the audience doesn’t feel like disrespected or that we’re just supposed to buy this."

I see him as our eyes in, as well as our storyteller guide. And the hope is that these things don’t take you away from Jane but will be different ways to kind of get you inside the character.

It’s so funny that you say that, because that’s one of my questions. The narrator is our entry point. He’s kind of sitting on the couch with us.
Exactly.

Isn’t that another form of experiencing the story? It's like the narrator is our co-conspirator. And that makes for more of a sense of warmth and connection, I think.
That’s what I want the show to do at the bottom -- you feel like it’s this very warm place. You feel like there are all these flights of fantasy, but the real wish fulfillment is with the Villanueva’s house and it's Jane and her mom and her grandmother, and with the narrator to some extent. The audience should identify with them and often feels the same way he feels. "That’s crazy. How is that happening? What did I miss?"

But you also get the sense that he’s pulling for them. Sometimes he gives voice to whatever emotional states or reactions you might be having.
And I think that helps us to navigate. We go from somebody impaled on an ice sculpture to a sweet scene on a porch, and it’s hard to go through all these things. I feel that his through line helps us, and helps the audience not get whiplash.

Another reason the show is so fun is because the typical "eat your vegetables" parts of the story -- exposition, explanation, plot mechanics -- "Jane the Virgin" makes that fun. You’ve got the "Previously" at the start, you’ve got the narrator and the flashbacks and the bits of text on screen. You’ve somehow found a way to take that boring exposition stuff and, like, turn it into candy.
That's what it's supposed to be, so it's like, "You’ll remember this thing you have to remember right now but we’ll do it in a fun way."

When I was on set, Jaime brought up something: that the scripts can be in the range of 56 pages. [Most TV scripts for hourlong shows are shorter than that, usually by several pages.]
Yes. Ours are often closer to 59. They can be 56 to 59. The craziest part of our show is how many scenes we do per episode. Normally you’re probably around 30 [scenes] for a 60-minute show. I would say 30 to 35 [scenes is the norm for an hourlong show]. And we are anywhere from 45 to 80 [scenes].

Eighty!
I’ve done 80. Everyone panics because it’s not really how much of the page count you do on set a day. It’s how many different setups you have. We have a lot and it’s a really fast-moving show. And I always tell the directors, "Don’t get attached to any camera moves if people aren’t speaking, because if people aren’t speaking I’m going to be cutting in right then." Anything that you want to see on screen has to be tied into the things that they’re saying, or else it won’t make it on the screen just because we move so quickly.

Jaime was saying sometimes things that are in the script get cut, but when I was talking with the some of the writers, they were saying, "We don’t really cut scenes per se. Parts of scenes might be trimmed."
Yeah. Maybe I’ve taken out one or two scenes, but that’s pretty unusual. Usually [a show will] drop a few scenes, and I usually don’t. But I’m really tight in the edit, and I go from point to point to point. If it’s a joke and I feel like it’s slowing down the movement, I cut it. [The line] has to do something else besides just be funny -– it has to move us forward. The pace is something I really just feel internally in my gut. Like, "We’ve got to move."

I’ve always said this -- I want the audience chasing after the plot. I felt like with a lot of TV, all of the emotional stuff is so labored and all of the comedy is really highlighted. I wanted a canvas where you might get everything and you might not get everything.

Sometimes a show slows down the pace and that's it's way of telling you what to feel. Like, "Now is the emotional time."
And then it counts more.

Right. But if the show hasn’t done the work of making me care, then slowing things down doesn’t necessarily work. It's like, "Now it’s slow and I’m bored."
Right. When we pause, it’s very deliberate. You know, things get cut. They just have to, because we pack in so much plot an episode. But hopefully each show has its own kind of balance and I try to keep all the things that I love the most.

I want to return to the number of scenes. How do you get that done without having the crew quit en masse?
I know! We have a great crew and they’re just so quick. Right from the beginning, that was what we talked about what the show would be, and I talked to the [director of photography] about that it was going to be a show with a lot of [scenes] and we were going to be moving and we were going do fairly straightforward coverage. Then [we would] take our [bigger] moments to do something more special. Sometimes for us, it’s about the character, so you’re in close with them and they’re talking and it’s the emotional connection of the plot movement.

You know, it’s a very still show. There’s not a ton of walking around and blocking. There is some, but that’s partly because I like to edit and I like to cut and if we get too tied into someone pouring an orange juice then I have trouble matching [the shots]. So we just keep everything kind of contained and we really go point to point.

But it’s a lot. It’s definitely a lot. But the crew does it. We rarely go over. We don’t do steadicam. We do everything on the dolly, because I like it to be a smooth fairytale, and I don’t want you to feel the camera that much. I want you to just feel immersed in this world like that has a little magic of its own. But we move fast.

You’ve got seven regular cast members and many other characters in orbit. And you’ve got to keep story arcs for all them going, and have those be emotionally grounded and throw in twists and turns. Is that an incredibly difficult challenge?
Yeah, it’s hard. We start from two places. What’s our comic set piece going to be? Because we want it to have that lightness of tone. And also, what’s Jane’s emotional story? That's the beginning of it, and the trick of this is that, if you’re on a procedural, you kind of know what every episode feels like. In this show, I feel like [the nature of the episode is] really defined by the quality of Jane’s emotional arc. That's what the tone of the episode is going to be. So they can be much wilder and funnier [when she's on an even keel but] when she’s afraid something’s wrong with the baby, it’s going to be a more serious tone.

So I don’t really have a template, and that makes it tricky in editing, because each episode has its own tone that’s dictated by where she’s at and how big our soap twists are. And I try to take a pass at each episode from each character’s point of view. I can go really crazy, as long as I know, "Okay, she’s doing this because she loves him and, you know, Petra’s the hero in her story. And this is what she’s trying to do to get what she wants." I try to just get at it from each character’s point of view.

The easiest thing for you to do to make it easier for yourself and your writers would be to make Petra just a villain? To give them a dimensionality or to give them multiple facets -- it’s making life harder.
It’s making life harder, yeah. I also get bored with certain dynamics quickly. I’ll always say to the writers, "Okay, we’ve done that four times, you know. I want the flashbacks to work in a different way in this episode," or "I want the opening to not be this." So my boredom is a big part of that too.

For you is the story of the show Jane figuring out how to do all of the things she wants to do -- writer, teacher, mother -- how to be all the parts of her that she wants to be?
I think underneath, fundamentally, there are two choices. There is, is she going to be a teacher, which for her is a safer option because that’s what she’s pursued and she knows it comes with a summer break and all the practical things? Versus is she going to be a writer -- is she going to take a chance and do that? Obviously I relate to that. I waitressed all the way through as I was trying to get writing jobs, so I connect to that.

I think the larger [idea] underneath it all is, this is a 23, now 24-year-old woman who was not planning to have kids anytime soon, and how do you keep a sense of identity when you become a mom? That’s hugely important in my life and a big question and something that I struggle with. People are saying, "Well, what happens when she has a baby?" I think there are infinitely so many more interesting stories once she has a baby, because I don’t think you become less interesting when you become a mom. I think things become harder, and you have to figure that out, but you’re still romantic. You still have dreams. You’re still trying to get [somewhere]. I struggle with that all the time.

If anything, what you want to accomplish as your own person becomes more important.
More important and more central. And then you have this conflict of, "Can I do that? Am I selfish?" So those are the real emotional things that are going to continue to drive Jane and I hope ground her as a person, things that we can relate to while these more soapy telenovela twists are going around.

Jane is the kind of person who would make her child such a priority, and she wants to fulfill her dreams. But she’s very practical, as you said.
Exactly. She wants the child to be grown up and loved. She felt surrounded by love, and I think that’s such a part of who she is and why she’s confident. And she wants all that but she’s going to be really conflicted because she was not planning this. Even I’m conflicted and I planned for kids. It’s going to be just a real struggle for her that I’m excited [to see] how she can do everything and be everything but not lose herself. [It's figuring out] who Jane’s identity is as a writer and as a creative person and also as somebody who loves lists and plans and schedules. That feels like just a good rich emotional underpinning. And then you can do all the fun crazy stuff -- the stalkers and twins and this and that. But you know what she wants.

For your first 12 episodes, there were 11 directors and eight of them were women. Three were women of color. I would assume that that was a conscious decision on your part?
You know, it is and it isn’t. I didn’t know that we [had] more women. I hire people I connect to and relate to. So I’m a woman and I connect a lot with women, and also I feel like this is a show that has a female gaze. It has a female protagonist that you don’t want to be objectified.

It’s just a sort of connection -- you meet with all these people, and you hire the people that you connect with the most and that you feel are speaking the same language of the show. And in my interviews there just probably were more women, but that’s kind of my experience and that’s probably why there’s not a lot of women [directing television]. If there are too many men in power, you’re going to hire people that remind you of your college roommate or your frat buddy or whatever. Whereas, if I’m sitting with you, I’m like, "Oh, she’s a mom. She understands that balance. We can talk." Do you know what I mean? There’s just a sense of connection and especially a connection to the subject matter.

Not that [only women can have that]. I mean, our pilot director, Brad Silberling, who’s done three of our episodes –- no one could understand Jane like he does. He understands it so intuitively. But a lot of the people I sat down with and that were really speaking passionately about the show and the subject and understood the tone were women, so I hired them.

The longer, podcast version of this conversation is on the Talking TV site, on iTunes and below.



'Girls' Adds A Gay Twist, But Don't Be Too Surprised

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Spoiler Alert: The below post contains spoilers for anyone who has not seen "Girls" Season 4, Episode 8, “Tad & Loreen & Avi & Shanaz" (and/or has not been paying close enough attention to Elijah).

Hannah's dad came out as gay on the latest episode of "Girls." Depending on how you were watching, the scene was a thoughtful revelation which followed up on a series of inferences bound to pay off or was "cheap, desperate, disrespectful and came out of nowhere" (no pun intended). Although, it wasn't intended as just more "Girls"-brand shock-value. Sunday's episode was handled with care: As Joe Coscarelli noted over at the New York Times, "Tad & Loreen & Avi & Shanaz" was directed by Jamie Babbit, the woman who gave us the "cult classic coming out story" known as "But I'm a Cheerleader."

“I feel there’s something that I want to share with you," Hannah's father, Tad, tells his wife, Loreen, in the cold open as the two leave therapy. "I’ve been thinking lately that I'm ... that I'm gay.”

According to executive producer Jenni Konner, this development has been in the works for quite some time. “We’ve actually been talking about this since the beginning,” she said on the PaleyFest red carpet (via Vulture). “If you were to go back and watch with the lens of knowing that, you’d see a lot of references to it, actually. It was something we always thought about.” (Indeed, back during the first season, Elijah ends a spat with Hannah by saying, “Nice to see you, your dad is gay.”)

In terms of how things will proceed over the rest of the season, we don't get much in the way of closure, but we'll see more of Tad when "Girls" returns for its already-green-lit fifth season. "Sometimes in life things have to get as bad as they can be before they get better," Peter Scolari, who plays Hannah's dad, told The Hollywood Reporter. "Things don't get better in the last episode [of this season]. Things don't resolve. [But I was told,] 'Don't worry, we're not going to leave you out there in the wind.'"

"If you’ve seen Sunday night’s episode, you already know the admirable respect (not to mention screen time) the 'Girls' writers have given Tad’s arc," Kevin Fallon wrote over at The Daily Beast. "Tad’s journey is played out in beats that reverberate throughout the rest of the season, with the way it affects Loreen, Hannah, and even her gay BFF Elijah all explored, and explored deeply."

Naturally, Lena Dunham addressed the storyline, too, specifically responding to "the fact that Tad’s had what seems a fairly healthy sexual relationship with his wife" over at Vulture.

"The thing about human sexuality is it’s really complicated," she said. "Just because you may be gay doesn’t mean you’re not totally capable of loving a woman. As we all know, we’ve seen the fluidity of sexuality and letting that be complex and not saying ‘Oh he’s gay so he can’t get it up,’ but rather, ‘He’s gay so he’s dealing with some really complex issues with his identify that because of the generation he was born in to he hasn’t been able to open up that dialogue.’”

Sam Smith & John Legend Recorded A Song For Charity Because They Are Soulful Perfection

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Sam Smith and John Legend are here to melt hearts and raise money for Red Nose Day, a biennial event where British residents and celebrities don clown noses to attract funds and awareness for underprivileged parts of the U.K. and Africa. Smith and Legend team up for a rendition of the former's debut single, "Lay Me Down." It will serve as the official song of this year's Red Nose Day.

The singers filmed a new video for the charitable endeavor, and they will appear at Comic Relief's televised special on March 13, which airs on BBC One. All proceeds from the track's sales benefit the charity, and all pleasure derived from seeing the soulful gentlemen together benefits humanity.

Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, Haim And Ellie Goulding Know How To Tea Party

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Leave it to Taylor Swift, Selena Gomez, Ellie Goulding and the Haim sisters to have the chicest girls' night in recent history.

The friends spent Saturday night lounging around a Las Vegas hotel room together, sipping on champagne, soda and tea. And of course, it wouldn't be a girls' night if they didn't document it on Instagram:

Well this is bloody CHILL @taylorswift @selenagomez @haimtheband

A photo posted by elliegoulding (@elliegoulding) on





she's so fluffy

A photo posted by Selena Gomez (@selenagomez) on





We are at our best when we cheer each other on and build each other up. Happy International Women's Day.

A photo posted by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) on





Later on, the squad was spotted at Hakkasan nightclub, where Calvin Harris was spinning as DJ. Goulding, who has collaborated with Harris on songs like "Outside" and "I Need Your Love," joked around in an Instagram caption, writing, "Some random DJ" alongside a snapshot from the show:

Some random DJ @calvinharris

A photo posted by elliegoulding (@elliegoulding) on







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The Best Celebrity Cameos In 'Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt'

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"Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt" is easily Netflix's most watchable show. The Tina Fey and Robert Carlock-created comedy starring Ellie Kemper as a freed cult member debuted on Friday with "30 Rock"-style jokes, a theme song you can't get out of your head and a dozen breakout roles. It's goofy, quotable and tender, and goes by in under six hours.

It's Kemper's first leading role and within the first episode, she's a clear natural anchor for a comedy full of absurdities. The supporting cast -- "30 Rock" vet Jane Krakowski as Kimmy's boss, Jacqueline Voorhees; Tituss Burgess as her roommate, Titus Andromedon; Carol Kane as her landlord; Dylan Gelula as Jacqueline's daughter, Xanthippe; and Sara Chase and Lauren Adams as former mole women -- is just that: Kimmy's support as she navigates New York. We see wonder at the modern world through Kimmy's eyes, and horror at her lack of life skills through theirs.

Aside from the recurring cast, which keeps "Unbreakable" from teetering too far into the insane, the show has an impressive roster of celebrity cameos to inject surreal moments into Kimmy's everyday life. Martin Short is barely recognizable as Jacqueline's siliconed-up plastic surgeon, Kiernan Shipka is Kimmy's angsty half-sister, Kymmi, and Jon Hamm is the charming apocalypse-fearing reverend. These are the best celebrity cameos in "Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt":

Matt Lauer
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Matt Lauer and the "Today Show" nab the Indiana Mole Women's first post-bunker interview. They call him Bryant.

Horatio Sanz
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Sanz plays Hector, who's part of a subway-playing mariachi band. He and Titus team up to destroy the costume store that's cheating them out of their security deposits.

Martin Short
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Yes, that really is Martin Short under all that silicone. As Dr. Franff, Jacqueline's plastic surgeon, he gets this great line when asking to choose which "foot lift" procedure he would recommend: "It's like asking me which one of my children's placentas was the most delicious."

Richard Kind
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P.S. 0 has an awful GED class, taught by Mr. Lefkowitz (Kind), who hates teaching, students and Kimmy. He loves movies and teachers lounges.

Amy Sedaris
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Sedaris plays Mimi Kanasis, Mr Voorhees' second wife, who Kimmy calls to help Jacqueline through her divorce. Turns out Mimi's a mess, has a lonely therapy dog named "Boyfriend" and just came to the Voorhees' townhouse with the intention to murder. Her biggest post-divorce qualm: "Do you know what the difference between a million and a billion is?!"

Kiernan Shipka
kiernan shipka
Meet Kymmi, Kimmy's half-sister. Kimmy's mom married the detective assigned to Kimmy's disappearance, Randy. He didn't find her, but had Kymmi and left Durnsville. Kymmi hates Kimmy and just wants to go to Olive Garden with her friends.

Dean Norris
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His name is Le Loup and he fake trains Titus on how to be straight, so he can nail his "audition for 'Entourage 2.'" Spoiler: There is no "Entourage 2."

Jon Hamm
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Well, look who it is. Hamm shows up -- without hook hands -- to play Rev. Richard Wayne G. Wayne, the charismatic cult leader who brainwashed the Indiana Mole Women. He charms everyone, including the prosecutor, who we'll get to in just a second.

Tina Fey
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Yup. Show co-creator and all-around favorite woman on the planet, Tina Fey, plays Marcia, one of the lawyers representing the mole women. She's garbage with a perm. We love it.

Nick Kroll
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Kroll plays Jacqueline's spin instructor, Tristafé, who becomes Kimmy's stand-in patriarchal cult leader ... until she reveals to his class that he's just a pimply guy named Christopher sitting on a toilet. "IBS is real!"

Kenneth Branagh's 'Cinderella' Is Not About 'A Passive Victim Waiting For A Guy'

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"Isn't he a knight or something?" a woman asked backstage while Sir Kenneth Branagh was being touched up for his recent appearance on HuffPost Live. "He's a sir," a friend corrected her. Actually, both are accurate descriptions for Branagh, and he has the stature, elegance and British accent to prove it.

A reimagining of "Cinderella" is Branagh's latest effort. It's a story that has been told before, though so have many of his films -- from "Henry V" and "Hamlet" to last year's "Jack Ryan: Shadow Recruit." Branagh has experience re-telling classics, even if this live-action Disney film is a clear departure from his Shakespearian background.

The 54-year-old had a lot of fun with "Cinderella," but the film courted controversy weeks before release. When images of Cinderella's ball gown first emerged, many were outraged that Lily James' waistline appeared digitally altered. She's since said that it wasn't, adding that she maintained a mostly liquid diet while filming that portion of the film in order to fit a corset which "that was pulled [within an] inch of my life."

As Jessica Willingham noted at Bustle, it doesn't help that princesses' waistlines are just one of the anti-feminist symbols of the Disney canon. Except, Branagh sees his "Cinderella" as re-thinking of the women-in-need-of-saving trope that colors the animated classics. He told The Huffington Post about the updated version of the tale (and the apparent "sub-sexual eroticism" in his glass slipper scene):

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What drew you to re-imagining this story?
It was the script. Chris White’s process of re-imaging the character from the inside out. That seemed to me what was most exciting and most surprising. There’s an uneasy association of the Cinderella story with the modern audience of containing a passive victim waiting for a guy. In fact, the structure of the story responded very well to making time allow her to become strong, empowered and intelligent. We make various choices to do that. Showing who she was, where she was born and then having a chance to see a relationship with the prince develop. So, it was about the excitement of re-imaging that character and sort of turning this tale on its head from the inside out.

The few revisions are reminiscent of "Ever After" -- for example, she meets the prince before the ball. Were you inspired by that telling at all?
No, to be perfectly honest. I enjoyed the film very much at the time. But this was the Disney version of Cinderella. There’s a lineage connected to that original movie. In this film, there’s definitely an attempt to go for the the lavish. There’s a visual invitation there which we embraced. That rich, classical look at it was the dynamic of the sumptuous frame in which the real, human performance could emerge.

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The other break from the classic comes when we get a bit of explanation from the stepmother for her behavior. She recounts her backstory, but then stops short of explaining the full reasoning behind her motives. What held you back there? How did you conceptualize her particular brand of evil?
We wanted a very able man’s woman. We’re in a blur of periods, but it’s very clear in that the period that men run the world. It’s a tougher gig, if you don’t have a man in the household. But I love that Cate Blanchett puts an enigmatic spin on this story of her broken heart. Is that genuine? We don’t know for sure, because she doesn’t tell it in a way that is asking for sympathy. It’s a fact, a passionate fact reflected in not tranquility, but in a sort of cold fury. I also love the consideration of the pause and her inability to finish the sentence when Cinderella stands up and says, “Why are you so cruel?” And she says “Because you are young, and innocent and good, and I ...” And then that dot, dot, dot, it feels like you could fill it with a lot of ideas. At one stage, she said, “And I am not ...” And we said, “Don’t say that.” Let the audience work it out and fill in what that means. It could mean many things. What you do feel is a great passionate woman who seems to have made a different choice when faced with these kind of challenges, these moments of heart break which we saw Ella face. She makes a different choice in the face of those things. It’s a great mirror.

Other than that, things stick pretty closely to the original, though they come with a very different set of aesthetics. Did you consider mirroring the images of the animated film more closely?
We had fun, I would say, saying “thank you” to the Disney classic. That meant including “Bippity Boppity Boo” or Cinderella singing “A Dream Is a Wish Your Heart Makes” from the original. There are a couple of moments. For instance, what I remember about the animated film is that when her dress is torn and she’s at her lowest end in our film she expresses that she doesn’t believe anymore. In the original animated film, she ends up running away in a series of very gothic shots and Dutch angles. There are three or four moments where it goes very “What Ever Happened to Baby Jane.” For a film like that, which is 72 minutes and packed with singing and mice, they give a remarkable amount of time to that moment. So, I think they understood how pivotal it was, and I took that as a cue. To give that much space in a short animated film, a wise man would listen to that an give it that time, and tease the audience with the idea that the fairy godmother showing up might not happen.

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Disney has had two versions of Cinderella onscreen in the last three months, with your "Cinderella" and the "Into the Woods" Cinderella. Do you you think of them in relationship with one another?
Yes and no. The character exists in a different sort of fairytale world. I was very familiar with the theater piece, which I’ve seen a number of times. I’m a devotee of Stephen Sondheim. I think he’s a genius. I somehow think of that “Into The Woods” version as entirely from Sondheim’s imagination, and also from Rob Marshall who is a wonderful director. Everything about her feels dirtier and darker. It’s very sardonic and, in a way, some of the cruelty is inwardly inflicted. It’s very sharp and funny at times. It mocks itself a lot. It’s incredibly convoluted and works with dark material.

In contrast with that material, we wanted our Cinderella to be a seeker of knowledge and truth. Someone who was heading toward the life. Someone whose decision was not abandoning her own wry intelligence. For example, just because she doesn’t engage with the stepmother and daughter, doesn’t mean she doesn’t realize they’re being unusual and cruel. You can see in her reactions, there’s an emotional intelligence at work there that has a bit of an arched eyebrow. But she chooses not to go that route. She definitely follows that route of kindness, goodness and courage.

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I have to ask you about the dress. There’s been a bit of controversy surrounding speculation it was digitally altered.
No, it wasn’t.

What made you go with such an extreme corseted look? Lily James has said she was tied in "within an inch of my life."
It wasn’t so extreme. I remember the most extreme version of a corset was Mr. Pearl, who made corsets for period pieces and wore a corset himself. He’d worn it for so long that the whole top of his body was pinched in. This was for a short time and there wasn’t a grain of desire or design to meet some so-called example of a feminine shape that we wanted to give character to. It was for these structured costumes with silhouettes that in themselves revealed character. It was about the sensory experience of all of that.

Is the corset a signal of Ella having to force herself -- figuratively and physically -- to fit in in this setting where she doesn’t belong?
That’s a very interesting way of looking at it. What I’ve found about Cinderella is that what it provokes in an audience is really extraordinary. It appears to be a deceptively simple tale, but I’ve heard nothing but people drawing all different things out of it. I watched it the other night and found myself connecting dots of things we did that were unconscious. That’s one of the things that drew me to it. Everything seems to symbolize layers and layers of meaning. In that regard, one of the things we decided to do was not make Cinderella so different from herself at home. When scrubbed up, there wasn’t this kind of makeover hell being transformed into someone the prince hadn’t already fallen in love with.

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They do form a connection prior to the ball. And yet, she still has to try on the shoe at the end! Could you just not avoid that iconic moment?
I think we had to have it. I think the story is one you come to with a weight of expectations that is almost part of the group ritual of seeing it. I had the same thought as you in that scene. He does already know who she is.

Right, she does a whole speech along the lines of “Accept me as who I am.” And he's like, “Okay, but try the shoe on anyway.”
Well, I suppose you could say there’s ritual. And, in another life, maybe there’s a scene where it didn’t fit. Maybe her foot was swollen, and he says, “You know what? It’s fine. You’re in.” But I think the smile and gallantry with which he does it make feel like just another version of following a ritual.

There’s something sexual about it, maybe, since he’s already tried the shoe on her foot at the ball -- and we get a lip bite there from Lily.
Yes, there’s a tactility here. His hand on the small of her back is quite electric when the dance starts. When he puts the slipper on in the secret garden it has quite a bit of charge behind it. By the end of it, as a boy, you might want to recreate this moment of literally touching that beautiful foot. And, frankly, the sub-sexual eroticism of slipping it on.

"Cinderella" is out on March 13.

Bill Cosby Releases First Video Message Since Sexual Assault Allegations

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Bill Cosby issued his first video message to fans since multiple allegations of sexual assault piled up against him. Cosby sent the video out on Monday with a simple message: "Dear Fans: I hope you enjoy my wonderful video message that's filled with laughter. Hey, hey, hey, I'm far from finished."

In the 13-second clip, Cosby sits in an armchair, talking into a telephone about an upcoming show in Wheeling, West Virginia. "You know I'll be hilarious," he assures. There's no mention of the any of the women who allege he drugged and assaulted them over the years.

Here's the video via "Good Morning America."




John Stamos Stopped By The 'Full House' House, And No One Noticed Him

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"Full House" star John Stamos recently returned to the San Francisco home that starred in the popular 1990s sitcom's opening credits. But instead of receiving the rockstar welcome you'd expect, "Uncle Jesse" apparently went unrecognized by fans.

The 51-year-old actor took to Instagram to laugh at the incident, sharing a photo of himself standing in front of the house as bystanders gawk at the home:

A photo posted by John Stamos (@johnstamos) on






A caption accompanying the photo reads, "Boy, these youngsters have 0.0 idea what they're missing. #Fullhousehouse. #TURNAROUND."

Stamos' 520,000 Instagram followers were quick to ride to the rescue, showering the photo with 48,000 "likes" and more than a few encouraging comments.

Madonna Explains Why Men Her Age Simply Aren't Dateable

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If there's anything that we know about Madonna, it's that she doesn't play by the rules -- she makes her own. And after more than 30 years in the industry, she says she has license to do as she pleases, regardless of what her critics say.

At 56, Madonna says she's always "breaking some taboo." She's been dubbed a cougar by the media for her penchant for younger men.

"It’s just what happens,” Madonna told The New York Daily News about her relationships with younger men. “Most men my age are married with children. They’re not dateable. I’m a very adventurous person and I also have a crazy life. I’m a single mother. I have four children. I mean, you have to be pretty open-minded and adventurous to want to step into my world. People who are older, and more set in their ways, are probably not as adventurous as someone younger.”

Her ex-husband, Guy Ritchie, was 10 years her junior, and she's had a string of much younger boyfriends ever since, including dancer Brahim Zaibat, and Timor Steffens, both in their 20s at the time.

Other female celebrities have also spoken about why they avoid dating older men. Singer Stevie Nicks said her reason is twofold. Older men tend to go for "25-year-olds" Nicks said. And secondly, "What if I fall in love with somebody and they die?" Actress Courteney Cox also has said that she can't imagine dating anyone her own age, adding that younger men find the confidence of older women to be attractive.

It seems Madonna isn't letting age slow her down and if anyone has any problems with that, well, they can take it up with her. "I take care of myself. I’m in good shape. I can show my ass when I’m 56, or 66 — or 76," she said of her revealing outfit choices. "Who’s to say when I can show my ass? It’s sexism. It’s ageism. And it’s a kind of discrimination.”

“I earned my stripes. Bitch, I’m Madonna. And that’s it.”

'Nuff said.

h/t New York Daily News





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Weird Al And Autistic Children's Choir Perform 'Yoda' At 'Night Of Too Many Stars'

Lena Dunham Discusses Marriage Equality With Ellen DeGeneres

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It isn't the first time Lena Dunham has spoken out on behalf of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) community, but still, it's reassuring to know that the "Girls" star has our back.

Dunham stopped by "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" this week and discussed a number of topics, including her recent appearance on "Scandal" and her relationship with boyfriend Jack Antonoff. During the conversation, Dunham shared with DeGeneres that she and Antonoff made the decision to not wed one another until same-sex marriage is legal in all 50 states.

"The idea of having a celebration that can't be fully shared among all the people in my life and all the people that we love just doesn't really feel like a celebration at all," Dunham explained. "So until that's something that everyone can join into with no sense of being left out on any level, politically, emotionally -- it's just not something that we're gonna do."

Dunham is an outspoken supporter of marriage equality, having previously expressed a similar sentiment in relation to her lesbian sister Grace. "We're not against marriage," Dunham stated in an interview with Howard Stern. "But I wanna wait... my sister [Grace] is gay and it just doesn't feel good to me to do something she can't do."

Check out the clip above to hear more.

Nick Gordon Expresses His Feelings For Whitney Houston & Bobbi Kristina, Slams Bobby Brown (VIDEO)

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After weeks of discord and unrest surrounding the hospitalization of Bobbi Kristina Brown, her boyfriend, Nick Gordon has finally broken his silence on the chain of events that have taken place since Brown’s medically induced coma.

In a clip promoting Gordon’s upcoming television intervention with Dr. Phil, the 25-year-old is seen sobbing while saying, "I miss Krissy and Whitney so much. I want them back."

Gordon also went on to underscore his social media rant from last month claiming Bobby Brown has prevented him from visiting Bobbi Kristina and is seen in the clip profusely admitting “I hate Bobby Brown.” The singer previously released a statement explaining Gordon was offered “an opportunity to potentially visit” Bobbi Kristina but "he declined to meet the terms of any possible visit."

Meanwhile, in an effort to prevent Gordon’s exclusive interview from airing on March 11, Bobbi Krisitina’s aunt, Leolah Brown, has issued a plea to Dr. Phil and other media outlets via her Facebook page asking not to provide him with a platform “to spin this situation to his benefit.”

Dr. Phil,

With all due respect,

Nick Gordon is under investigation for the attempted murder of my niece Bobby Kristina Brown.

We have strong evidence of foul play. Until this investigation is completed by law enforcement, I would ask that you or anyone else not provide this individual a platform to spin this situation to his benefit.

If Nick Gordon does not have the courage to speak with my brother Bobby Brown and/or law enforcement about what happened the day my niece's body was found in a bathtub, he does not deserve to have a platform to speak to anyone of your caliber until this investigation is concluded.

Respectfully,

Leolah Brown


Check out a preview from Nick Gordon’s upcoming intervention with Dr. Phil in the clip above.

Here's What The First Three Episodes Of 'Game Of Thrones' Season 5 Are About

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There's a month left until "Game of Thrones" returns for its fifth season, which means we're left to dissect HBO's vision teasers, comb through outlandish fan theories and rewatch the new trailer for our "GoT" fix. Now more grist for the mill has leaked online in the form of new episode descriptions.

The unconfirmed titles and descriptions for the first three episodes Season 5 reveal much of what's to come. Although HBO wouldn't confirm the episode info to HuffPost Entertainment, the first two episode titles are listed on the HBO.com official schedule. Here's what we know from Spoiler TV's leaked descriptions and some speculations to follow:

Major book and show spoilers follow for "Game of Thrones"

Episode #41: "The Wars to Come": Cersei and Jaime adjust to a world without Tywin. Varys reveals a conspiracy to Tyrion. Dany faces a new threat to her rule. Jon is caught between two kings. (Written by David Benioff & D. B. Weiss; directed by Michael Slovis.)


varys tyrion

The alleged conspiracy Varys reveals to Tyrion could be a variety of things. Perhaps it's an indication of Varys' plan to put Daenerys into power, as hinted in the Season 5 trailer and poster. But some Redditors pointed out that it could mean the introduction of a major character and theory from the books: Young Griff, who is believed by some to be Aegon Targaryen.

Episode #42: “The House of Black and White”: Arya arrives in Braavos. Pod and Brienne run into trouble on the road. Cersei fears for her daughter’s safety in Dorne as Ellaria Sand seeks revenge for Oberyn’s death. Stannis tempts Jon. An adviser tempts Dany. (Written by David Benioff & D. B. Weiss; directed by Michael Slovis.)


If the description is true, it points to a major storyline for Arya. Maisie Williams recently said that Season 5 is "the end of Arya," a statement that likely alludes to her arrival at The House of Black and White. In George R.R. Martin's books, this is when Arya takes on new identities and learns to become an assassin. According to the official HBO schedule, Tom Wlaschiha, who portrayed Jaqen H’ghar in Season 2 and gave Arya the Braavosi iron coin, is listed to appear in this episode. Perhaps he will guide Arya through her training.



As far as Brienne and Pod's storyline, some Redditors are hoping this is the return of Gendry -- that is, if he survived all that rowing.

Episode #43: “High Sparrow”: In Braavos, Arya sees the Many-Faced God. In King’s Landing, Queen Margaery enjoys her new husband. Tyrion and Varys walk the Long Bridge of Volantis. (Written by David Benioff & D. B. Weiss; directed by Mark Mylod.)


Here's where we'll meet a new character, the titular High Sparrow, the High Septon of the Faith of the Seven, played by Jonathan Pryce. Also the description "Margaery enjoys her new husband" sounds rather troubling, since her semi-seduction of young Tommen last season was a bit uncomfortable for viewers.

"Game of Thrones" Season 5 premieres on April 12 on HBO.

Adrien Grenier's Quest To Find 52 Hertz, The 'Loneliest Whale In The World'

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"Entourage" actor Adrien Grenier and filmmaker Josh Zeman plan to set out like Ahab this fall to find their Moby Dick: a lonely whale named 52 Hertz.

52 Hertz is acknowledged by many to be the loneliest whale in the world. He travels solo, Discovery reports, and because his song occurs at a frequency that doesn't appear to be shared by any other whales, he receives no response to his calls.

Scientists first heard the whale's song in the northern Pacific in 1992. At first, they weren't entirely sure what it was, because he sang at a frequency of 52 Hz, which is higher than other baleen whales. Their frequencies in the area typically range from 10 to 39 Hz.

52 Hertz, they decided, was an anomaly.

Nobody has ever seen 52 -- scientists have only heard his soliloquies while monitoring underwater sounds -- but it's believed he is a rare hybrid of a blue and fin whale, singing a mating song only he can understand.

Grenier and Zeman are currently raising money on Kickstarter to film a team of scientists' expedition in search of the whale. The fundraising for the project, currently called "52: The Search For The Loneliest Whale In The World," ends on Wednesday, March 11. With 68 hours to go at mid-day Monday, they've received nearly $229,000 toward the project's $300,000 goal.

"When I heard the story of a whale that calls out at a frequency that no other whale can understand and that has presumably called out for years and never received a response, it immediately struck me," Zeman told The Huffington Post. "It was probably because I was going through a breakup at the time, but I immediately connected with the story."

Zeman soon realized that several of his artist friends were inspired to create something around 52.

"That's when I realized that there were all these people, all across the world, who are so touched by this story ... there’s this solitary creature swimming through the oceans who can’t seem to connect with his own species, but connects so profoundly with our species -- there were all these people talking about him, and he had no idea."

In addition to 52's story, the documentary will also look at the issue of noise pollution in the ocean, the history of whale songs, and how human interference affects the behaviors of whales and other cetaceans.

While Zeman hopes they find 52, he says he's fine with the possibility that they don't.

"Expeditions are important, whether you win or lose, because they spark curiosity. That’s so important for our understanding of science. Not every answer is found on Google. Our expedition is not just a physical search for a whale, it’s an emotional search for a whale," Zeman said, adding that, "A quest to try to find one whale in the ocean is a common theme in our culture -- the irony is not lost on us."

Below, listen to 52 Hertz's unique song:

Natalia Vodianova Reveals How She Was Discovered In Glamour's April Issue

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Natalia Vodianova is a supermodel, Woman of the Year and a true example of what it means to work your way to the top. After selling fruit illegally as a child to support her impoverished family, Vodianova moved to Paris at 17 to pursue a modeling career.

She also has a surprising story of her discovery. She told Glamour:

natalia

I didn’t know the business. These poor girls were lined up in short skirts. They were all scared. There was this guy walking along, looking at them, and I could see how much he enjoyed it. He was the biggest asshole. I stood in the corner, and some other guy took a picture of me. That was how I was discovered, really.


Vodianova looks gorgeous as Glamour's first solo model cover in four years, fronting the mag for its "beauty" issue. She may be a beauty icon to many, but how did she find her icon?

"I watched Soviet films made in the 1940s, ’50s, ’60s, ’70s, because that’s what was on, and a certain kind of light and beauty were part of the propaganda," she told the mag, adding, "these women had eyeballs that were whiter than snow. Huge smiles. So when everything was tough, what people were seeing on TV were these motivational images; there was always a bit of strength through the suffering. When I discovered foreign films, Audrey Hepburn became my icon. She’s so full of life. I love 'Roman Holiday,' 'Sabrina.'"

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Click here to see more images from the shoot, and be sure to pick up your copy of Glamour, on newsstands March 17.

Adorable North West Wears Pearls Before Bed

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North West's pre-bedtime look is fit for a princess.

The 21-month-old was decked out in pearls while in bed with Kim Kardashian Monday. While North assuredly didn't wear the pearls to bed, the necklace made for some adorable nighttime dress-up.

Kardashian posted a sweet photo of the pair to Instagram, writing: "Reading books before bedtime!"






She captioned a second photo with "kisses and cuddles."




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Pixar's 'Inside Out' Already Looks Like Our New Favorite Movie

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Pixar released a new trailer for "Inside Out," the animated film told through the emotions of an 11-year-old girl named Riley. Directed by Pete Docter, the film imagines Fear (Bill Hader), Sadness (Phyllis Smith), Joy (Amy Poehler), Disgust (Mindy Kaling) and Anger (Lewis Black) as they help Riley in a move across country. The preview features new footage of Joy and Sadness getting lost in Riley's Imagination Land, an instance of brain freeze and San Francisco ruining pizza.



Disney also released a video that introduces the film's voice cast.



"Inside Out" opens June 19, and we're already sitting at the theater waiting for it to debut. Come on over, guys.
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