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Louis C.K.'s Master Plan For Making Sure His Kids Don't Grow Up 'Weird Or Spoiled'

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Worried about raising your kids right? Louis C.K. has been there.

In the April 24 issue of The Hollywood Reporter magazine, the 47-year-old comedian talked about raising his daughters in New York and making sure they stay down to earth. Here's what he had to say:

I talk to [my kids] about work, and I hope they both have shitty minimum wage retail jobs when they're old enough. I really try to be aware of not letting them grow up weird or spoiled, which is easier to do here than it is in L.A. My 13-year-old daughter leaves the house at 7:15 every morning and takes a smelly city bus to school way uptown. It's like 8 degrees out, and it's dark and she's got this morning face and I send her out there to take a bus. Meanwhile, my driver is sitting in a toasty Mercedes that's going to take me to work once both kids are gone. I could send her in the Mercedes and then have it come back to get me, but I can't have my kid doing that. I can't do that to her. Me? I earned that f--ing Mercedes. You better f--ing believe it.


Louis C.K. has opened up about his parenting style in the past. While doing a bit on "parenting, kids and questions," he said, “I’m not raising children. I’m raising the grownups they’re going to be. I have to raise them with the tools to get through a terrible life. That’s the way I look at it."

It certainly seems like those kids are developing some solid life skills.

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Sarah Paulson Returns For 'AHS: Hotel' As 'The Baddest Bad Girl'

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We all expected it, but now it's official: Sarah Paulson is returning for "American Horror Story: Hotel."

Ryan Murphy announced on Monday that the "AHS" veteran, who's appeared in all four installments of the anthology series, is officially checking in to Season 5's "Hotel."




Who is "the baddest bad girl of them all?" No clue, but if anyone's a perfect fit for that role, it's the Supreme herself. Paulson also joins former "AHS" co-stars Kathy Bates, Chloe Sevigny and Wes Bentley, as well as newcomers Lady Gaga, Matt Bomer (he guest-starred in one episode of "Freak Show") and Cheyenne Jackson. We don't know what "Hotel" will be about beyond the fact that it's related to the top hat clue from "Freak Show," and that Paulson is equally as excited as we are.





Paulson's previous "AHS" characters include conjoined twins Bette and Dot, witch Cordelia Foxx, reporter Lana Winters and psychic medium Billie Dean Howard. The actress is also starring in Murphy's upcoming crime anthology series "The People v. O.J. Simpson" as prosecutor Marcia Clarke.

"American Horror Story: Hotel" returns in October on FX.

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Fifth Harmony Respects Zayn Malik's Choice To Leave One Direction: 'He Needs To Take Care Of Himself'

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When it comes to the departure of One Direction's Zayn Malik, the ladies of Fifth Harmony have chosen to stand in solidarity with the former 1D singer.

"[Our] only opinion is that we respect him and his decision to [leave]," Fifth Harmony's Lauren Jauregui told HuffPost Live on Monday.

Camilla Cabello understands the disappointment of fans though, admitting that Malik's exit had struck a melancholy chord for her.

"I think One Direction is such an important part of some people's lives, and I think that it was just a dream for a lot of people," she explained. "I was a huge One Direction fan -- we all are -- [and] it made people sad. But at the same time, happiness and health [are] the most important thing[s], and at the end of the day, he's a person and he's a human being and he needs to take care of himself."

Watch more from Fifth Harmony's conversation with HuffPost Live here.

Sign up here 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!

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Oh, You Don't Think Being A Celebrity Ever Blows?

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Society is doomed, and Pedro Martinez is a Saint. There is no grey area.

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Tori Spelling Reportedly Hospitalized After Suffering Severe Burns On Easter

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Tori Spelling was rushed to the hospital on Easter after she tripped and fell on a hot hibachi grill at Benihana restaurant in Encino, Calif.

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The Age of Insanity (Part 5)

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I continue to worry about what I have referred to in past posts as "the age of insanity." Recently I met with R.H. Flutes, my old friend from the Lying Institute of America. Dr. R.H. Flutes was in a jubilant mood because his former student, Ted Cruz, was on the presidential campaign trail.

Dr. RH Flutes: Ted Cruz, a brilliant student! When he's caught in a lie, he just says it was a joke! How brilliant is that? There's no defense for it -- if you don't get the joke, end of discussion!

Me: Yes... Brilliant....

Dr. RH Flutes: Listen, lying is hitting an all-time high in political circles. It excites us, stimulates us, entertains us....

Me: Why?

Dr. RH Flutes: Because, my dear friend, when a way of life is dying, a government, society hears the death rattle -- truth dies first.

Me: Are you saying that the United States of America is dying?

Dr. RH Flutes: Certainly! For quite a while now. We have lost our way. We have stopped dreaming of a better America, afraid of the future, fearful of progress, fearful of our own government. Look at us now! We accomplish nothing, plan nothing, prepare for nothing -- it's only survival! We are a fearful people without dreams, so lying is our compensation. Lying is the fake Band-Aid. Lying is the tranquilizer to make us feel better.

I thought Dr. Flutes, who is always somewhat of a provocateur, was overstating his case this time:

Dr. RH Flutes: Just look at the Supreme Court rulings recently. They have basically said that there is no racism in America. Really?! These men and women are not dumb, but the ruling on voting rights is insane by any standard. Or the Citizens United ruling, which basically lets as much money into the political process as any wealthy individual wants to spend? And they don't believe it pollutes the political process? Nonsense. Of course it does.

Me: If they know it's wrong, why did they vote that way?

Dr. RH Flutes: It's a good question, perhaps too difficult to explain, but I believe once idealism is betrayed, once the dream fades, the support beams begin to bend and falter. The Titanic went down one compartment after another. Lying in America is surging through our bloodstreams! Everything is becoming meaningless. Nothing of substance can stand in its way.

At this point he was as animated and jubilant as I had ever seen him. This next part he said to me with a huge smile on his face:

Dr. RH Flutes: And the truth? Too real. This is the age of junk-food politics, my boy. Every day these politicians rant about this and that, and there are those who expose the lies on a daily basis, but no one cares. Lying is just so entertaining. It might not be good for you, but damn, those French fries taste great!

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Listen To The First Episode Of 'Undisclosed,' The New Adnan Syed Podcast

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"Serial" fans still itching for more investigation into Adnan Syed's case are in luck. The first episode of the new podcast "Undisclosed: The State v. Adnan Syed,” which delves deeper into Syed's case from "an investigatory perspective instead of a narrative one", is now available to stream.

The podcast, which has no affiliation with Sarah Koenig or "Serial," comes from a group of attorneys behind the defense for Syed, including Rabia Chaudry, who initially brought the case to Koenig's attention, as well as Susan Simpson and Colin Miller. The Adnan Syed Legal Trust, which funded the podcast, has raised nearly $94,000.

"We want our listeners to know that this podcast will not give you purely pro-Adnan information or intentionally slant it in his favor," reads the official website for "Undisclosed." "We will present a smart, nuanced legal argument based on the totality of the facts in the case. As attorneys, we pride ourselves on looking dispassionately at facts, analyzing those facts, and applying the appropriate law in our analysis."

Syed, 33, became famous last year when "Serial" investigated the 1999 murder of Hae Min Lee, for which Syed received a life sentence at age 17. The first episode of "Undisclosed," a bi-weekly podcast, is now available online.



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John Singleton Drops Out Of The Tupac Biopic Because He Says People Weren't Respectful Of Tupac's Legacy

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Tupac Shakur's forthcoming biopic, "Tupac," has experienced a slight shift as it was announced last week that “Devil In A Blue Dress” director Carl Franklin has been named to replace John Singleton as the film's director.

According to Variety, the film’s spokesman, Greg Mielcarz, stated Singleton departed from the much-anticipated project -– after exiting in 2012 and returning in 2014 –- due to creative differences. Following the announcement the Academy Award-nominated director took to his Instagram accountto explain why he’s walking away from the developing film for the second time in three years.


Real talk! The reason I am not making this picture is because the people involved aren't really respectful of the legacy of Tupac Amaru Shakur. I won't say much if you want you can read my articles in Hollywood Reporter on authenticity in Black Storytelling ... To Pac's real fans just know I am still planning a movie on Tupac ... It doesn't matter what they do mines will be better... Tupac was much more than a hip hop artist ... He was a black man guided by his passions ... Of most importance was his love of black people and culture ... Something the people involved in this movie know nothing about... Real talk! How you gonna make a movie about a man when you suing his mother to get the rights to tell his story?! They have no true love 4 Pac so this movie will not be made with love! And that's why my ass isn't involved ! If Tupac knew what was going on he'd ride on all these fools and take it to the streets... But I won't do that ... I'll just make my own project. What Yall think about that?!!

A photo posted by JOHN SINGLETON (@realjohnsingleton) on




Singleton worked with the late rapper his 1993 film “Poetic Justice.” During a 2013 interview with Essence, which also commemorated the film’s 20th anniversary, Singleton recalled his fondest memories of Shakur, including his intentions to cast him for the lead role in 2001's “Baby Boy” which was later fulfilled by actor Tyrese Gibson.

“People always idolize 'Pac, but he was really just a brilliant yet confused young kid with a lot of fame,” he told Essence. “He had nothing to ground him, no father. He had no one to tell him ‘no’ or ‘just sit down.’ But when you did tell him something, he’d respect you. Right before he passed we just started talking again.”

“I saw him a week an a half before he went to Las Vegas and I told him I’m working on a new movie [Baby Boy, 2001] and I told him that this will be the movie that will get him an Oscar. He said, ‘Anything you want I’m there.’ He was going to be my Robert DeNiro. We were going to grow together. When you see Baby Boy now, his presence and soul are still in that movie.”

Casting for “Tupac” is set to begin in the coming months, with filming beginning later this year.

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New Mom Blake Lively Isn't Concerned With 'Having It All'

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New mom Blake Lively isn't fixated on "having it all."

“Most of the things I do are all-consuming, but somehow I find a way to do it all. It’s not having it all; it’s about doing it all,” Lively told Allure magazine, before delving into the complexities of the sentiment: “But it’s dangerous to dilute that to a catchphrase. Having it all could be having a happy, healthy family, and you could be a mom who stays at home, and that is the most admirable thing you could do. Or it could be having a profession that you really believe in, and not having a family, and doing what fulfills you. If it’s not a part of a conversation with someone face-to-face, those bites are why women tear each other apart or why the media will tear people apart.”

The 27-year-old is on the cover of the May 2015 issue of Allure. It is her first magazine spread since welcoming daughter James with husband Ryan Reynolds in December. The former "Gossip Girl" star announced her pregnancy on her website, Preserve, in October with a simple photo taken by her brother, showing the actress holding her growing belly.

That decision was a personal one.

“That was my way of owning that moment. I can’t be someone like Beyoncé ...," Lively said, referencing Bey's onstage pregnancy announcement at the VMAs in 2011. "But it was important for us," she continued, "It was a struggle, because we want to keep our privacy, but we also don’t want our lives to be exploited by other people. So we did it simply; it was a quiet way, an elegant way.”

For more with Blake Lively, head over to Allure.com or pick up the new issue on newsstands April 21.

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Want to Go to Paris? Take a Shortcut Through Broadway

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There's nothing quite like Paris in the springtime. The Seine shimmers blue and gold, and artists line its walls with their prints and paintings. Tourists stop to "ooh" and "ah" at portraits of a ballerina who looks similar to "that girl from the Palais Garnier the other evening." Then, they race off to Ladurée for a macaron or Angelina's for chocolat à l'ancienne, all the while waiting for their French fling to fly onto the scene.

The City of Lights has a tender sensibility when the natural world awakens from its winter stupor and everything is alive and living. Energy emanates from each corner of St. Germain-des-Prés, and cozy coffee shops, red and emphatic, welcome the famished for a croque monsieur. It could be today, tomorrow or yesterday, 2015 or 1915. It's Paris, pure and simple, with all of its restlessness and romanticism.

This allure has inspired Broadway's latest affair with France. New York and its grit and grime are not enough anymore; we want amour, something glimmering and hopeful that makes us sigh and laugh even though we don't necessarily believe in it. That's where new musicals Gigi and An American in Paris come into play -- they'll give us that type of love from '50s films: neat and tidy with a bubblegum bow on top.

Unfortunately, they tie things up a little too sweetly for the circumstance, particularly Gigi. Colette's take on feminism had its heyday decades ago and was celebrated with Oscars and Tonys galore. But now, her contented courtesans and merry (unmarried) men seem obsolete and almost offensive when warped by time constraints and a poorly-devised update, especially when they're supposed to represent the height of love.

The story is set at the turn of the 20th century -- bourgeois with the Belle Époque -- and the context must be considered alongside the plot. Courtesans were not so much prostitutes as esteemed socialites, and misogyny ran rampant regardless of class and region. Nevertheless, Gigi reinforces the stereotype of the virgin/whore dichotomy in dangerous ways for 21st-century audiences, especially when adaptor Heidi Thomas claims to have thrown in a feminist spin. Courtesan Liane d'Exelmans is vapid and melodramatic; her antithesis, Gigi, is ingenuous and unassuming. As the image of the "new woman," neither is imbued with even a hint of nuance. Liane craves gifts, Gigi marriage. Their only ambitions surround a boy who's not worth their while.

That's Gaston Lachaille, and unlike in previous versions, he truly is a boy. Portrayed by 25-year-old Corey Cott, this Gaston has none of the panache or maturity of his predecessors. Cott's acting is so poor that sometimes his eyes bulge like a grasshopper and he nears insanity instead of passion. In contrast, Disney Channel star Vanessa Hudgens, who plays Gigi, has a voice to rival any leading lady, but she can't carry the production alone. She will, however, bring in plenty of little girls who want to see Gabriella from High School Musical in the flesh (they'll take away a terrible moral, but who cares if it's selling tickets?). And as for everything else, the ensemble is sloppy, the sets are tired and no one leaves the theater singing unless it's the "Hallelujah Chorus" because they're relieved to be surrounded by fresh air and modernity.

An American in Paris is much better. Yes, it's cheesy, but it goes down like soft brie with jam and crackers. The Gershwin score has that sensuous vitality that only George and Ira could evoke, and it makes you want to find a partner and dance all night.

However, in this case, it's almost more opportune to be a voyeur because Robert Fairchild is just so sexy and dynamic as Jerry. Christopher Wheeldon's choreography is unparalleled: smooth, sensitive. Acts transition with ease as Wheeldon presents his dancers at their best. He's known for making mortals into muses; he was the one who brought Wendy Whelan into her own. Here, he's done the same with Fairchild, who's never looked so good. Given his New York City Ballet background, Fairchild should at least be able to pull off Wheeldon's movement with George Balanchine and Jerome Robbins in mind. But he does much more than pull Jerry off. He's like Mikhail Baryshnikov in Pas de Duke with the kind of charisma that keeps people on the edge of their seats. And then there's his singing. People say that professionals dance because they can't sing. Those people haven't heard Fairchild belting "I Got Rhythm."



Leanne Cope, with her Royal Ballet training, is also stunning as Lise. Her port de bras captures everything that's special about the elusive ballerina. Still, Lise is quiet and as Adam says, needs protecting. Arts patroness Milo Davenport is much fiercer, but of course she ends up snubbed because she's not the ideal manifestation of femininity.

The show is well done. It's fun. It's flirtatious. It's a really good time. But as my friend and I pushed our way through Times Square, we were both a weird mix of jolly and disheartened because beneath Gershwin's catchy tunes was a thinly veiled argument. Women are to be beautiful and breakable. They are to run from conflict, play hard to get, rarely speak and daydream of love while fulfilling their duties.

Isn't that an antiquated concept? And isn't Gigi's purity also pretty passé? Why are these the women we have on Broadway, in Paris?

Don't get me wrong, there's no problem with being a sex worker, or a wife, or a ballerina, or a heiress if you so choose. They're all paths with merit. But what the female protagonists and antagonists in Gigi and An American in Paris lack is agency in their happily ever afters. They are strewn along like petals in the wind: dainty, delicate. And regardless of the quality of the production, that isn't the right message to send.

So here's my question: If Paris is so sublime in the springtime, then why aren't we there now? Where is our love story, the one that's not as soft as brie with jam and crackers? And why are we so nostalgic that we can't embrace the present as a gift? No number of period costumes or expensive sets can mask the fact that I'm not that dainty, delicate girl onstage, and I don't want to be. As kids pile into the orchestra to see their idol, Vanessa Hudgens, I don't want them to get any false ideas about womanhood, either.

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Paul Walker In 'Furious 7' And Other Successful Posthumous Film Releases

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"Furious 7" is a box office smash that has already become the highest-grossing sequel in the series, due in part to the buzz surrounding the film following the 2013 death of franchise star Paul Walker. But it's is only the most recent blockbuster film to premiere after the death of a high-profile actor. In the video above, HuffPost Live remembers some of the most iconic roles that ultimately received a posthumous release.

Sign up here 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.

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One Of These 31 Movies Will Be Summer's Biggest Blockbuster

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summer movie preview 2015

Summer movie season seems to stretch wider and wider as blockbusters' budgets swell. Just look at this month's "Furious 7," the latest behemoth in a franchise whose first three installments opened in June. That movie is cruising around with summer-style box-office figures, marking the first in a long line of films gunning for the coveted $1 billion threshold -- and we haven't even hit the May benchmark yet. Come August, we'll still be awaiting titles like "Fantastic Four," which could also coast to 10-figure sums. Celebrate it or castigate it, summer movie season is upon us, and this year's lineup is hardly lacking adrenaline. In the coming weeks, we'll preview a slew of smaller releases that will relieve your glassy eyes from the next four month's special-effects spectacles, but for now, it's all about the box-office benjamins. Here are 31 movies -- most of which we are quite excited for -- that are competing to win the picnic days' blockbuster crown.

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Larry Kramer On His New Book, 'The American People,' Which Identifies George Washington, Ben Franklin And More As Gay

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Playwright and legendary AIDS activist Larry Kramer expounded on his new book, The American People: Volume 1: A Search for My Heart, which is billed by its publisher as "a novel" but which Kramer says is a "history," and which, as usual with Kramer, is creating controversy.

In The American People, Kramer describes George Washington as a man who had sex with men -- a “big queen,” he said in an interview -- and writes the same of Alexander Hamilton, who “was in love with George,” Ben Franklin, Andrew Jackson, Franklin Pierce, James Buchanan, and “the most powerful gay man” in American history, J. Edgar Hoover. Historic Jamestown was a hotbed of gay sex, Kramer writes, partly because the settlement for a long time only included men. And not only did Abraham Lincoln have intimate affairs with men – a thesis that was seen as far-fetched a number of years ago, but which more historians now support – but, Kramer writes, Lincoln assassin John Wilkes Booth was queer, too, and Joshua Speed, thought to be Lincoln’s lover, was a “hustler” as well as “gift” from Booth.

But it’s all much more complicated than that, detailed in over 700 pages (and Volume 2 is on the way next year). In an interview with me on SiriusXM Progress Kramer talked about his version of history, and again criticized his long-time friend, the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Tony Kushner, for not queering Lincoln in the Steven Spielberg 2012 film, "Lincoln," for which he wrote the screenplay.



“We were very close friends,” Kramer said of Kushner. “We speak to each other again, but he was very mad with me that I publicized the issue. I really thought that he had a responsibility as a gay artist to indicate that about Lincoln, that there was enough known. I put him in touch with all kinds of academic people who support that there was enough to indicate” that Lincoln was involved with men.

“I’m not asking for a love scene in the movie,” Kramer said, “but just some touch that would indicate that it was there. And for all I know Spielberg was not in favor of what? I don’t know. But I just...I lost a little respect for Tony, because I think a gay artist has a gay responsibility. There, I said it.”

Kramer also talked about what he sees in studying history that many historians didn’t see with regard to who was queer.



“In the case of Washington, he was a big queen, basically,” Kramer said. “He decorated everything. He designed all the uniforms, the buttons. The correspondence exists with all the dealers he dealt with in England to make everything. And then there was a man called Baron von Steuben, who was German, who designed all the maneuvers for all the troops of all the great armies in Europe. And he kept getting thrown out after he made the armies real – like Rockettes [laughs]. He got kicked out and he came to George. And he and George hit it off like nobody’s business.”

“George put him to work right away and they designed all these maneuvers and it was like putting on show,” Kramer said. “That’s for starters. And there’s no question, that Alex [Alexander Hamilton], really-- whether it was a father/son thing -- that Alex was very much in love with him. And Alex Hamilton was very handsome. And George was much older. And that’s been written about. There was a mutual attraction between them…Hamilton also had a young lover, a fellow officer, John Laurens is his name. There were letters between the two. Even the [Ron] Churnow book mentions that.”

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Sarah Hyland On Her 'Modern Family' Fame: 'It Didn't Come Easily Or Fast Or Free'

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The cast of “Modern Family” knows a thing or two about winning big in the comedy category of the Emmy Awards. While Sarah Hyland manages to make it look easy with her role as the always funny and sometimes rebellious Haley Dunphy, her off-screen life hasn’t always been so simple.

In 2012, the actress underwent a kidney transplant as a result of a condition called kidney dysplasia. Despite her health issues, Sarah has been acting since she was a kid taking on characters in both television shows like "Law and Order: Special Victims Unit" and movies like "Vampire Academy." The actress' latest gig though, is being a cover star for Seventeen's May issue, where she opens up about following her dreams and loving what she does.

On not letting medical issues get in the way of her dreams:
“I was born with so many health issues that doctors told my mother I would never have a normal life. And she said, ‘You’re right, she won’t -- but it won’t be because of her health.’ When my mother told me that story, it resonated with me: If I can’t have an ordinary life, I might as well have an extraordinary one. If you set your mind to something, you’ll achieve it.”

On appreciating her “Modern Family” role:
“Happiness, I’ve learned, comes from within. I am happiest when I am doing something I love. And I love 'Modern Family' -- it’s the best job I’ve had in my 20 years as an actress. It didn’t come easily or fast or free: It took me 14 years to land a gig like this.”

On staying on track:
“When you’re feeling vulnerable, it can lead to doubt and second-guessing. It will steer you away from your goals and your happiness. Once you have a goal, keep moving forward -- even if you’re taking baby steps!”

Seventeen’s May issue hits stands on April 21. Scroll down for more pics of Sarah and head over to Seventeen.com for more.

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Jesse Williams Calls Out 'Justify-Anything' Americans Who Excuse Police Shootings

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In recent years, actor Jesse Williams has been vocal about expressing his frustration surrounding police misconduct and the "criminalization of the black body."

In response to the April 2 death of Eric Harris -- who was fatally shot by a reserve sheriff's deputy as he lay on the ground -- the “Grey's Anatomy" star on Monday took to his Twitter account to outline various points to Americans who constantly use excuses to justify the killing of black people.



































The videotaped deaths of Harris, who was shot by reserve sheriff's deputy Robert Bates in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Walter Scott, who was killed by then-police officer Michael T. Slager in Charleston, South Carolina, mark the latest fatal shootings of unarmed black Americans to draw national attention.

In addition to his recent string of tweets, last year Williams questioned the media’s coverage of the Michael Brown case in Ferguson, Missouri, which then focused on video footage showing Brown involved in strong-arm robbery at a convenience store.

"You'll find that the people doing the oppressing always want to start the narrative at a convenient part, or always want to start the story in the middle," Williams said during an August 2014 interview on CNN. "This started with a kid getting shot and killed and left in the street for four hours."

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Actor Jamie Costa Pays Tribute To Robin Williams With Spot-On Impressions Of His Characters

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The world may have lost Robin Williams, but his creative spirit is clearly still inspiring others to bring laughter into the world.

Actor Jamie Costa pays tribute to the actor and comedian, who died last August, with a series of 20 impressions of Williams' most memorable characters -- and they are beyond impressive.

The actor and filmmaker, who eerily resembles a young Williams, uploaded a video to YouTube on Monday titled, "Never Had A Friend Like Him," which is a compilation of Robin Williams impressions he posted on Vine, including his take on Mrs. Doubtfire, Genie from "Aladdin," Mork from "Mork and Mindy," Sean Maguire from "Good Will Hunting" and more.

But Williams' isn't the only actor Costa impersonates. He also does a pretty decent Matthew McConaughey:



And his Alan Rickman as Severus Snape from "Harry Potter isn't too shabby either:



H/T: "Today"



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Fifth Harmony Is Devoted To Promoting Feminism '100 Percent'

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Fifth Harmony cites feminism as strongly influencing their work, with their music video for "Bo$$" depicting several scenarios of female empowerment. But that's only where the girl group's commitment to spreading gender equality starts.

In a conversation with HuffPost Live on Monday, band member Lauren Jauregui explained that the group considers feminism to be "definitely important just as a concept, because it's by definition the political and economic and social equality of the sexes."

And that's something the group is promoting "100 percent," especially by leading through example.

"A huge part of [feminism], I think, is the coming together of women," Jauregui told host Nancy Redd. "[It's] supporting each other and not breaking each other down, and kind of sending out that message and making sure women know that doing this together is going to be so much more effective than trying to tear each other down."

If women stand together and adopt the camaraderie that Fifth Harmony looks to embody, the group is confident that options for ladies are endless, and we'll see more women "being powerful and being strong and being able to be successful in whatever division they want to be successful in," according to Jauregui.

Check out Fifth Harmony's newest album Reflection, out now.

Watch more from Fifth Harmony's conversation with HuffPost Live here.

Sign up here 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!

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Why ‘OITNB' Star Diane Guerrero Is ‘Really Glad' She Shared Her Emotional Immigration Story

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Diana Guerrero currently stars in two highly acclaimed award-winning series, but back in November it was her family’s harrowing immigration story that took the spotlight.

In a Los Angeles Times op-ed, the actress made an emotional plea for immigration reform by describing how she lost her parents and older brother to deportation when she was 14. Her story went viral, a reaction she recently told The Huffington Post she did not expect.

Guerrero, now 28, also pointed out in her op-ed that after her family’s deportation back to Colombia, no government official contacted her to verify she was all right. She was forced to depend on friends’ families to survive.

The actress is currently writing a memoir based on her immigration struggles, titled In The Country We Love.

Just days after her letter went viral and Guerrero appeared on CNN’s “New Day,” breaking down as she described the toll her family's absence has had on her over the years, President Barack Obama issued his historic executive actions to protect nearly 4.5 million undocumented parents and children with longstanding ties to the U.S. from deportation.

HuffPost recently spoke to Guerrero about what it was like to share a very personal story, and what everyone should focus on in the upcoming election.

When you published that very moving letter about your experience with your family’s deportation, did you expect it to go viral?

No, absolutely not. I really just thought I was going to get a few retweets, which is silly because so many people in this country are experiencing the same thing, with fear of their family being taken away and separated.

Clearly it’s still a very emotional topic for you. How do you feel about doing it now that you have the benefit of hindsight?

It’s a topic difficult to talk about, to have people know your business like that. It was hard but I’m really glad that I did it; I think a lot of people can relate to the situation. A lot of young women have come up to me, Latinas who are going through the same thing and are really afraid of their situation. And I think what I’m doing is, I’m urging people to participate, I’m urging people to get involved in their community and vote if they can vote. Or get the word out if they can.

Speaking of voting, the election is fast approaching. What advice would you give voters as candidates begin to surface?

I think it’s really, really important for you to pay attention this year because it’s really going to dictate how you’re going to have your life for the next four years. It’s really important to participate. If you’re not voting for the people who have your best interest in mind, then you’re doing something wrong.

Shifting to your career, you star on “OITNB” as Maritza and you also portray Lina, Jane’s best friend, on “Jane The Virgin.” What is it like being on two highly acclaimed series?

I think just being on screen and being a Latina is important. In terms of Maritza on “Orange Is The New Black,” it’s a story being told of many Latinas, and I think that’s important to show. With this show, I think it feeds you a stereotype in the beginning and then it really breaks it down. You really get to see who the person is, where they came from. And I think that we’re speaking out for a really large group of Latinas who are very much ignored.

And you go from a prison in Litchfield to working in a luxury Miami hotel as a waitress.

Yeah, a luxury hotel. A hardworking Latina who is kind of not sure where her life is, which is a very common story for every woman or any person. Just trying to be the best friend she can be, even though she fails at that a lot. But just showing a different side of the Latina story, the Latino family. I think “Jane the Virgin” does a beautiful job of showing the Latino family and really holding on to your culture, really holding on to your values, and I’m glad to be a part of that.

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Kylie Jenner's Lips Are Real, So Stop Talking About Them

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They're real, and they're spectacular.

Kylie Jenner might not have been alive when those words were uttered on "Seinfeld," but it certainly sums up her response to critics who have accused her of undergoing cosmetic surgery to attain her full pout.

"I'm like, 'Stop talking about my lips,'" Jenner told Grazia magazine, addressing the claims in an interview for the first time. "I haven't had plastic surgery. I've never been under the knife. People flashback to pictures of me when I was 12 and say 'Kylie's so different,' but how can I look the same from 12 to 18?'"

Jenner has tweeted that she is "bored" with people constantly discussing her lips. And in December, her makeup artist, Rob Scheppy, revealed the secret behind the look for inquiring minds.

"I find it funny that so much attention is drawn to my work, but I like it," he told the Daily Mail. "Kylie's lips are created using expertly applied lip liner and a little lip balm."

In her Grazia interview, the 17-year-old gave lip liner a major shoutout ("I think contouring and lip liner definitely changed my life") and dished on some other beauty tidbits, like the benefits of strip lashes and how a good Instagram photo is all about the lighting and the filter.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

MTV2 Reboots 'Celebrity Deathmatch' For More Pop Culture Blood

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"Celebrity Deathmatch" is coming back for more blood.

The animated show, which originally ran on MTV from 1998 to 2002 and aired in a second installment on MTV2 from 2006 to 2007, imagined violent fights between claymation versions of celebrities and pop culture figures. But there are never too few celebs to throw in a boxing ring to duke it out, right?

The Hollywood Reporter revealed on Tuesday that MTV2 is reviving the series again. (The network confirmed the news over Twitter, too.) This time, the animated show will have a focus on social media with hourly Twitter wars. MTV2 also retweeted fans with suggestions for the reboot using the hashtag #CelebrityDeathMatch2015.




In the meantime, refresh your memory on all the bloody clay fights that went down in the past, like Lindsay Lohan vs. Hilary Duff or Kid Rock vs. Eminem.

tv show gifs
Image via Imgur

For more, head to The Hollywood Reporter.

-- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

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