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Julianne Moore Graces Harper's Bazaar April Cover, Reveals Why She Isn't A Fan Of The Mani Cam

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Julianne Moore may have wowed us this red carpet season, but her style wasn't always so on point.

At least that's what she reveals in the April issue of Harper's Bazaar. The cover star explains that, when it comes to her fashion, she's definitely had her good and bad moments. "There was one year when my kids were little, and every time I was photographed, I was wearing a pair of cargo shorts, a T-shirt, and a bandanna. It was so bad, my publicist was like, 'Get it together!'"

julianne moore

These days, her red carpet style is more ultra-glam-perfection than shorts and T-shirts, but there's at least one thing she won't participate in at awards shows: the dreaded mani cam.

"I'm 54 years old. I can't make my fingers walk; it's humiliating!", she told the mag, adding, "And a guy asked me to lift up my skirt to show them my shoes, and I said, 'I don't need to do that. Let's keep some dignity.'"

Preach.

julianne moore

Click here to read the entire interview, and be sure to pick up your copy of Harper's Bazaar on newsstands March 24.

Kanye Boogies Down In These Hilarious Dancing Memes That Bring Us All Back To The '90s

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Move over, Kim Kardashian.

There's a new Kanye West meme circulating the Web and it's well on its way to breaking the Internet. Only this time, it's through a much different and unintentional approach and has us all in a fit of laughter.

Hilarious memes have surfaced showing clips of Kanye and his awkward dance moves after the rapper decided to engage in his own interpretation of the robot dance during one of his recent performances in Paris.

Kanye's popping and locking skit has since sparked a series of memes on social media, many of which can be easily identified through #KanyeDancing.

The memes even prompted the launch of an Instagram page dubbed @DancingKanye that showcases the rapper's breakdancing moves set to popular songs from the '90s including everything from TLC's "Creep" to N'Sync's "It's Gonna Be Me."

Warning: It's probably one of the best things you've seen all week.

Here's the original performance:

"Say You Will" dance with @therealmikedean on the guitar tonight. (via @simondrai)

A video posted by TeamKanyeDaily (@teamkanyedaily) on





And, alas, here are the memes:

Kanye blesses his fans with his dance moves to "Creep" by TLC #Kanye #KanyeDances #DancingKanye

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Kanye steps out to Mark Morrison's "Return Of The Mack" #Kanye #KanyeDance #DancingKanye

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Kanye dancing to "Where The Party At" #Kanye #KanyeDancing #KanyeDance

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Kanye dancing to "Its Gonna Be Me". #Kanye #KanyeDancing #KanyeDance

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Kanye pays homage to Bad Boy as he dances to "Mo Money Mo Problems" #Kanye #KanyeDances #DancingKanye #KanyeDancing

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Kanye shows his respect to Will Smith as he dances to "Fresh Prince" #Kanye #KanyeDances #dancingkanye #KanyeDancing

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Kanye appeals to the older crowd with a 90's tune "All That". #Kanye #KanyeDances #DancingKanye

A video posted by Dancing kanye (@dancingkanye) on




Angie Stone Arrested For Assault After Allegedly Attacking Daughter

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R&B star Angie Stone was arrested in Georgia and charged with domestic aggravated assault after allegedly attacking her daughter with a metal stand, breaking her front teeth.

DeKalb County police were called to Stone's home in Lithonia, Georgia, on Monday around 9:30 p.m., according to Atlanta's WXIA. Her 30-year-old daughter, Diamond Stone, told officers the singer went into her room telling her to clean up and "get her children since they were running around the house half naked." An argument ensued and turned physical.

WXIA reported that the 53-year-old told police she hit her daughter in the face with the metal stand in self-defense after she started punching her. However, a police report obtained by the Atlantic Journal Constitution states that Angie Stone didn't know she hit her daughter with the metal stand.

"Once she realized this,” the report reads, “she quickly put the stand down and attempted to get away from Ms. Diamond Stone. Ms. Angie Stone then stated while she tried to get away, Ms. Diamond Stone continued to come after her as if to strike her again but stated that [family friend] Ms. Blondy Chisolm came to break up the fight.”

After both women were questioned at police headquarters, Diamond Stone was released with no charges and Angie Stone was handed the assault charge.

TMZ obtained photos of Diamond Stone's injuries, showing broken teeth and a bruised lip.

Angie Stone was released on $10,000 bond Tuesday.

Madonna On 'Rebel Heart,' Gay Fans, Social Media And Her Biggest Fear

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Over the course of three decades, Madonna has become synonymous with provocation, panache and pop prestige. No less central to the diva's record-smashing career, of course, has been her ardent gay audience.

The community has, once again, played a prominent role in the lead-up to the March 10 release of “Rebel Heart,” the Queen of Pop’s 13th album and most musically diverse offering in a decade. To promote the album, Madonna teamed up with the gay social app Grindr, giving five lucky users the chance to chat with her one-on-one. She also tips her hat to those fans on the album’s most self-referential tune, “Veni Vidi Vici,” with the line, “And when I struck a pose, all the gay boys lost their mind.”

On the eve of the “Rebel Heart” release, HuffPost Gay Voices and five other LGBT media outlets caught up with Madonna at the offices of Interscope Records in New York. In typical Madonna fashion, the superstar held court in an intimate, all-white music room that was perfumed with eucalyptus oil.

She looked fit and glamorous in a flowing black and gold dress, and was as succinct and confrontational as one would expect, directing the individual journalists to form a semi-circle in the room, facing her directly.

“It’s better if we all can look each other in the eye,” she said. “I prefer it. I’m Italian, I don’t like anybody behind me.”

Although she’s in the midst of a whirlwind publicity tour, the Queen of Pop was in a particularly chatty mood, sharing candid thoughts on “Rebel Heart” and its occasionally troubled history, her gay fans, social media and more.

You were forced to change the release schedule for your new album because of the song leaks that took place last year [and earlier this year]. The next time you go to create a new album or film, is your process going to change because of these new threats?
Yeah. I’m never going to put anything on a server and send information back and forth, as it had been done. That was the first mistake. But then the last leak came from the mastering lab, and that was just a technician’s oversight after everything that had happened and everyone knew that we had to crack down and be really super secure -- we were hand-delivering everything -- someone sent the record on the server again, and my hacker is very clever, obviously. So, again, it was not up for very long, but it was snatched, so I would never do anything like that again. Hand-deliver!

Did [the leaks] change anything about the way the tracks were sequenced, or…?
It changed everything! First of all, it drove me insane and made me feel an overwhelming sense of anxiety. It made me second-guess everything. Suddenly I thought, “Oh God, everybody’s heard all these demos!” There were some demos that I actually liked the demo version of, and then I thought, “Well, they heard the demo, now they’re going to be expecting other things.”

It kept making me think, “Should I change it or should I just leave it how it was?” I was second-guessing everything, rather than having to just choose for myself and put it out, as I would normally as an artist.

The way he leaked it and the way the stuff starting coming out and coming out and coming…it kind of drove me crazy, because it started making me think, “I don’t even know what version I should be putting out.”

As someone who has always admired your work, I found it devastating, too -- I thought, "What a horrible thing to do."
Yeah. And also very confusing, because a lot of things were being sold on my supposed “fan” sites, and I kept thinking…my fans should be supporting me and protecting me so…I don't know. The whole thing confused me. Still does. And what [my hacker] did was a white collar crime. He's in jail in Israel. So I don't even know what's going to happen to him. I hope he goes to jail for a long time, but I don't know what's going to happen. Let's not dwell on that subject!

You’ve been such an important part of the gay community for so long. What would be some differences between the gay audiences you see coming out in 2015 versus the audiences you saw in 2005 or 1995 or 1985? How have you seen the community evolve around you?
When I first came up, the whole AIDS epidemic was starting, and… the gay community that I experienced from the beginning of my career was mostly and overwhelmingly concerned with staying alive. I felt really aware of the preciousness of life and time… and people who were HIV positive were treated so badly. I was very disturbed by things, but I also saw a lot of love and connection in the gay community at that time.

Like all progress that is made in all marginalized communities or groups, I think, after time goes by and you earn certain rights or you break through certain barriers, you can sometimes take for granted what you have now that you didn't have before, and then that would lead to a certain lack of community in a way.

What's your whole perspective on [Grindr and] hook-up culture?
It's part of the modern world we live in. I think that there are just as many a**holes meeting the old-fashioned way as there are meeting in the new hook-up culture.

Thematically and lyrically, [“Rebel Heart”] is a lot more self-referential that you have been in the past. During the process of the writing and the production was that something that you did intentionally or was it just part of the process?
I don't know. I didn't set out to write certain kinds of songs, I just set out to write good songs, and that was the mood I was in and that's what I was channeling. Sometimes I was in nostalgic moods and looking back, sometimes I was in the mood to write a song as if I was writing in my journal and reveal certain parts of me that I was ready to reveal.

On the song “Body Shop,” the music is folksy and made me think of a lullaby, but then you listen to the words, and they are…
Sexually provocative.

Was that your intention to contrast the music with the lyrics?
Was it intentional? No. Again, it just happened. I was working with Tony Gad, who spent a lot of time in India, and … the song has kind of an Indian flavor to it. And I liked the idea of the body of a car as a kind of sexual metaphor. What you do to a car, what you do in a car. So...lots of innuendoes, lots of fun. And we all love a really cute mechanic!

If you were a car, what type of car would you be?
That’s a good one. I might be a Bentley. But I might be an Aston Martin, and then I might be a Jaguar, and then I might be a Cadillac. So it depends on what day it is. Can I have a few cars? Can I be a few cars? I'm not a Smart Car.

Your music has shaped the lives of multiple generations of pop and dance music fans. When you set out to create an album, do you feel any responsibility to that fan base at all?
I don't feel like I have a responsibility from a sonic point of view, but I do feel like I have responsibility to impart some kind of wisdom and inspiration to people, yeah.

We're all very excited about the upcoming tour. Can you give us a preview of what you've got planned?
No. Why would I do that? I want it to be a surprise for you.

You've worked with so many people over the years, who has pushed you the furthest as an artist and a performer?
Working with Toby Gad… he really pushed me a lot [as a songwriter]. He was constantly questioning my choice of words, and sometimes I would get really irritated with him. I started calling him an S.S. officer, which he's clearly not. He's the sweetest, most lovely guy ever.

He really pushed me, and Diplo really pushed me. He really was particular about lyrics and phrasing and my vocal performances. He pushed me a lot, too. In the end it served me well on this record.

You released your “Living For Love” video through Snapchat, and you're doing Grindr and all these different types of social media. Is that going to be a continuous theme throughout the rest of this album?
I like to try new and different ways to present my work to people, so yeah, why not?

The “Living For Love” video…I think this was your first time bringing what you do with your tour visuals to a full-on music video concept. Is that also something that we'll get to see again?
I guess so. The thing about that song, it’s such a passionate song, I had to present it in a passionate way. I used mythology to tell that story of the minotaur and the matador and fighting for love and the color red and flowers and horns and death and naked men. You know, the important things in life!

I don’t want to make every video the same, but I did love the richness of that video. To me, it felt like a painting that came to life. But I wouldn’t want to do that for every video. Like, when I do “Bitch I’m Madonna,” it's going to be a whole different aesthetic.

[Regarding the song] “Veni Vidi Vici,” was it just a trip down memory lane for you?
It was a trip down memory lane. To be in this business for over three decades…I don’t actually think about it that much, but a lot of the people that I worked with were asking me so many questions. In a way, I think I underestimate what I’ve been through and what I’ve witnessed. So I think it was just important to do that … to dwell in a bittersweet nostalgic point.

At this stage in your career, what still frightens you?
Ignorance.

What are your reading right now?
One is The Goldfinch, and the other is the Bob Fosse biography.

Do your kids have a favorite song of yours?
They really love “Bitch I’m Madonna.” That’s my teenagers’ favorite song. My son David, who plays guitar, likes “Devil Pray.” That's his favorite.

What do you love most about pop music?
Well, I love who accessible it is.

What do you despise about pop music?
Despise? That’s such a strong word. Well, I’m not crazy about how homogenized how it's become. It used to be so much more diverse. Maybe it’s just what’s played on the radio sounds very much the same. But I can’t say, “I despise,” that’s too much. In my house, we don't use words like “despise” and “hate,” we say, “strongly dislike.”

This interview has been edited for content and length.

Waka Flocka Flame: I Can't Blame SAE For Their Racist Chant (VIDEO)

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Waka Flocka Flame’s “disgust” over the actions displayed in Sigma Alpha Epsilon’s viral clip has prompted the rapper to cancel his April concert at the University of Oklahoma.

In addition to Flame responding to SAE’s offensive behavior earlier this week via an Instagram post, he appeared in an interview with CNN’s Brianna Keilar on Tuesday to share more of his thoughts.

“My initial reaction when I seen the video, I was more like hurt. More like disgusted, because I knew those kids, I performed for those kids,” the Atlanta rapper said in reference to a 2014 concert at the university. “They made me feel like a brother. Just to see what a person does behind closed doors was more disgusting than hurting. I wasn’t angry, I was just disgusted.”

Despite some media outlets -- including MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” -- blaming the explicit lyrics of rap music for inspiring SAE’s racist chant, Waka recounted his positive experience partying with the fraternity and said that their recent actions may have been “passed down” through previous generations.

“I really felt like I was down with the fraternity. Like I was SAE. You couldn’t tell me no different,” he said. “So for me to see that video, I was like, ‘Damn, that’s what y’all doing behind closed doors?’ That disgusted me. To me, I really can’t blame the kids. To me, I feel like that’s passed down. You can’t even make me believe that. That’s just crazy. I’m disgusted, I’m not gonna lie.”

Check out more of Waka Flocka Flame’s CNN interview in the video.

Viola Davis Recalls Being 'So Hungry And Ashamed' As A Child

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Long before she was a two-time Oscar nominee, Viola Davis was just one of many children in the U.S. suffering from lack of food. To spread awareness of childhood hunger and raise money for Hunger Is, the "How To Get Away With Murder" star opened up to Glamour magazine about the harrowing details from her childhood.

“I was always so hungry and ashamed, I couldn’t tap into my potential," Davis recalled. "I couldn’t get at the business of being me.”

When there was food in her home, Davis explained that it didn't last long: “It was like, if you don’t eat it now, it’ll be gone, and you’re going to be hungry for the next -- Lord, who knows how long?”

Despite her hardships growing up, the 49-year-old says she has learned to embrace all aspects of her life.

“I’m finally comfortable with my story. And I finally understand what [mythologist] Joseph Campbell meant when he said: ‘The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.’”

For more with Viola Davis, pick up the April issue of Glamour, on newsstands March 17.

viola davis

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Police Respond To Alleged Shooting At Lil Wayne's Miami Home

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Police have been called to Lil Wayne's Miami home following an alleged shooting, multiple outlets report.

According to a police spokesperson, an unnamed individual called saying that he had shot four people inside the house.

TMZ reports that the rapper was not at home at the time of the alleged shooting.

Lil Wayne's record label, Young Money, confirmed in a tweet that Lil Wayne was not present during the alleged shooting:




This is a developing story.

Here's Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, On The Set Of 'Downton Abbey'

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Welcome to Downton, Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge.

Self-professed "Downton Abbey" fan Duchess Kate visited the set of the hit series at Ealing Studios in London on March 12 to meet the cast and crew and watch a scene from Season 6. The show's creator, Julian Fellowes, showed her around while some of the cast members, including Joanne Frogatt, Brendan Coyle and Phyllis Logan, introduced themselves. According to Us Magazine, the Duchess met with people behind the production process as well, chatting with makeup artists, costume designers, seamstresses, set and prop designers.







Duchess Kate, who is eight months pregnant, had an adorable exchange with the youngest star of "Downton," Zac Barker, who plays Lady Mary Crawley's son, Master George. Actress Michelle Dockery was on-hand to witness the exchange.




Unfortunately, Dame Maggie Smith, aka Dowager Countess of Grantham, was feeling under the weather and missed the special day on set, but Duchess Kate got the full "Downton" treatment and was presented with a cake by the show's fictional cooks, Mrs. Patmore (Lesley Nicol) and Daisy (Sophie McShera), in honor of the visit.




Here are more photos from the big day, posted by Kensington Palace:





















The 'Paper Towns' Movie Poster Is Here And Its Trailer Is Coming Sooner Than You Think

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Nerdfighters, you might want to sit down for this.

Author John Green just released the poster for the "Paper Towns" movie, and it's probably going to blow your mind.

paper towns poster

The poster gives a first look at Cara Delevingne and Nat Wolff as the main characters and features the film's tagline, "Get lost. Get found." Green also announced he'll be premiering the trailer on "The Today Show" on Thursday, March 19, which means we only have to wait a week to finally get a preview of the novel coming to life.

If you need us, we'll be counting down the days.

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Jennifer Lopez Manages To Make Blue Eye Shadow And A Minidress Look So Chic

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The combination of icy eye shadow and a minidress might sound like a '90s fashion disaster, but Jennifer Lopez managed to make the combination look decidedly chic.

Lopez donned blue eye shadow and a collared Marchesa Notte Resort 2015 dress adorned with flowers for the "American Idol XIV" Top Finalists Party at the District restaurant in Los Angeles Wednesday. The 45-year-old looked gorgeous as she posed for photos on the carpet with fellow judges Keith Urban and Harry Connick Jr.

Although Lopez looked topnotch, Ryan Seacrest joked about "Idol's" low ratings during the show earlier in the night, referencing "Empire" and saying: “To be number one … Oh yes, I remember those days."

jennifer lopez

jennifer lopez

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How Madonna Succumbed to 'Victory Blindness'

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It's happened to many seasoned LGBT activists, to many progressives, to many in the media, and to other celebrities (like Patricia Arquette), so why shouldn't it happen to Madonna?

The legendary performer and great supporter of LGBT rights told Out magazine:

Gay rights are way more advanced than women's rights. People are a lot more open-minded to the gay community than they are to women, period. It's moved along for the gay community, for the African-American community, but women are still just trading on their ass. To me, the last great frontier is women.


And this is where, on LGBT rights, Madonna has succumbed to what I call "victory blindness" (which is title of the first chapter of my soon-to-be-released book). She and many others are intoxicated by the heady whirl of victory -- which the media magnifies in an extraordinary way -- and appear to believe, living within this seductive moment of advances for LGBT rights, that we've "arrived" and the rest of it is inevitable.

Madonna is absolutely right about women and the backlash to their equality. But it is precisely because of that backlash and what it teaches us that she is absolutely wrong about LGBT equality. Women's equality stalled, experiencing a backlash that took feminists by surprise in the '80s, and it's a backlash that they are battling right up until this day. But only in hindsight can the backlash be seen.

In the moment, during the heyday of the '70s and federal legislation and Supreme Court rulings upholding women's autonomy, many women thought full equality was inevitable, exactly like many LGBT activists, progressives, some in the media -- and Madonna -- seem to think today about LGBT equality. Many feminists celebrated and talked of how they'd "advanced." Many women stopped paying attention, became apathetic, thinking the fight was won, while the enemies of women's equality were working fiercely to roll things back.

Now, I could get into the "contest" with Madonna and point out that women are actually included in the 1964 Civil Rights Act while gays are not, which means it's illegal to discriminate against women in housing, employment and public accommodation but perfectly legal to do so in the 29 states that don't have such protections for gays. And I could point out that there are women who are leading nations, and it's quite likely that a woman could be the next president of the United States, while there is currently no openly gay leader of any major nation, and there is only one U.S. senator who is openly gay or lesbian. I could point out that only one CEO of a Fortune 500 company -- Tim Cook at Apple -- is openly gay, while there are over 25 women running such companies. And for transgender people there's even far more invisibility.

But this is not a contest, for heaven's sake. The reason it feels in the moment that gays are "winning" is simply that we have made some important victories in this time frame. But zoom out and you will see the backlash building -- laws being passed to stop anti-discrimination ordinances, "religious liberty" bills advancing -- just as it built against other groups. In the moment, the passage of the Civil Rights Act and later the Voting Rights Act surely made many African Americans believe they too had "arrived." And here they are, decades later, seeing attacks on affirmative action, voting rights stripped away, voter suppression laws passed and Ferguson and far too many incidents like it occurring all the time.

The problem is that the victories -- as significant as they are -- often feed a desperate hunger for validation by marginalized groups that have been starved for so long, leaving many of us spellbound. We've been battered and bruised for so long that we want so much to believe it's nearly done. But this was the mistake women made -- something Madonna alludes to, perhaps without realizing it -- and it's the mistake she and so many others are making now on LGBT rights.

I'm not talking solely or even necessarily about abortion either, nor comparing it to gay marriage, something many people say is a flawed comparison. We could argue that one, but really it's not even necessary. We need only to look at a whole host of other issues, from pay equity for women to the persistence of rape culture -- and the forces stopping legislation to battle both -- and then a whole host of LGBT rights far beyond marriage equality, from discrimination in public accommodations to exemptions for people who hate because their religion tells them to do so.

If we don't learn the lessons from the past, victory blindness too will allow the enemies of LGBT equality to do what they've done to successes not only for women but for people of color and so many other groups. Madonna doesn't mean to do it, but her words serve to divide us when she could be underscoring how all of us who are marginalized are experiencing backlash by an angry, irrationally fearful force among the American people -- a force fueled by bigotry and which has helped consolidate power among the few for a long time.

Our enemies are feeling threatened and getting desperate as we all march forward. None of us -- women, LGBT people, people of color -- has the luxury to become complacent. Victory blindness is enormously seductive and very dangerous. And we've got to help Madonna and a great many others overcome it now.

Michelangelo Signorile's next book, It's Not Over: Getting Beyond Tolerance, Defeating Homophobia, and Winning True Equality, will be published April 7 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

Kim Cattrall Isn't Attracted To Jamie Dornan Because He 'Looks Like A Young Boy'

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What would Samantha Jones have to say about this?

Former "Sex and the City" star Kim Cattrall recently told The Independent that she's not planning on seeing "Fifty Shades of Grey" -- but it has nothing to do with the film's lukewarm reviews. Nope, Cattrall is skipping out on the BDSM thriller simply because she doesn't find the onscreen Christian Grey attractive:

Maybe it's my age, but he doesn't look like a man to me. He looks like a young boy. I like men to look like men. I saw the preview and you know they say in three seconds you can tell if you find someone attractive or not? Well, I just thought, 'no'.


In case you needed a reminder, here's what Jamie Dornan looks like:

jamie dornan

As for who the 58-year-old would rather see in "Fifty Shades"? Brendan Gleeson.

"Now, if he were Brendan Gleeson -- well, there's a little something going on there, you know, the twinkle in the eye," Cattrall said.

And here's Brendan Gleeson:

brendan gleeson

Perhaps the casting directors will take note before they start filming the sequel.

10 Rules From Sheldon Cooper's Roommate Agreement Everyone Should Follow

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"The Big Bang Theory" is full of hilarious jokes, but something that isn't a bazinga is Sheldon Cooper's roommate agreement.

Like Sheldon and Amy's relationship agreement, the roommate agreement is the sacred document that summarizes Leonard and Sheldon's responsibilities to each other as friends and roomies. This covers all the necessities from where to order takeout to the correct protocol in case of a zombie outbreak. And through it all, Leonard and Sheldon have become better buds than ever ... or, you know, at least they haven't torn each other apart.

Here are 10 rules from Sheldon's roommate agreement that everyone should follow:

1. The manners rule

Image: Pinterest

2. The Godzilla rule
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3. The zombie rule
tv show gifs
Image: YouTube


4. The takeout rule
cbs

5. The time travel rule
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Image: YouTube

6. The robot rule
roomie

7. The dairy rule
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Image: Tumblr

8. The pet rule
cats

9. The superhero rule
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Image: YouTube

10. The crazy rule
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Though, #10 shouldn't be much of an issue for Sheldon and Leonard ...


Image: Tumblr

Follow these rules, and you'll be friends like Sheldon and Leonard in no time!

"The Big Bang Theory" airs Thursday at 8:00 p.m. ET on CBS.

AMC Really Wanted 'Mad Men' Spinoffs About Peggy And Sally

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AMC has a penchant for churning out spinoffs of their top shows. First, there was "Breaking Bad" prequel "Better Call Saul" and now the untitled "Walking Dead" spinoff is in the works. But the network also really wanted "Mad Men" creator Matthew Weiner to create spinoffs for characters from his beloved period show.

In The Hollywood Reporter's oral history of "Mad Men," celebrating the upcoming end of the series, Lionsgate TV COO Sandra Stern revealed that back in the early days of negotiating the show, AMC wanted a modern-day spinoff. "Given the fact that ['Mad Men'] ends nearly 50 years ago, most of the characters would be dead," Stern said. "Sally was the one character young enough that you could see her 30 or 40 years later." Um, yes please!

On top of that, the network also had an idea for a series based on Peggy "going off to LA." Both of those sound amazing, but sadly Weiner wasn't willing to commit to the ideas at the time. Now we're left imaging what older Sally would be like.

The oral history also revealed some surprising details about casting. January Jones initially auditioned for Peggy -- twice -- and John Slattery first read for Don. But the biggest reveal? Besides Jon Hamm, Weiner had another top choice for Don: Peter Hermann, who's best known as defense attorney Trevor Langan on "Law & Order: SVU" and Mariska Hargitay's real-life husband. The execs at AMC doubted Hamm's good looks at first due to the poor video quality of his audition tape, but Weiner fought for him. "We were like, 'Really, this is who you think?'" said Christina Wayne, a former senior VP at AMC. Hamm's response:



For the full story, head to THR.

"Mad Men" returns for its final episodes on April 5 on AMC.

Fifth Harmony's Touching Words For The Transgender Community

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Two weeks ago, Fifth Harmony’s Camila Cabello posted a photo on Instagram of herself with a transgender fan who renamed herself after the singer. Now, the whole group is opening up about supporting the transgender community and encouraging others to stay true to themselves.

In a video from MTV, the singers look back on talking with Camila Joe, the fan who told Camila she inspired her to transition.





“She was just so beautiful, and there was just such a light about her,” Camila said in the video.

After Camila posted about it, the group heard from other transgender fans about how the girls helped them learn to love themselves, which is exactly what Fifth Harmony encourages.

“The number one thing that we try to promote is to be who you are and to love who you are no matter what that means,” Lauren Jauregui said.

The singers want to spread this message of self-acceptance to their fans, especially to those who might be afraid of transitioning for fear of being rejected by friends and family. There is a supportive community out there for them that doesn't just include Fifth Harmony.

"There are people out there that are open to it and that want you to love yourself," Camila said.

Though they had no idea how influential they would be before forming Fifth Harmony, the girls now want to put their fame to good use. For Normani Hamilton, being in such a position is the perfect way to make a difference.

“We went into ‘X-Factor.’ We didn’t even know each other. We didn’t even know what we would become. But to be able to have, you know, the platform that we do have we want to just use it for the better and really help change the world for good.”

H/T MTV

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The First Stand-Alone 'Star Wars' Movie Is Called 'Rogue One' And Stars Felicity Jones

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The first in a series of upcoming stand-alone "Stars Wars" films will be titled "Rogue One," Disney chairman Bob Iger announced at a shareholders meeting on Thursday. Iger confirmed it will star Oscar nominee Felicity Jones ("The Theory of Everything," "Like Crazy"), who was reportedly in talks for the role last month. "Rogue One" will shoot in London this summer and open Dec. 16, 2016.

Iger also announced that "Episode VIII," which will follow the events of this year's "The Force Awakens," is slated for release on May 26, 2017. He confirmed that Rian Johnson ("Looper," "Breaking Bad") will take the reins from J.J. Abrams. The press release notes that "Episode VIII" will open 40 years and one day after the 1977 release of franchise opener "A New Hope." (That gives Disney, which owns Lucasfilm and Marvel Studios, two enormous franchise installments in May 2017, as "Guardians of the Galaxy 2" also opens that month.)

Gareth Edwards, who directed last year's acclaimed "Godzilla" reboot, will helm "Rogue One" based on a script by Chris Weitz ("About a Boy," "The Golden Compass"). The press release makes no mention of Gary Whitta, who wrote a first draft but left the project in January.

No plot details have been confirmed, but previous rumors indicated the film would follow Boba Fett and other bounty hunters who steal the Empire's plans to construct the Death Star. In the "Star Wars" canon, "rogue one" is a title given to the commander of elite Rebel Alliance group of fighters known as the Rogue Squadron. Luke Skywalker is "rogue one" in "The Empire Strikes Back" and Wedge Antilles fills the role in "Return of the Jedi."

Apparently Madonna Dated Tupac Shakur

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File this under "Celebrity Couples You Never Knew Existed" -- Madonna once dated Tupac Shakur.

The 56-year-old singer made the revelation on the Howard Stern Show Wednesday. The radio host asked about her feelings toward David Letterman because he thought she seemed "annoyed" during her "Late Show" appearances. She said "that's how I flirt with people," but then admitted there was one time when she wasn't thrilled with the late night host.

"Well, one time I was mad at him, when I said the F-word a lot, but the rest of the time was good," she said. "You know what? I was in a weird mood that day. I was dating Tupac Shakur at the time and the thing is he got me all riled up about life in general. So, when I went on the show I was feeling very gangster."

(According to E! News, the pop star was referencing a 1994 appearance on the CBS show.)

Stern and co-host Robin Quivers were shocked to hear about the romance, and Stern asked if it had ever been public knowledge before.

"I think people know if you're in-the-know," Madonna responded.

The late rapper once discussed how the "Living for Love" singer was supposedly going to visit him during his incarceration at the Clinton Correctional Facility in Dannemora, New York.

"Madonna is real nice," he said. "She's a good person. She helped me a lot. She was real cool. Like any one of my homeboys. One time, they had a story on the local news out there that Madonna was coming to visit me. Madonna has so much power that the guards let me take an extra shower because they thought she was coming to visit me."

She never wound up visiting.

Listen to a clip from the interview below.

Madonna Didn't Report Her Rape For The Same Reason So Many Victims Stay Silent

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During a March 11 interview on "The Howard Stern Show," Madonna summed up exactly why so many people don't report their sexual assaults.

The 56-year-old pop star spoke with Stern about her new album, "Rebel Heart," and about her experience of moving to New York City in the late '70s. During that period of time, she says she was sexually assaulted by a male stranger at knifepoint. "I was raped. The first year I lived in New York was crazy," Madonna told Stern.

The singer first spoke out about the violent crime in an October 2013 essay in Harper's Bazaar. "New York wasn't everything I thought it would be. It did not welcome me with open arms," she wrote. "The first year, I was held up at gunpoint. Raped on the roof of a building I was dragged up to with a knife in my back, and had my apartment broken into three times."

She also explained to Stern why she never reported the incident to the cops or attempted to press charges. "You've already been violated," she said. "It's just not worth it. It's too much humiliation."

In one sentence, Madonna got to the heart of why rape is one of the most grossly underreported crimes in the United States. According to RAINN, about 68 percent of rapes are never reported. Likely, part of this tendency to underreport is because of the stigma, negative attention and re-traumatization that many victims of sexual assault face during the reporting process. And at the end of the day, just two of every 100 people who commit rape will ever receive jail time.

It's not hard to imagine why so many survivors of sexual assault wait years -- and even decades -- to come forward with their stories. Once a victim reports sexual assault, he or she must undergo an invasive medical exam to gather physical evidence if the assault happened during the previous five days, divulge traumatic details about the incident and his or her personal life, retell the details of the assault during a trial (if one ever happens), and face the possibility of being maligned by the media, his or her peers and/or institution of higher learning.

Men and women who have been sexually assaulted also face the pressure to be the "perfect victim," and to have their narratives fit into a box of what is conventionally considered an "acceptable" rape story. This picking apart of one's experience of assault can also contribute to the "humiliation" Madonna mentioned.

emma sulkowicz
Emma Sulkowicz carries a mattress, with the help of three strangers who met her moments before, in protest of the university's lack of action after she reported being raped during her sophomore year.


"If you didn't immediately dial 911, it doesn't mean you weren't raped," activist Emma Sulkowicz told Mic in February. "Everyone deals with trauma differently, depending on how we were raised, the way we see ourselves and the different ways we each handle crises."

Unfortunately, looking at the way that women like Sulkowicz and many of Bill Cosby's alleged victims have been picked apart by the public over the last year, not nearly enough has changed since Madonna chose not to report her rape decades ago.

It's time to do better.

'Revenge Of The Nerds' Star Robert Carradine Involved In Car Crash

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Robert Carradine -- the star of "Revenge of the Nerds" -- was involved in a horrifying car accident with a semi-truck ... TMZ has learned.

'Frozen 2' Is Officially Happening

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"Frozen 2" is officially a go, Disney announced at the company's annual shareholders meeting in San Francisco on Thursday.

John Lasseter, chief creative officer at Pixar, Walt Disney Animation Studios and DisneyToon Studios, made the announcement with Bob Iger. According to reports. Lasseter said that the team "had so much fun making the short 'Frozen Fever' that it was excited to make a sequel." Josh Gad, who voiced Olaf in the first film, also joined the meeting.

The sequel doesn't have a release date or a plot line just yet, but the news comes a few months after directors Chris Buck and Jennifer Lee insisted that a second film was not yet in development. Earlier this month, Buck told The Huffington Post that they would take a breather from "Frozen" projects. "It was really nice to do a short and just get back with these characters who we love without the pressure of having to do a huge sequel," he said about working on the short film, "Frozen Fever." "We're going to take a little bit of a break from the 'Frozen' stuff before diving into anything else."

But "Frozen 2" is no surprise, considering "Frozen" made $1.219 billion at the box office and became the top-grossing animated movie of all time.

Kristen Bell, who voiced Anna, is clearly excited:


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