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One Direction Gives First Interview Following Zayn Malik's Departure

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One Direction has finally opened up about the departure of band member Zayn Malik. In an interview with The Sun on Friday, the band members expressed sadness about losing Malik, but also said they're determined to keep performing and recording in his absence.

"It's been a tough few weeks, probably the toughest since the band was formed five years ago," Liam Payne told the British newspaper, according to People. "We're gutted that Zayn chose to leave, but now after a few performances as a four-piece, we're feeling confident and are determined to carry on stronger than ever."

Malik announced he was leaving One Direction late last month, explaining his departure in a Facebook post on the band's official page. "I am leaving because I want to be a normal 22-year-old who is able to relax and have some private time out of the spotlight."

Steven Tyler's New Country Music Career: What It Takes, or Dream On?

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Type "Steven Tyler" into the search window on Rolling Stone's web site, and you'll see that ink has been spilled for the Aerosmith singer well over a hundred times through the years. But the story that ran on April 1 was different, mainly because it had readers wondering who was getting fooled: them, for believing that Tyler is really planning to release a country-music album, or the singer himself, for believing that he can actually pull it off.

Turns out, the news was no joke -- Tyler's long-planned foray into country is apparently coming to fruition. The singer is excited; some longtime Aersomith fans, however, are not, at least based on the comments they left below the article. "Sign of the apocalypse," one wrote; another called the plan "lame and transparent."

Luckily for Tyler, though, contributors to the magazine's comments section are probably not hard-core fans of country music, a genre that steadfastly respects its elder statesman. Unlike their pop-music counterparts, country acts aren't put out to pasture once they turn 35; they are forever celebrated as legends and revered by the musicians they influenced. So if there's a genre for Tyler to cross over into, he's chosen the right one.

While rock fans often seem to feel betrayed when their heroes want to try something new, country listeners tend to accept those who want to take a taste...initially, at least. In the long term, country crossovers have met with mixed success, and while Tyler will probably do pretty well -- after all, hard living, resiliency and bravado are all but prerequisites for any of the genre's male performers over age 40 -- not everyone has. Here are five men and women who made names for themselves elsewhere in the music business before dipping their toes into country-music waters.

Kid Rock. At the end of the 1990s, Kid Rock was an aspiring DJ and rapper with legitimate rock-music chops who hit the big time after being booked to entertain the crowd outside an open MTV VJ audition in New York. Nearly two decades later, the "kid" is all grown, and has long since traded in his turntables, track suits and blunts for acoustic guitars, plaid shirts and wheat sprigs. Thanks to "Picture," his massively successful duet with Sheryl Crow (who herself possesses shaky-at-best country credentials), Kid Rock quickly spring-boarded high into the country-music hierarchy, and in the years since has earned a slew of country-music award nominations, including taking home a CMA trophy for 2008's "All Summer Long."

Darius Rucker. When the soft-rock boom that replaced grunge in the mid-1990s had faded, and groups like the Gin Blossoms and Counting Crows had seen their fans grow weary of tambourines and Hammond organs, Hootie & the Blowfish saw their own popularity float belly-up to the surface. Singer Darius Rucker ventured on a solo career, releasing an awkward R&B album before redefining himself as a country singer. Our first glimpse of the South Carolina native as a country artist was in a Burger King commercial, when he donned a purple cowboy suit and hawked a chicken sandwich, but in the decade to follow would eventually go on to country-music acclaim, becoming the first African-American solo performer to top the country charts in nearly 20 years. This summer, after years touring as an opening act for other country performers, Rucker will finally headline his own amphitheater tour.

Jewel. It's not unheard of for female country acts to outgrow their cowgirl boots and move on to bigger stages (nice knowing you, Taylor Swift), but women who leave other genres behind and head to Nashville are few and far between. Jewel has never been afraid of taking risks, though, and in 2008 and 2010 released a pair of country albums that actually sold fairly well. The singer seemed to embrace not only the country-music genre, but also its very lifestyle, even moving to Texas with her then-husband, champion bull rider Ty Murray. While she has maintained some minimal presence in country music -- she starred as June Carter Cash in a 2013 biopic for the Lifetime network, for instance -- Jewel has by now all but walked away from the industry altogether. As she explained in a December blog: "My job and my profit center have shifted away from music because music no longer makes money." Ouch. If Jewel is hoping to mount a comeback someday, she might want to try another genre: Country fans take their music seriously, and if you're just in it for the money, you'd might as well not be in it at all.

Aaron Lewis. The Staind singer cut his teeth in the late-'90s nu-metal scene that made acts like Korn, Limp Bizkit and, yes, Kid Rock stars, but later decided to switch gears and explore life as a country singer. Lewis's formidable baritone and no-nonsense approach to his music put him in line for a promising career, but despite being the voice behind huge hits like "It's Been Awhile" and "Outside," Lewis is still playing relatively small venues and is not a major presence on country radio. Audiences may eventually be more receptive...though forgetting the lyrics during a World Series national-anthem performance probably didn't sit well with country fans, who probably also listened to his debut LP and wondered why a guy from Massachusetts suddenly had a Southern accent.

David Lee Roth. The Van Halen front man is everything that country music is not: flashy, self-promoting, shameless. But that didn't stop him from singing a pair of songs on a bluegrass tribute to Van Halen in 2006. Unlike Lewis, Roth made no attempt to add a twang to his voice, and performed the reborn songs with a bluegrass band on national television, all while mugging for the camera...just the way that David Lee Roth would. Roth's foray into the periphery of country music may have been short-lived, but it happened.

As Tyler prepares to start a new job at age 67, he would be wise to follow Roth's lead and just be himself: No fake accents, no trying to pretend to be southern, no exploiting country music as a way to make money. Country fans may not be hip to everyone who wants in, but they will open the door for a dude who's authentic. Even if that dude looks like a lady.

Taylor Swift Rocks Her BFF's Birthday Party

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Feelin' 25! Taylor Swift's longtime bestie Abigail Anderson celebrated her birthday Saturday with a star-packed party and some serious photo booth action.

'Furious 7' Shatters Box Office Records For The Entire Franchise

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LOS ANGELES (AP) — The high-octane "Furious 7" peeled out of the gates in its opening weekend, picking up a stunning $143.6 million from 4,004 locations to easily top the domestic box office, according to Rentrak estimates Sunday.

The expectation-shattering sum is a studio and franchise best for the homegrown car-obsessed series, which has continued to grow over the past few films. "Furious 7," now the ninth-biggest opening of all time, also unseats previous April record-holder "Captain America: The Winter Soldier," which opened to $95 million on the same weekend last year.

While the "Fast and Furious" films have grown in popularity over the past three films, the mega-opening for "Furious 7" was also at least partially tied to audience interest in star Paul Walker, who died in a car crash in Nov. 2013 before the film was completed.

Production on "Furious 7" was halted while the filmmakers and Universal decided whether or not to proceed with the film. The team ultimately decided to delay the release from its originally scheduled July 2014 date.

"It probably created some curiosity, but, at the same time, (the film) fits in so well with the overall continuing saga of the 'Fast and Furious' franchise," Nick Carpou, Universal's president of domestic distribution, said of Walker.

"It's a motivator, but it's not by any means the prime motivator the see the movie," he added.

There is also a sense that massive openings like "Furious 7" point to the creeping of summer blockbuster season, which seems to be starting earlier and earlier as studios try to stake their claim on prime dates.

But for Carpou, in a 52-week-a-year release strategy, the demarcation of a summer blockbuster is almost irrelevant when it comes to getting audiences to turn out in droves for a film.

"It's that corny old adage that if you build it, they will come," he said, adding that the impressive February debut of "Fifty Shades of Grey" helps prove his point.

Paul Dergarabedian, Senior Media Analyst for box office firm Rentrak, thinks that this is a liberating trend for studios who once clamored for the first weekend in May release date.

"Studios are finding tremendous value in putting their movies in non-traditional corridors," he said.

As the most ambitious release in Universal's history, "Furious 7" opened on 10,005 screens internationally as well, picking up $240.4 million from 63 territories for a $384 million worldwide debut — a 48 percent increase over "Fast & Furious 6."

The film will also debut in Russia, Poland, Japan, and China in the coming weeks.

Holdovers populated the rest of the top spots with DreamWorks Animation's "Home" earning $27.4 to take a distant second place. "Get Hard" brought in an estimated $12.9 million, while "Cinderella" and "The Divergent Series: Insurgent" rounded out the top five with $10.3 million and $10 million, respectively.

But it's all about "Furious 7" for the next few weeks. The film has the roads to itself until Disney and Marvel's "The Avengers: Age of Ultron" hits theaters on May 1.

"This could be the first in the franchise to flirt with the billion dollar mark," Dergarabedian said.

Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at U.S. and Canadian theaters, according to Rentrak. Where available, the latest international numbers for Friday through Sunday are also included. Final domestic figures will be released Monday.

1. "Furious 7," $143.6 million ($240.4 million international).

2. "Home," $27.4 million ($20.7 million international).

3. "Get Hard," $12.9 million ($2.6 million international).

4. "Cinderella," $10.3 million ($24.3 million international).

5. "The Divergent Series: Insurgent," $10 million ($15.5 million international).

6. "It Follows," $2.5 million.

7. "Woman in Gold," $2 million.

8. "Kingsman: The Secret Service," $1.7 million ($20 million international).

9. "Do You Believe," $1.5 million.

10. "The Second Best Exotic Marigold Hotel," $1 million ($3 million international).

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Estimated ticket sales for Friday through Sunday at international theaters (excluding the U.S. and Canada), according to Rentrak:

1. "Furious 7," $240.4 million.

2. "Cinderella," $24.3 million.

3. "Wolf Warriors," $22 million.

4. "Home," $20.7 million.

5. "Kingsman: The Secret Service," $20 million.

6. "Let's Get Married," $16 million.

7. "The Divergent Series: Insurgent," $15.5 million.

8. "The SpongeBob Movie: Sponge Out of Water," $5.8 million.

9. "Twenty," $5.3 million.

10. "Focus," $4.9 million.

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Universal and Focus are owned by NBC Universal, a unit of Comcast Corp.; Sony, Columbia, Sony Screen Gems and Sony Pictures Classics are units of Sony Corp.; Paramount is owned by Viacom Inc.; Disney, Pixar and Marvel are owned by The Walt Disney Co.; Miramax is owned by Filmyard Holdings LLC; 20th Century Fox and Fox Searchlight are owned by 21st Century Fox; Warner Bros. and New Line are units of Time Warner Inc.; MGM is owned by a group of former creditors including Highland Capital, Anchorage Advisors and Carl Icahn; Lionsgate is owned by Lions Gate Entertainment Corp.; IFC is owned by AMC Networks Inc.; Rogue is owned by Relativity Media LLC.

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Follow AP Film Writer Lindsey Bahr on Twitter at: www.twitter.com/ldbahr

Is 'Bitch Better Have My Money' a Song About Reparations?

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This week, Bad Gal Ri Ri returned with the second single from her upcoming album, Bitch Better Have My Money. Vulture called the song "a slice of ratchet heaven," and Billboard exalted Rihanna as a "trap queen" who has taken claim to her throne with this single. While I agree with both of these assertions, I also think this song is a powerful and politically charged anthem calling for reparations owed by white America for the wrongs and the legacy of slavery.

After getting this text message from a close friend and hip hop scholar:

2015-04-03-1428082728-7887088-reparations.jpg


I haven't been able to listen to the track without considering the powerful implications it has for this particular moment in popular culture. We are living in a time where it is impossible to dismiss the legacies of colonialism, slavery and violence, which shape lives and worlds in the present. As rapper Azealia Banks said in a recent Playboy interview, "The generational effects of Jim Crow and poverty linger on." When asked why she always brings up the topic of race in interviews and Twitter, Banks replied: "Because y'all motherf---ers still owe me reparations! That's why it's all about race... As long as I have my money, I'm getting the f--- out of here, and I'm gonna leave y'all to your own devices." Rihanna and Azealia Banks seem to be on the same page with this one.

Rihanna is haughty and unapologetic in this song, evocative of Beyonce's no-holds-barred, "bow down bitches," persona in "***Flawless." Shouting out, "Where y'all at? Where y'all at? Where y'all at?" she demands accountability from white America for the "two hundred fifty years of slavery. Ninety years of Jim Crow. Sixty years of separate but equal, and 35 years of racist housing policy," that Ta-Nehisi Coates elaborates on in a powerful treatise on the importance for reparations.

Her demands are clear: "Pay me what you owe me, don't act like you forgot." White America has a tendency of sweeping aside less-than-idyllic historical narratives and glossing over the conquest of the continent, the dispossession of native peoples and the enslavement of Africans whose labor built the economy of this country. In her own way, Rihanna is bringing these violent realities to light. In "Bitch Better Have My Money," she is calling for an acknowledgement of past injustices and a recognition that who we are is forever shaped and altered by who we were.

She asserts her dominance by reminding her listeners she "calls the shots, shots, shots like bra, bra, bra." Here, bra, bra, bra clearly represents gunshot sounds. Rap Genius notes that Rih is shooting warning shots in the air, "emphasizing that she's in control and not to be f---ed with." In a country where there is a prevailing fear of Black resistance, Rihanna is claiming her right to defend herself and her hard-earned money and is encouraging others to do the same.

In The Case For Reparations, Ta-Nehisi Coates writes:

What I'm talking about is more than recompense for past injustices--more than a handout, a payoff, hush money, or a reluctant bribe. What I'm talking about is a national reckoning that would lead to spiritual renewal... Reparations would mean a revolution of the American consciousness, a reconciling of our self-image as the great democratizer with the facts of our history.


Rihanna's new track is a step towards the "national reckoning" and change in consciousness that Coates is calling for. By tapping into Black expressive culture and artistic modes of resistance, Rihanna is joining a centuries long tradition of musicians who use their voice to call for equality and justice.

"Bitch Better Have My Money" speaks directly to a cultural imaginary where ideals like "post-racial America" and "colorblindness" are celebrated and welcomed. Yet by demanding accountability for 400 years of racism and the afterlife of slavery, Rihanna is calling white America's bluff. She rejects any notion that we as a society have somehow "evolved" beyond racism and reminds us that histories stay alive, even when they are not consciously remembered. Who y'all think y'all frontin' on?

Michelle Obama And First Family Looked Exceptionally Stylish On Easter Sunday. Obvi.

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There are so many reasons why we love Easter Sunday, one of them being that we get to see the first family together and all dressed up.

The Obamas looked exceptionally stylish today to attend Easter service at Alfred Street Baptist Church in Alexandria, Virginia. The White House released a photo of the first family, including the first dogs Bo and Sunny, via Instagram with the caption "Happy Easter!"





Michelle Obama opted for a teal hued, sleeveless sheath dress to fete the holiday. The dress stays true to FLOTUS's signature style of wearing vibrant, form-fitting frocks. Last year she donned an all white dress with a matching cardigan, so we're glad she's back to showing off her more colorful side.

Speaking of color, Malia and Sasha wore a few eye-catching looks of their own. Malia, 16, wore a navy-and-white printed dress, while Sasha, 13, decided to rock an orange-and-yellow colorblocked dress with a thin white belt. These ladies have literally grown up before our eyes and have definitely shaped their personal styles over the years.

Finally, the president kept it simple in a dark grey tailored suit. His lavender tie was the perfect accent for the celebratory day.


Mariah Carey And Nick Cannon Celebrate Easter Together

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Plenty of stars are sharing festive snaps this Easter, but Mariah Carey's new photo just might be the sweetest of the bunch.

Carly Rae Jepsen Just Released Her New Single, 'All That'

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Carly Rae Jepsen fans were in for a treat this weekend. The "Call Me Maybe" singer performed on "Saturday Night Live," where she debuted her brand new single "All That."

After performing "I Really Like You," for which she released a music video last month featuring Tom Hanks, Jepsen premiered "All That." The new song is produced by Blood Orange's Dev Hynes and Ariel Rechtshaid, who also joined her onstage at Studio 8H on Saturday.



After her "SNL" performance, Jepsen tweeted the link to the official studio version on iTunes.



Kendall Jenner Strips Down In Easter Photo (NSFW)

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Kendall Jenner is getting her NSFW vibes on this Easter Sunday.

The model and reality star took to Instagram to share a bunny-themed photo in which she wears nothing from the waist down. The image was accompanied by a bunny pun.

woke up like Hoppy Easter!

A photo posted by Kendall Jenner (@kendalljenner) on





Elsewhere on Sunday, members of the Kardashian family were spotted wearing coordinated white outfits.

kardashian

Lots of different kinds of celebrating going on this weekend.

Young Fan With Cancer Moves The Rock To Tears

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Question: How do you squeeze water from a stone?

Answer: You move The Rock to tears.

As in Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson, who happened to meet a fan named Nick Miller on Sunday and was so moved by the young man's battle with cancer that he got a little misty-eyed. Then he devoted an inspirational message to Miller on Instagram.

Johnson wrote on Instagram that he was leaving a workout when he noticed "these kids in the rearview mirror screamin' & runnin' after my truck. Thought to myself, "Should I stop or keep drivin'?" I stopped.

"I hop out of my truck and this kid runs up to me, hugs the hell outta me and says it's been his life's dream to meet me and tell me how much I've inspired him to fight cancer (Hodgkin's lymphoma) and hard core chemo and stem cell transplant treatments."

A photo posted by therock (@therock) on





"He was a little teary eyed and said for months and months all he's wanted to do was find me and say this face to face," Johnson continued. "I told him what it meant to me to hear this story. I thanked him, hugged him (and his friends), got back in my truck and drove away.

"As I'm drivin' I start shaking my head (and tearing up) at how fragile life is and how amazing and cool the universe was to make this meeting happen between myself and this special kid Nick Miller. Let's always take a moment to count our blessings.. cause there's always something to be grateful for."

He then ended with this sign-off: "Happy Easter y'all."

Leonardo DiCaprio Is Opening A Resort On His Private Island In Belize

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Belize is one of the most beautiful places on the planet. With its secret beaches, Mayan ruins and incredible snorkeling, Belize's mainland and islands are less-crowded, equally beautiful versions of Caribbean escapes. And now is one of the best times to visit, especially if you're interested in vacationing like Leonardo DiCaprio.

According to a report from The New York Times, DiCaprio plans to "create an eco-conscious resort" on Blackadore Caye, his private island in Belize. The environmentally-conscious actor is partnering with NYC developer Delos on the resort, which will be called "Blackadore Caye, a Restorative Island."

The resort is set to open sometime in 2018 and will feature 68 villas, infinity pools and amenities like special lighting that encourages sleep. The New York Times also reports that Deepak Chopra will "spearhead a program focused on health and anti-aging" at the resort.

That all sounds great, but if you have the urge to visit an eco-friendly resorts, why wait? Here are some of the world's best properties to visit sometime before 2018.



H/T The New York Times

Lucille Ball Fans Say, 'Whaaaaaa' To Her Statue

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Even the staunchest Lucille Ball fan probably would not recognize the statue purportedly of the actress that resides in her hometown of Celoron, NY.

Now a group has officially formed to lobby for the statue's removal.




Jennifer Lawrence, Chris Martin Reunite Over Easter Weekend, Have Romantic Brunch NYC

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Meet them in the fields! Jennifer Lawrence and Chris Martin reunited in NYC over Easter weekend, and then boarded a private plane together on Sunday, April 5, out of the Teterboro Airport in New Jersey.

New Jersey Man Says DMX Robbed Him

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He's sold millions of albums, but a New Jersey man said famed rapper DMX robbed him.

The victim, 21, told Newark police that he spotted the rapper outside a gas station early Sunday morning, according to the New Jersey Advance.

"The two had a brief conversation about rap music and during the conversation a male in DMX's entourage, showed the victim a gun and demanded the victim's money," police spokesman, Ronald Glover, said in a statement.

The man said he pulled out $3,200 from his wallet and DMX "snatched" it out of his hand, according to Glover. Then DMX and his associates jumped into four Cadillac Escalades and fled.

DMX performed at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark on Saturday night, NBC New York reports.

No arrests have been made and no charges have been filed.

Newark Police ask anyone with information on the case to call the anonymous tip line at 877-695-8477.

DMX is no stranger to legal trouble, as the Washington Post notes.

In 2008, he was charged with dog fighting, animal cruelty and drug possession violations. And in 2010, he spent several months in jail for violating his probation.


Jasmine Daniel at Universal Attractions Agency, which represents DMX, declined to comment when reached by The Huffington Post.





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David Chase Wanted Lorraine Bracco To Play Carmela On 'The Sopranos'

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Lorraine Bracco's Dr. Jennifer Melfi was the thoughtful, measured counterpoint to her mobster patient Tony Soprano, but "The Sopranos" creator David Chase originally wanted Bracco to play a much different part, she told HuffPost Live.

In a conversation with host Ricky Camilleri on Monday, the actress said Chase originally reached out to her to play Tony's wife, Carmela, a part that ended up going to Edie Falco. But Bracco wasn't interested because she'd already played a memorable mob wife in Martin Scorsese's "Goodfellas." She explained:

I fell in love with David [Chase] the minute I met him, when I walked into the room. I said, "I like this guy." And I said, "Look, I don't think I should play Carmela because I did it, I did it in a Scorsese movie, I got an Oscar nomination. I really don't think I'm going to bring so much to this for you that I haven't done already." I said, "But I really love this script, and I want to play Mefli." ... And he agreed with me that I'd done it already and it wasn't really incredible creative casting for him. He said, "You want to play Melfi?" And I said, "Yeah, I want to play Mefli." So I left on that, and he gave it to me.


Bracco also spoke about her relationship with James Gandolfini, who died at the age of 51, six years after "The Sopranos" aired its finale. She said losing Gandolfini and both her parents acted as a wake-up call in her own life, prompting her to write a new book, To the Fullest. Bracco described Gandolfini as "loving, caring, sweet, funny, a jokester" and a true friend.

"It was devastating -- young man, talented, the peak of his career, the peak of his life with a beautiful wife and baby and children and [his son] Michael," Bracco said. "It was really shocking to me."

Watch the full HuffPost Live conversation with Lorraine Bracco.

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

Free The Nipple! 15 Proud Breastfeeding Celebrities

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Breastfeeding is natural, it's healthy and it's human. It's remarkable, in a really depressing way, that it remains such a taboo, because, well, they're boobs.

Amber Rose Looks Awesome With Blue Hair

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Amber Rose ditched her platinum blond hair for a vibrant blue hue.

Rose's new look was on display when she stepped out this weekend for an evening at the Penthouse nightclub in Los Angeles. She matched the color with the nail polish on her fingers and toes, and it popped against her all-white outfit as she made her way into the venue.

She was also seen sporting the turquoise shade on Easter Sunday while out with ex Wiz Khalifa and their son Sebastian for Tamar Braxton's party in Calabasas.

amber rose

amber rose

The Night a Gay Don Draper Called Peggy Lee

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Peggy Lee's "Is That All There Is?" opens and closes Mad Men's mid-premiere of its final season, and it's the perfect anthem for the talented but self-destructive alcoholic, 40-something Don Draper. I was ahead of Don. It was the perfect anthem for budding alcoholic me when I was five in 1973.

That's when I saw Miss Lee singing it on some variety show. I stood on the shag carpeting of my family's living room in small-town Texas mesmerized. She stood in a white fog on the Zenith TV screen, like a glamorous ghost in a platinum-blonde Cleopatra wig wearing about 200 yards of white, diaphanous chiffon and blue-tinted sunglasses, lenses the size of my little head. She had a black dot on her right cheek, just like Miss Kitty on Gunsmoke.

The haunting, fatalistic song had me hooked from the first verse. Even though it was a very grown up song, it wasn't that odd that it spoke to my five-year-old gay mind. It was a story song, after all.

In "Is That All There Is?" she assumes a louche, seen-it-all demeanor, and in a whispery purr of a voice as if she is singing only to you in bed, she sings verse after verse about a life of tragedy and disappointments, and when her father takes her to the circus, she describes it with an ironic wink in her voice as "Greatest show on earth."

Her voice rises at the end in a question, so that you can almost hear her ask "Right?" But she doesn't say it, it's implied. Her bored assessment of the spectacle of clowns, and dancing bears, and pretty ladies in pink tights? "I had the feeling that something was missing. I don't know what." Her little girl, pragmatic answer to that disappointment: Let's keep dancing... break out the booze, and have a ball.

Wow! That's my kind of little girl.

Like a gay Don Draper, I escaped the sticks and landed in New York City in 1990 where I chased the Mad Men lifestyle long after the Mad Men era had ended but long before the term had become a beautiful cliché. I wasn't in advertising in the 1960s. I was in the publishing world in the 1990s -- less glamour and less money, but the same amount of sex and liquor. While I broke out the booze and had a ball, Peggy Lee's "Is That All There Is?" followed me wherever I went like ghostly cigarette smoke in a bar.

On one of those break-out-the-booze nights in 1996 at four a.m. -- when it was all still fun, but the ice was just beginning to melt -- I found myself in my Manhattan brownstone apartment with my best friend, Mr. Parker, playing "Is That All There Is?" over and over and over.

Mr. Parker chimed in with a bray, "My God, that song is brilliant! She's brilliant! You know, most people think of this as the ultimate downer song. I don't. Conversely, I think it's a celebration of the spectacle of life in all its joy and tragedy."

"Well, she does say that she's not ready for that 'final disappointment.'"

"Oh! 'That final disappointment.' What a brilliant line. It's a total alkie song!"

We took gulps of drinks and marinated in the meaning of the song as we let Peggy finish it uninterrupted. In the final verse she says that as fatalistic as her outlook may appear, she's not going to end it all, and when that "final disappointment" comes she'll face it, like she has faced the rest of life. She re-phrases the song's question as a statement that she'll keep dancing and drinking, "If that's all." Pause. "There." Pause "Is." Followed by a final vamp and bump bump of the tuba.

We sat in silence and drank, staring ahead.

Then Mr. Parker looked at me with a spark in his glassy eyes. "You know, I have her number."

"What do you mean you have her number?" I asked incredulously.

"I mean to say that I have her phone number. Right here in my wallet. A friend of mine managed to get it from some hospital she was in. You know she's always in and out of the hospital."

"Oh, I know. I read her autobiography," I said with pride. "She described more ailments and near-death experiences than... than Elizabeth Taylor."

Mr. Parker pulled out her number and waved it at me.

"Give me that!" Fueled with liquor courage I picked up the cordless phone and dialed.

Ring. Ring. Ri--

"Hello," a young-sounding woman answered.

"Hi. May I speak to Peggy."

"Who's calling, please?"

"Jamie."

"Okay. Hold on."

Hold. Hold. I'm hold for Miss Peggy Lee.

And then: "Hello? This is Peggy."

"Hi Peggy. This is Jamie."

"Jamie... Anderson?"

"No. It's Jamie Brickhouse. I'm a huge fan of yours. I met you back stage at one of your New York concerts," I lied. I never was lucky enough to see her perform. "Peggy, I missed you at Carnegie Hall last year and I'm still sick about it. Do you have any upcoming New York dates?"

"No. Ever since the fall I can't even get out of bed..." Her words seemed to sink into what I imagined was a cumulus, king-sized cloud of a bed where she was nestled in a quilted, white satin bed jacket, a princess phone cradled between shoulder and ear. She let her words lie there for a beat. And then with a twinkle in her voice she said, "But I've still got the voice." I could almost feel her breath in my ear.

"Yes, Peggy, you've still got the voice." I mouthed "Oh. My. God," to Mr. Parker. "Am I catching you at a bad time?"

"No? What are you doing?" Her voice was so sexy, the question could have been, "What are you wearing?"

"I'm sitting here in New York with my best friend. Drunk. We've been listening to 'Is That All There Is.' Peggy, I can't tell you how many drunken nights you've gotten me through with that song."

"Well," breath, "I guess my life was worth living."

I don't remember the rest of the conversation. After that, I didn't need to.

"I guess my life was worth living." What did she mean by that? Was it a sarcastic slap in my face that if she got some lush through another drunken night, then perhaps her purpose on earth was fulfilled, or was she truly acknowledging my reverence for her and the song, meaning that if she could move people so profoundly as she had me, then her life had meaning? I suspect she meant a bit of both.

I thought about the life I had been living in the six years I'd been in New York. This was long before I finally got sober or even thought I needed to get sober. I was living the kind of life I'd always fantasized about back in Texas: the charming Brownstone New York apartment, a career working with writers, a boyfriend (with some boys on the side), and a recirculating waterfall of booze and parties and more booze.

Greatest show on earth. Right?

But at the end of all those parties, after the last guest had gone, I'd always stay up for just. One. More. I'd survey the mess of the party and sit there listening to Peggy as I replayed what had become of my life. The people showed up. We broke out the booze. We had a ball. And then it was over.

I felt like Peggy at the circus. Or Don Draper in 1970. I had the feeling that something was missing. And I didn't know what.

This essay is adapted from Jamie Brickhouse's memoir Dangerous When Wet.

B.B. King Hospitalized For Diabetes-Related Emergency

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Blues legend B.B. King was rushed to a Las Vegas hospital this past weekend ... we're told for a diabetes-related emergency.

Tom Towles, Horror Movie Actor, Dead At 65

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Tom Towles, the mustached character actor who popped up in several Rob Zombie's movies, has died. He was 71.


Towles' spokeswoman Tammy Dupal said in a statement Monday that the actor who appeared in "House of 1000 Corpses" and "The Devil's Rejects" died April 2 in Pinellas, Florida, from complications following a stroke.


"Tom was a personal friend, a fantastic actor and a lovely man," Zombie said in a statement. "We worked together, we laughed and cried together. Not many fans knew the soft heart behind the tough exterior. Tom was one of a kind, never to be repeated."


Towles' memorable roles included a serial-killer sidekick in 1986's "Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer" and an obnoxious zombie apocalypse survivor in the 1990 remake of "Night of the Living Dead."


His other film credits included Zombie's 2007 remake of "Halloween," ''Grindhouse," ''The Pit and the Pendulum" and director Michael Mann's "Miami Vice."


Towles TV credits included "Seinfeld," ''NYPD Blue," ''L.A. Law," ''ER," ''Star Trek: Deep Space Nine," ''Star Trek: Voyager" and "Firefly."

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