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Keegan-Michael Key's Whiplash Parody MAKES This Music Video

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Play all of the woodwinds from the middle of the tragedy after Luke Skywalker's aunt and uncle have been killed on Tatooine -- NO, THE MIDDLE!

When Keegan-Michael Key isn't busy killing it as one-half of "Key & Peele," he's trying very hard to make musicians perform their absolute best. Such is the case with singer and songwriter Bhi Bhiman, who gets whipped into musical shape when Key hilariously channels J.K. Simmons in this music video / "Whiplash" parody.

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Meredith Vieira Says 'Be The Left Shark' In Boston University Commencement Speech

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Television host and journalist Meredith Vieira offered some memorable advice for Boston University's class of 2015: "Be the Left Shark."

Vieira, who said she was a "nervous wreck," delivered the address on Sunday for the university's 142nd commencement, encouraging students to challenge conformity and step out of their comfort zones.

“Don’t ever be a conformist for convenience's sake," she said. She offered up the example of the "Left Shark" -- one of the costumed dancers from Katy Perry's halftime performance at the 2015 Super Bowl. The dancer ad-libbed some of the choreography and quickly became an Internet sensation.

“You may be thinking of Tom Brady’s deflated balls right now, but I’m thinking of Katy Perry’s halftime performance," Vieira said as a person in a shark costume joined her on stage.

Earlier in her speech, Vieira encouraged the graduates to keep an open mind and to accept new possibilities. She said she never planned to be a journalist until a college course on radio reporting led to an internship with a Boston radio affiliate.

“So if you haven’t found a job or decided on a career path yet, don’t freak out," she said. "Don’t let fear or frustration or the fact that others around you seem to be all set immobilize you.”

She also challenged the stereotype that members of the millennial generation are unprepared for the workforce. She said employers perceive young people as "self-entitled, lazy, high-maintenance and disloyal."

"I know that's bull," she said, as a mother of three 20-somethings and the host of a show whose staff is 30 percent millennial. "Most of the young people I know are incredibly hard-working and extremely motivated."

Vieira is not a BU alumna, but she did graduate from nearby Tufts University. BU awarded the Rhode Island native an honorary degree at commencement.

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Josh Brolin Engaged To His Assistant Kathryn Boyd

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He found love again! Josh Brolin is engaged to Kathryn Boyd, his rep confirms exclusively to Us Weekly. An insider close to Boyd first told Us that the Gangster Squad actor, 47, and Boyd got engaged sometime last month.

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Chris Harrison Says The Audience Will Decide If There Will Ever Be A Gay 'Bachelor'

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According to Chris Harrison, it's up to the television audiences to decide if there will ever be a gay "Bachelor."

"That's really who dictates where shows go on television -- where we go socially [in] television, entertainment, everywhere," the host of "The Bachelor" and "The Bachelorette" told HuffPost Live in an interview this week. "They will dictate when it's time, if we're ready for that, if it would be successful, if it would be a good business move -- the audience always dictates where we go in reality television."

Viewers, he added, were at the heart of all entertainment-related business ventures: "Believe me, when you stop watching a show ... it's off the air, or it will change."

Harrison, who supports same-sex marriage, previously said he wasn't sure if a gay "Bachelor" would be a good fit for the ABC reality series.

"Look, if you've been making pizzas for 12 years and you've made millions of dollars and everybody loves your pizzas and someone comes and says, 'Hey, you should make hamburgers.' Why? I have a great business model," he told the New York Times Magazine last year. "I don't know if hamburgers are going to sell."

He added, "Is our job to break barriers, or is it a business? That's not for me to answer."

Watch more from Chris Harrison's conversation with HuffPost Live here.

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B.B. King Public Viewing Scheduled Before Mississippi Burial

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LAS VEGAS (AP) — A public viewing for blues legend B.B. King will be held in Las Vegas before his body is sent to Mississippi, where plans are being made for services in his hometown next week, King's business manager said Monday.

A private family funeral also will be held in Las Vegas for the guitar genius dubbed the King of the Blues, who died at his home here Thursday at age 89. King will be buried on the grounds of the B.B. King Museum and Delta Interpretive Center in his hometown of Indianola, Mississippi, said Allen Hammons, a member of the museum board of directors.

Arrangements are still being made for the Indianola funeral and burial.

In Las Vegas, a public viewing will be held from 3 to 7 p.m. Friday at Palm Mortuary West, King's business agent, LaVerne Toney, told The Associated Press.

People will be able pass King's open casket, but there won't be seating or a memorial service during the viewing, mortuary manager Matthew Phillips said.

A private service for family members will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at the larger downtown Palm Mortuary chapel, which seats 400. Toney and Phillips said the media will be excluded.

Toney, King's business manager of 39 years, has power-of-attorney over King's affairs. She said she expects by Tuesday to have arrangements for King's funeral and burial next week in Indianola.

King was hospitalized several times in recent weeks before he died of a series of small strokes attributable to his longstanding battle with Type 2 diabetes, his physician and the coroner in Las Vegas said.

A hospice nurse and King's tour manager and personal assistant, Myron Johnson, were at King's bedside when he died, said Brent Bryson, a lawyer who represented King in a guardianship dispute with several of the musician's 11 surviving adult children.

King was born Riley B. King on Sept. 16, 1925, to sharecropper parents. He was married twice and had 15 natural and adopted children.

Daughters Shirley King of Chicago, and Rita Washington, Patty King and Karen Williams, all of North Las Vegas, complained that Toney prevented them from visiting their father in his final days.

Blues guitarist and Rock and Roll Hall of Fame member Buddy Guy said he also was denied permission last month to visit his old friend.

A judge in Las Vegas said two investigations found no evidence King was abused.

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Associated Press writer Emily Wagster Pettus in Jackson, Mississippi, contributed to this report.

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Anderson Cooper Fooled By Satirical News Site Clickhole

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In his defense ... actually, we got nothing. No defense. Come on, Cooper.

On Monday afternoon, CNN's Anderson Cooper tweeted out a serious reaction to a Clickhole story about something he allegedly said at a college graduation, not realizing that Clickhole is a satirical site from the same people who bring us The Onion:



Very quickly, the Internet swarmed on Cooper and his inability to know 100 percent of all things in the universe. He shortly after sent out a tweet admitting his mistake:



Okay, other media folks, we think Anderson Cooper is high profile enough that the rest of you will now know better. No excuses from here on out.

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'Empire' Takes A Step In The Right Direction For Representations Of Mental Health On TV

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As Andre Lyons on "Empire," actor Trai Byers' portrayal of a character with bipolar disorder is not perfect. In general, mental health representation needs a lot of work across pop culture. But to see such a studied, nuanced portrayal on a broadcast network is progress in a realm so severely lacking.

It's important that Andre is shown managing his illness and taking his meds, something especially rare for fictional characters with chronic mental illness. There is also a misconception that people with mental illness can't be successful, lending a myth-busting element to the fact that Andre is a graduate of a competitive university who is largely responsible for the business success of Empire Enterprises.

To expect an ideal depiction on a primetime soap like "Empire" is as absurd as some of its subplots. But Byers has done an excellent job considering the space. Unlike many of the bad examples before him, he's ensured Andre's mental health issues are not just used to amp up the drama. As Emmy nominations approach, Byers told The Huffington Post about researching the character and dealing with the stigma of mental illness specifically as it manifests itself in the black community.

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There is a lot of responsibility in playing a character with bipolar disorder. What kind of research did you do to prepare for the role?
To be honest with you, I spent a lot of time online. One of the more useful things is that I have a family member who struggles with bipolar disorder. I was able to witness one of this person’s episodes in a very extreme manner that aided me with where we were able to take Andre. It weighs heavily on me, but I love doing work like this. Bipolar disorder -- and mental illness in general -- is something I think we as a country kind of sweep under the rug. We pass it off as behavioral problems rather than a genuine imbalance that sometimes dictates our behavior. To be able to have a platform for people with bipolar disorder on "Empire" is amazing. So many people have reached out who are bipolar or who deal with people who are bipolar and are appreciative of the way we deal we have dealt with it authentically.

One of the more powerful things about Andre is that he defeats this myth that a person with a mental illness can't be successful.
Absolutely, you hit the nail on the head. My family member is one of the most charismatic people you’ll meet -- successful, lovely -- but when they’re off their medication the imbalance that they have no control over kicks in. So, it’s not something slimy. You don’t have this scarlet letter just because you’re dealing with any mental disorder. It’s just something that you have to monitor, take care of and have support from your community, whatever that may be.

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We see Andre managing his illness, but then he goes off his meds. What do you think pushed him to that point?
There’s a lot going on with regard to his emotional state. He has no mother figure at all. She’s been gone. Her actions took her away. You know, how do you justify that? And his father is so into himself and into his business that he doesn’t necessarily take the best care of his kids emotionally, even though he might provide for them monetarily. Andre goes out and picks himself up by the bootstraps. He believes in the best of the business (even though he knows what its built on) and tries to do things the right way only to be slapped in the face. Or, with a term I like to use, Esau-ed -- you know, the story of Jacob and Esau, where Jacob stole Esau’s birthright? So, there’s a lot going on. It becomes competitive. He's driven to this place with all the action taking place, all the sacrifices being made. And he’s becoming imbalanced. It’s betrayal, it’s sadness, it’s daddy issues, it’s mommy issues, it all comes to a head with not taking his medication.

There is a stigma against mental illness across cultures, though it seems especially strong in the black community. For example, we see Lucious denying the existence of his son's disorder and Andre exerting his masculinity in spite of his disease. How do you conceptualize that element of his experiences?
I’m just gonna keep it real with you. As a black man in the 21st century, I still have to deal with the fact that skin color is an issue. As we’re seeing on the news every single day, skin color is an issue. Being a black man comes with stigmas all its own and trying to be the best person you can be, trying to be a man above and beyond your skin color and having to overcome the ideas that your skin color represents just so you can have a job, just so you can be competitive in business or whatever element or aspect of life is hard enough. So, anything that looks like it can tear you down, anything that looks like it’s a handicap, you want to dismiss, you want to throw it to your side. Especially if it’s somebody who is part of your team and not you you yourself. Look at how Lucious deals with ALS. He doesn’t tell anybody, he tries to do his business in underhanded ways. He does anything that he can to keep his name alive. His reputation is most important to him.

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That's interesting. Part of the stigma of mental health is the way it is seen as distinct from physical health. When you put it that way, it seems like the main goal, for both Lucious and Andre, is concealing weakness.
Exactly. If that’s the way he deals with himself, imagine how he’s going to deal with his sons. Whether it’s a gay son, a mentally ill son, a recently incarcerated wife, I mean, he sees all of these things as stains on the resume that are stacked against him. He doesn’t want that to be representative of him, so he dismisses it. I think we all do the same thing. We may not be as ruthless as Lucious, but we still want to represent the best of ourselves, so we will disregard, we will hide, we will deny everything that we think stands against us and our destiny.

Originally, Andre was going to be struggling with depression. How did you deal with the shift to bipolar disorder?
Let me tell you the truth, I have no idea where that come from. We shot this pilot with him being depressed, I went off to do "Selma," came back and they said, “Guess what?! You’re now bipolar!” I said, “Okay, so I better get busy with my research.” And it went on from there, you know. So, the challenge I think was trying to link the bipolar behavior with Episode 1, so that we could re-conceptualize him but also make him the same person that he was in Episode 1. It was an interesting challenge. Hopefully we were successful.

What's next for Andre? What can we expect from him in Season 2?
The only thing that I can say is we’re picking up where we left off. You know, Andre is about to be a father, Vernon has been killed. Within that, he is trying to define his identity. He was moving more toward the spiritual realm and trying to recreate himself outside of Empire Enterprises. So, the interesting thing, at least what I’m hoping -- I don’t know what all is going to happen, I wish I could tell you more -- is Andre finding his identity between the birth of his kid and the death of his mentor.

This interview has been edited and condensed.

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Chrissy Teigen Denies Rolling Her Eyes At Iggy Azalea

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Celebrities threw a lot of shade at the 2015 Billboard Awards in Las Vegas on Sunday night. Or did they?

Not according to Chrissy Teigen, who has dismissed claims that she rolled her eyes at Iggy Azalea on the red carpet as nothing more than people trying to drum up drama.




On Monday, the 29-year-old model took to Twitter to try to clear the air:







Teigen didn't seem too worried about the rumor, but we're sure Erin Andrews can empathize.

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Nicki Minaj And Beyoncé Have An Awesome Summer Party In 'Feeling Myself' Video

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Tidal subscribers were in luck on Monday when Nicki Minaj and Beyoncé dropped the video for "Feeling Myself" exclusively on the streaming service. The song, which appears on Minaj's "The Pinkprint," first leaked online last December. And now the video for "Feeling Myself" has leaked.

In the video, Minaj and Queen Bey play with squirt guns in inflatable pools in pink fur coats, eat cheeseburgers in a bounce house, have a champagne pool party and share Now and Laters. It's pretty much the summer party of your dreams. (And proof that bucket hats only look good on Beyoncé.)

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Image via Tumblr

Beyoncé previously released her video for her new song "Die With You" on the artist-owned streaming service last month. Soon after, Rihanna released her video for "American Oxygen" and Jay Z released his music video for "Glory" via Tidal. There are also rumors that a possible Jay Z and Beyoncé joint album will exclusively premiere on Tidal, proving that the streaming service is serious about rewarding its users, especially after Jay Z's special Tidal shows over the weekend.

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R&B Singer August Alsina Reveals Loss Of Vision, Undergoes Eye Surgery

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R&B singer August Alsina has taken a proactive step to correct his vision.

On Friday, the 22-year-old New Orleans native revealed to his 2.7 million Instagram followers that he was in the process of undergoing eye surgery due to an unspecified eye disease. Alsina said he has lost vision in his left eye and is slightly blind in his right.

Following the procedure, he expressed his gratitude for regaining his vision and the lessons he's learned through the process.

“A lot of things that are so natural to us in life (like waking up and being able to see) we can take it for granted,” Alsina wrote on Instagram. “Thank God the OG for allowing me to see. The good the bad the ugly, I'm just glad to see.”






Alsina’s latest health news follows the singer's previous health scare which involved a three-day coma after he collapsed on stage during a September 2014 show in New York City.

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Chris Harrison Says A 'Full Mesnick' Breakdown Will Happen This Season On 'The Bachelorette'

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Here we go, "Bachelorette" fans. Season 11 kicks off Monday night with Part 1 of the two-part premiere, and it's about to go down. Britt Nilsson and Kaitlyn Bristowe will duke it out for the coveted, official title of the Bachelorette as 25 men choose among them in the opening episode. (Yes, the men, once again, have the power, despite the fact that this is a female-led show.)

"Immediately, one of the girls will be going home," host Chris Harrison told The Huffington Post in an interview Monday. "Tonight is kind of a two-pronged rose ceremony," he continued. "Early on, I come in and say there’s a ballot box and you can choose which girl you would like … it’s traumatic. And then Tuesday, in the second part of our premiere, the tables are turned and it’s business as usual as the Bachelorette gets ready for a rose ceremony. So, we kind of have two separate cocktail parties -- the first one is really more about the girls and then the next one is about the guys."

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But Harrison is totally against the idea that ABC and the producers of the show are "pitting two women against each other," and adamantly denies that the girls were enemies during filming.

"Obviously, ideally, this isn’t how they wanted it to go," he said. "But life doesn’t always go as planned, and so, I love the fact that they embraced what could have been an awkward or bad situation, and made the best of it. They empowered each other instead of being divisive and catty and adversarial. Some people thought, ‘You’re pitting women against each other.’ Well, are we? Because it’s what they make of the situation, and good on them to be strong women and empower each other and take control of the situation. Yeah, one of them is not the Bachelorette right now," Harrison continued. "Again, that’s not necessarily a bad thing, it’s just she wasn’t chosen to be that part right now. It’s not like she’s not going to date anymore ... they’re both beautiful. They’ll be okay."



So despite the fact that either Britt or Kaitlyn will get voted out by a group of handsome, somewhat fame-hungry men on the premiere episode, Harrison feels that the so-called "loser" in this situation will be just fine. Still, it's hard to believe that whoever ends up getting sent home won't feel subpar to the chosen Bachelorette. Let's face facts here: One of these ladies will feel diminished, and hurt, and embarrassed, and less beautiful, etc., etc., etc. But apparently while the battle of the Bachelorettes went down on set, Britt and Kaitlyn were nothing but kind to one another. (As they should be!) They "became kind of buddies," Harrison insisted, and would judge the guys together as they introduced themselves. "It was just these two friends going through this awkward moment," Harrison added. "It was cute."

Cute while it lasted, that is. According to the host, the whole exchange between the girls was edited to be more dramatic, of course. "You’ll see in the edit that it’s a little more competitive, because in editing we want to make it a little more dramatic or whatever, but it really didn’t play out that way in person. It didn’t feel that way." Okay, gotcha.

Still, Bachelor Nation tunes in for the drama, especially when Harrison teases each season with his trademark promo line -- and Season 11 of "The Bachelorette" is set to be pretty high up there on "The Most Dramatic Season Of 'The Bachelor/Bachelorette'" lists.

"It’s pretty damn close," Harrison told HuffPost. "If you are a student of the game, there is a full Mesnick. That’s how dramatic this season is ... there is a full Mesnick."*

*The Full Mesnick is "wailing over the railing," according to Harrison. Exhibit A:

jason mesnick

The two-part "Bachelorette" premiere airs May 18 at 9:00 p.m. ET and May 19 at 8:00 p.m. ET on ABC.

Make sure to check out episodes of HuffPost's "Bachelorette" podcast, Here To Make Friends, on The Huffington Post's SoundCloud page.

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33 Messy Braid Hairstyles That Prove Perfection Is Overrated

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Photo Credit: Jupiterimages via Getty Images


One of our favorite things about wearing messy braids is that you don't have to be a master hairstylist to achieve the look. Flyaways, visible bobby pins and frizzy ends often make these braided 'dos look effortlessly gorgeous.

Another added bonus about messy braids is that they don't require a particular hair texture or length. Everyone -- from Kelly Osbourne with her partially shaved head, to Mindy Kaling with her naturally wavy locks -- loves to sport them.

Take a cue from the celebrity messy braid hairstyles below and don't get caught up in creating perfectly polished plaits. Use your imagination and the hairstyling products in the slideshow to make braiding at home even easier.

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George Takei Uses The 'Bad Blood' Music Video To Challenge Marvel

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Where are all the female-fronted superhero movies? It's a question that's made headlines week after week following the release of Marvel's "Avengers: Age of Ultron," and is further fueled by Taylor Swift's music video for "Bad Blood." Featuring more than a dozen female celebrities as action stars, superheroes and villains, it's a pseudo-eff you to the lack of badass roles for women these days.

"Star Trek" actor and general hero George Takei agrees:




"Bad Blood" is produced by a woman (Swift), stars women (Swift and her girl gang) and has already raked in more than 21 million views on YouTube since its debut on Sunday night. Take note, Marvel.

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12 Times Jennifer Lopez Dressed Exactly Like A Figure Skater

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Photo credit: Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images

If there is one thing you can say about Jennifer Lopez, it's that she is never boring. Not only is the singer one of the most powerful entertainers in the business, but her style is always ... interesting.

On Sunday night we saw J.Lo at the 2015 Billboard Music Awards, where she stormed the red carpet looking a lot like a figure skater.

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And it got us thinking: How many other times has J.Lo worn what appears to be a costume, rather than an outfit? And the answer is a lot. Here are 11 other times J.Lo looked like she was ready to take the ice:



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Azealia Banks Calls BET Awards 'Bogus,' Says Nicki Minaj Wins 'Every Year'

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Azealia Banks is never one to hide her feelings, and it's safe to say she's really not feeling her BET Award nomination for Best Female Hip-Hop Artist.

Iggy Azalea, Nicki Minaj, Trina, Tink and Dej Loaf are up for the honor along with Banks, who took to Twitter on Monday to express her thoughts on the "bogus" award show:














Minaj certainly has been a favorite at the BET Awards and has taken home the Best Female Hip-Hop Artist for the last five consecutive years. She has yet to respond to Banks' comments, but she's likely basking in the afterglow of dropping the video for "Feeling Myself" with Beyonce.

Besides, Banks claims her comments weren't supposed to be taken as jabs at Minaj anyway:








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Marina Abramovic Is 'Pissed' At Jay Z, Says He 'Completely Used' Her

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The performance art world and the hip-hop community merged in 2013 when Marina Abramovic collaborated with Jay Z. Now, however, the Godmother of Performance Art isn't very happy with the rapper.

For Jay Z's "Picasso Baby" music video, Hov adapted Abramovic's 2010 MoMA retrospective, "The Artist Is Present," by performing the song for six hours straight in New York’s Pace Gallery in front of celebrities and fans. Abramovic appeared in the video and even had what seemed to be a poignant head-touching moment with the rapper, but now she says she's "pissed by" the aftermath of their collaboration. In an interview with Spike magazine, Abramovic said she only worked with Jay Z on one condition: "That he would help my institute." Yet she claims "he didn't."

Abramovic says that Jay Z was supposed to help with her self-titled performance institute and museum space, which Lady Gaga worked with her on, much to the performance artist's satisfaction. "He just completely used me," Abramovic told Spike.



Although the performance artist, who most recently had a retrospective at SESC Pompéia in São Paulo, doesn't regret her work with the "Glory" rapper, she won't do it again. "In the end, it was only a one-way transaction," she said. "I will never do it again, that I can say. Never."

Whether that means Abramovic will never work with Jay Z again specifically or major celebrities in general remains to be seen. We know those Lars Von Trier rumors weren't true (as she confirmed to The Huffington Post last November), but we can expect some film projects from the artist in the future.

For the full interview, head to Spike.

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Wall Trips Up Taylor Swift In 'Bad Blood' Blooper

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Taylor Swift performed (at least one of) her own stunts in "Bad Blood," her latest action-packed music video.

Need proof? Here's a video of Swift messing up one of those stunts in a big way, which she shared Monday on Instagram:

A video posted by Taylor Swift (@taylorswift) on




Fortunately, Swift wasn't injured in the incident, though she looks to have hit the deck awfully hard. "I'm good," the pop superstar assured concerned onlookers after tumbling through the wall. "I forgot to keep running."

In a caption along with the blooper, Swift encouraged readers to "Go to 1:42 of the #BadBloodMusicVideo to see the take where I got it right."

"This, however, was the first take," she added. "#stuntFAIL."

For reference, here's the shot that ended up making the final cut:

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Here Are Gifs Of All The Times Alicia And Kalinda Drank Together On 'The Good Wife'

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Warning: This post contains spoilers from the first six seasons of "The Good Wife," up to and including the season 6 finale.

When the sixth season of "The Good Wife" came to a close on May 10, it marked the end of one of TV's most powerful, complicated relationships: Kalicia. Up until this point of the marvelous show, attorney Alicia Florrick (Julianna Margulies) and investigator Kalinda Sharma (Archie Panjabi) were alternately the best of friends and the bitterest of enemies. There were runs of episodes where they almost always shown together, and much longer runs where they were never in the same room. Gossip around Hollywood chalks the latter up to a vicious but completely mysterious fight between Margulies and Panjabi, which only makes the on-screen relationship between the two characters more fascinating.

Amidst all the turmoil, there was one thing you could count on with these two: They would drink. They loved drinking, a trait they share with several other powerful female protagonists on TV dramas.

So to commemorate their glorious friendship, The Huffington Post combed through six seasons of "The Good Wife" to find all the scenes where Kalicia drank together. Here they are.

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The ritual began in the show's pilot, meaning it predates even the appearance of such staple characters of the show as Eli Gold (Alan Cumming) and David Lee (Zach Grenier). That's how integral it is to the show! In this first episode, Alicia and Kalinda work together to crack a difficult murder case involving a faked carjacking. After Alicia presents their killer evidence, and the jury goes out to deliberate, Kalinda tells her that it's a Stern Lockhart & Gardner tradition for lawyers to take tequila shots after their first jury trial.

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After Alicia takes her shot, Kalinda reveals that this was a trick: no such tradition exists. For a moment, it seems like Kalinda won't drink her tequila. But then, of course, she does. Alicia smiles.

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The next nine episodes feature lots of interactions between Alicia and Kalinda, but none of them involve alcohol, sadly. They don't drink together again until the 11th episode. Even then, it's not in a bar, but in a room in their office: they drink beer and eat kettle corn while watching TV news related to the two cases of the week.

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In episode 14, though, Alicia and Kalinda hit the bar again, because they have some personal matters to discuss. (Glenn Childs has asked Kalinda to testify against Alicia's husband Peter.) This time, Kalinda orders a dark beer...

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...while Alicia drinks what looks like tequila again. But she sips it instead of shooting it.

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This drinking session apparently goes well, because they go to another bar in episode 21. Alicia drinks what appears to be a martini with olives.

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Kalinda gets another dark beer.

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The very next episode, the second-to-last of season 1, opens with Alicia and Cary finding out that Alicia got the one full-time position they had been competing for all season. Kalinda waits for Alicia down the hall and, knowing that Alicia will likely feel crummy for beating out Cary, insists that they go to get drinks. They start by ordering two tequila shots in a row.

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They keep drinking, as is evident from the plethora of glasses that accumulate on the bar top.

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All that tequila gets them pretty wasted. A cute, younger guy hits on them, sending them into a giggle fit. He buys them yet another round of drinks.

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These extra drinks send them into the truthbomb-dropping stage of drunkenness, prompting Alicia to ask Kalinda whether she's a lesbian.

Kalinda refuses to answer, much to Alicia's chagrin. But then a call to Alicia's cell phone saves her. Will tells Alicia she has to go see a client, so she composes herself and goes to Colin Sweeney's house, where she finds him handcuffed to a dead female body. Alicia maintains admirable composure, considering her inebriation. Close call!

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Alicia and Kalinda next drink together in the sixth episode of season two, at an office party to celebrate a huge class action settlement. While drinking champagne, Alicia notes that Kalinda doesn't look as happy as everyone else at the firm.

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Just three episodes later, in "Nine Hours," one of the best episodes of the entire series, Alicia and Kalinda work on a stressful death row case from Alicia's apartment. At a particularly trying moment, Alicia grabs them two beers out of the fridge.

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They drink them on Alicia's bed. Slash fic alert!

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They actually only visit a bar one time in the second season, in the 17th episode. They return to their beloved tequila shots.

A couple episodes later, Alicia discovers that Kalinda had slept with Peter, one time, many years ago, before they were friends. She's completely furious. The revelation creates a rift between her and Peter -- and, more importantly, between her and Kalinda. Throughout most of season 3, they only speak when work requires them to. Some have speculated that the real-life tiff between Julianna Margulies and Archie Panjabi first emerged around this time, though Margulies attributed the break to natural developments in the plot.

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In any case, they finally drink together again in the final episode of season 3. Though it begins as a kind of "Parent Trap" situation -- Cary invited them both to the same bar -- they actually manage to have a bit of fun.

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They even take tequila shots together!

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This bar visit sets off something of a renaissance in their friendship. They visit bars three times in the first half of season 4. They sip red wine and whiskey in episode 6.

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Cary joins them for some cocktails of an indeterminate nature in episode 9.

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And then in episode 10, they go back to tequila shots. Kalinda is uncharacteristically late to the drinks in this episode, which worries Alicia.

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When she shows up, a few minutes after Alicia takes her first shot, she reveals that the drama surrounding her relationship with her erratic husband is over. What exactly happened to him is unclear, though when Kalinda says there's no chance of his ever returning, it's hard not to suspect that she killed him. He was a jerk, though, so this is an occasion for tequila.

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One of the sweetest of their drinks sessions comes in the next episode, when Alicia is staying at a remote hotel while waiting to be allowed to depose a key witness in a case. Kalinda brings her fresh clothes -- and a bottle of red wine.

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They lie in side-by-side beds glumly, chatting about this and that while drinking glasses of red wine. It's cute. It seems like maybe they're on track to be best friends again.

But then -- nothing. In a big way.

Alicia and Kalinda see each other briefly in the next episode, but after that, don't share a scene for more than two seasons after this hotel tryst. There's no on-screen blowout to explain their bizarre separation, so this is when many (starting with Buzzfeed) speculated that Panjabi and Margulies got in some terrible fight. No one in the press has ever managed to figure out what transpired; it's one of the best-kept secrets in Hollywood.

Whatever happened, though -- and something must have happened -- it kept Alicia and Kalinda apart right up until the very end of season 6.

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They sort of reunite in the season's penultimate episode, after Kalinda has fled town to avoid being killed by Lemond Bishop, when Alicia thinks back to two times they'd met before. But the flashback scenes are either filmed in such a way that the two actresses may never have even been in the same room, or are repurposed footage from season 1. Fun fact, though: although this same tug-of-war over Alicia's phone was shown in the drunken bar night in Season 1, Episode 22, the exact moment above is shot from two different camera angles in the two episodes.

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In the season 6 finale, they finally reunite for real. Kalinda surprises Alicia at a bar just before she leaves town for good. She orders two tequila shots for old time's sake.

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Then, though, something curious happens: Most of the shots in the scene show only one of the two actresses clearly. For that reason, many people started to speculate that they hadn't actually filmed most of it together.

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On May 15, TVLine reported, based on some anonymous inside intel, that the scene had indeed been faked. The shots that show only one face clearly were filmed with body doubles filling in for the obscured actor, while Panjabi and Margulies filmed the shots that include both characters separately, and then the footage was merged together in post-production.

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The fact that Panjabi and Margulies couldn't overcome their rumored enmity even for a day of filming made the parting -- likely the last time these two characters ever see each other, since Kalinda is now officially on the lam -- even sadder. Kalicia is, or, was, a friendship for the ages. These drinking buddies will live in our hearts and livers forever. And we look forward to revisiting the early season heyday of their relationship many times to come.

-- 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.

Shonda Rhimes Nails How Much Easier It Is To Be A Man, In One Flawless Speech

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Shonda Rhimes knows a thing or two about empowering women on-screen -- just watch any of her three primetime TV shows -- and on May 18, she used her platform to encourage women off-screen to absorb some of that badass feminist energy.

The Feminist Majority Foundation honored Rhimes and "Orange Is the New Black" showrunner Jenji Kohan at the 10th annual Global Women’s Rights Awards. Rhimes delivered a powerful speech about feminism, declaring: "I absolutely love being a woman. I mean, I love it. It never occurred to me not to love it." Later, she added, "I mean, I think I’m fabulous."

She also told a story about a time when her assistant told her that she wanted to experience life as a man for a day, reported Variety. Rhimes said her assistant wanted to know what it would be like "to have all of that," and then the showrunner proceeded to break down exactly what "all of that" actually means.
My assistant wants to walk through the world just for a day without some guy hitting on her when she runs to Starbucks to get me coffee. She wants to not be called "cute" by the security guard. She wants to not be told that she should be a model. She wants to not see the look of surprise on someone’s face when she tells them where she went to college. She wants her boobs to no longer be a topic of conversation. She wants to no longer make 70 cents on the dollar. She wants to not have old men legislate her vagina’s rights. She wants to not know that a glass ceiling ever existed. She wants to not believe that having a baby would end her career. She wants everything in the world to be made for her, be about her and speak mostly to her. Because that’s how it is for men.


According to the Los Angeles Times, Rhimes said she rejected her assistant's wish, instead encouraging her to embrace her womanhood -- even when it seems like a curse. "Living in the possession of a vagina is not a hindrance. It's not a flaw, it is a gift," she said.

"Lead the life you want to lead," Rhimes continued. "Be whoever you want to be. Have the babies. Be the CEO. Lean out. Lean in -- on your own terms. Just run this thing because I don't want the girls wishing they could be men for a day. I don't even want men wishing they could be women. I just want those words 'all of that,' I want all of that to apply to all of us."

Yes, Shonda -- to all of that.

H/T Variety

-- 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.

A Goodbye After 20 Years of Directing Late Show With David Letterman

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In the early evening of May 20 the words "used to be" will be grafted to the end of my name. Around 5:30, I will ask CBS Technical Director Tim Kennedy to "please fade to black." Later I will remove the few remaining personal items from my sunny office with the four windows and set out to civilian life. When my feet touch 53rd street I will take my place among "ex" ball players, "former" Congressmen and "used to be" ship captains. I will be referred to as "the former director" of Late Show with David Letterman. Along with the name change, comes the surrender of an all-access pass to New York City.



Consider the sound of six hands clapping. In March of 2012, the cast of the Broadway show Once was booked on Late Show. On the Friday before the appearance, I walked eight blocks south to the Bernard B. Jacobs Theater with a Late Show producer and my assistant. We sat in the darkened house as Cristin Milioti, Steve Kazee and the entire cast treated us to a very private performance of "Falling Slowly." We were invited onstage where these big-time performers warmly introduced themselves and asked if "we would like to see it again?" "Ah, thank you. We'd love to see it again."



Show business is filled with effusive strivers who realize their dream and can't stop telling you about it. Sorry, but yes, there was a younger version of me from the north shore of Staten Island desperate for a one-way ferry ride. Manhattan scared me -- it was loud, uncomfortable and uncaring, and, for reasons thousands of smarter people have tried to explain, absolutely magnetic. I had no choice. I needed to step off on the New York side and stay there.



One arctic January night, I rode the ferry again but this time I "owned" it. Late Show needed a new opening montage and I was given the resources and creative freedom to light up a boat named "The American Legion". After crossing the harbor with the ferry's captain, I grabbed a taxi to the West 30th street heliport where a pilot and camera crew harnessed me to the floor of a helicopter that was missing its doors. We did multiple passes across the bow of the ferry that was following a route and speed I requested. Later we buzzed the icons. I got a close look at the rivets dotting the roof of the Chrysler building and dangled my feet over the spiky crown of the Statue of Liberty. "Big deal" you say, "directors get to do that stuff all the time." True, but on what scale and how often? I was in show business every day for 20 years or 1040 Sundays if Billy Crystal is counting. I had a blast. If things didn't go well on Tuesday (they often didn't), I had the rest of the week to get it right (I often didn't.)



When my time at Late Show ends I will have directed over 3700 broadcasts, three openings and dozens of single camera shorts. I was treated to a private tour of the Empire State Building. I rode in blimps, police cars and the back seat of a taxi with Buzz Aldrin, who listened politely as I explained how to hold a pen in zero G. I had free run of Yankee Stadium and was part of a group that convinced George Steinbrenner to berate our Stage Manager, Biff Henderson. Mr. Steinbrenner turned out to be a great guy but the people around him seemed very nervous.



I put in hundreds of miles wandering the city streets with writers and camera crews in search of "found comedy". On one of the many days when the funny refused to reveal itself, a call was put in to City Hall. Forty five minutes later, we were standing on the porch of Gracie Mansion as Rudy Giuliani lectured us about the waters of the Long Island Sound, the Harlem River and Upper New York Bay converging off his front yard to form the currents of Hell Gate. He reminded me of a know-it-all uncle.



If Joaquin Phoenix can romance an operating system, can I love a building? In 1992 I was invited to abandon my comfortable union gig in the art deco halls of NBC and travel a few blocks west to a smelly, broken down theater that saw its glory days in the 1960s. There was no guarantee of long-term employment, but there was the opportunity to help refurbish of one of the world's most famous stages. Money blew down Broadway as the corporate might of CBS dragged a neglected ocean liner out of mothballs and made it seaworthy again. It was intoxicating. A dazzling broadcast facility was dropped into a swirl of fresh plaster, deep pile carpeting and velour seats. Everything was new; everything was possible.



I roamed the grand old building unchallenged, no one told me to leave (actually there was one time in 2003, long story). Instead stagehands and security people acknowledged me with snarky, absurd salutations that can only be traded among people who've shared changes of seasons and cycles of life. I've crawled through every accessible inch of The Ed Sullivan Theater. I've examined the pumping system that tames the stream running beneath the building and I've spied the plump rats who shared the stage with Letterman. I've climbed the sketchy iron ladder to the roof and stepped out a restaurant window onto the iconic marquee where Paul McCartney marked his return with a summertime street concert. I've pondered my good fortune in front of the René Bouché pencil drawing of Ed that hangs in the inner lobby and I've seen the looks of reverence from the many people I've taken through the place.



In October of 2002 Warren Zevon showed up for rehearsal; he was dying from mesothelioma. This was his last Late Show appearance and final public performance. He would be dead in less than a year.



Warren was a Late Show regular and covered for Paul Shaffer during the rare times Paul was unavailable. He was one of those guys you never saw coming. He didn't enter a room -- he appeared. On this day a rolling silence announced Warren's arrival. He took in our frightened, sad faces for a few perfectly timed beats and said, "I think it's the flu." Later, Warren and Letterman had a compelling and surprisingly amusing conversation during which Warren shared that he may have "made a tactical error in not going to a physician for 20 years." With the time he had left, Warren told us he intended to "enjoy every sandwich." He performed three songs, focusing every witness to a deep look at the abyss.



Each day, Late Show started with a blank page that demanded to be filled. There were plenty of smart ideas, but we often resorted to spectacle. We broke windows, blew up pumpkins and spilled thousands of marbles from seven floors up. We hosted presidential candidates, presidents and former presidents. (There's that "former" word again.) We re-enacted the Civil War and marched Marines under our marquee and through the aisles of the theater. We watched Philippe Petit take a wire walk 14 stories above an airbag that the city demanded, but he assured me would do nothing to save his life.



And then there are the folks, the humans who kept the assembly line moving. Late Show is populated by smart, stylish people with wicked senses of humor and impossibly fast minds. They gorge on popular culture and carry generous supplies of intuition and insight. Somehow they soldier on through jealousy, rage, dysfunction, cancelled guests, evolving technology, relentless scrutiny, tardy rock stars, fierce competition, 4 am calls, failed comedy ideas and a very demanding boss. They are clever, resilient and, at their core, among the most decent people you could ever hope to meet.



And then there's Letterman -- someone who relentlessly drove himself and the rest of us to the outer envelope of effort and clear thinking. In a random close encounter you're likely to be charmed -- what a great guy, so well-informed and so interested in what I have to say.



I grew up around funny people. Sarcasm and irony was my native language, finesse was an alien concept. Humming just beneath the surface of banter and insults was a bond allowing us to endure life's cruelties with silliness. Funny people are strong. They counter fear and the indignities of living by surfacing the ironic, the ridiculous and the unexplainable. If tragedy is never taken seriously, then nothing can be tragic, fear is eliminated. To be in the presence of funny people is effortless and exhilarating, to be around people trying to be funny requires you to pay attention -- it's work.



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When Dave was still at NBC hosting his 12:30 show, there were lavish Christmas parties. He'd buy out the Rockefeller Center Skating Rink and staff and crew would eat, drink and skate together. It was magical. Imagine sliding around on that famous ice minus the crowds, while envious tourists studied us from the plaza above.



As the evening wore on, small support clusters gathered to strategize about the best moment to approach Dave. We all wanted a little face time to register gratitude and maybe say something clever. People agonized over when to make the move and what to say. It was like lining up to visit Santa Claus, except Santa was a moving target, easily irritated and there would be no sitting on his lap.



It didn't feel right to bother him while he was skating; you weren't going to interrupt him while he was eating and there was never an easy way to join a conversation he was having with someone else. I was new to this world and couldn't reconcile the degree of angst hovering over the room. Smart people were struggling to measure the conditions of saying "thank you" to their boss at the company Christmas party. It seemed way too difficult but, like everyone else, I was thrilled to be included and desperately wanted to be invited to the next party and beyond.



As I silently raged against my diffidence and fear of celebrities, I was steadily reminded by more experienced partygoers that "you have to go up there." Time was running short. When I spied a gap around his table, I jumped. It was like stepping off the wing of a shrieking airplane. Beyond the pressure of coming up with something smart to say was the added burden of being evaluated by a gaggle of eavesdroppers who would overhear my remarks and report to the rest of the party. There would be judgment.



Before I was frightened off by the intense, narrow eyes that screamed "Oh God, here's another one," I stuck out my arm and said "Well Dave, it's time for the annual hand shake." I was sure that lampooning the absurdity of it all was something he'd appreciate. Turns out I was very wrong. Professional funny people don't like wise guys. My stab at neighborhood humor was met with soul-searing silence. "Thanks for everything," I stammered as he reflexively gripped my hand. "No Jerry, thank you," came the kind-of-loud reply. I slithered away reduced. I spent two agonizing hours trying to get it right and he dropped me with four words and a scowl. I wanted to stick my head in a bucket.



Spread over 25 years my Letterman encounters, occasionally direct sometimes by proxy, were dominated by similar miscues, garbled intentions and remorse. I never seemed to say the right thing, but the stakes got higher -- I was the director, perfectly positioned to screw things up and I often did. Despite an earnest desire to please, I never left work thinking I got it right.



Among Dave's many gifts is the uncanny ability to turn the simplest task into something unwieldy. Watch him dial a phone or attempt a tweet. He's also someone who can stare down the barrel of a single camera and distill the most complex human frailties with sideways insights that are hysterical and ultimately reassuring. The maddening part is the impossibility of predicting which version you're going to get.



Long before Paris Hilton, the obnoxious Housewives or the family Kardashian was Dave, antagonizing Bryant Gumbel with a bull horn or taunting General Electric's upper management with a gift basket. Dave pioneered reality television. If he was happy, you knew it and there was no escaping the times he was pissed. Search the night he announced the birth of his son or the time someone accused him of being a "non-voting Republican."



Brilliant writers showered him with scripts, concepts and set ups. Most pitches were rejected and the rare ones to make it through were drastically altered. Even the best ideas were a threat to his effort to spill his thoughts out in real time. The memorable nights were when he was on a rant or a roll and the vitriol or joy flowed fresh from his uniquely wired brain. While he filleted himself in pursuit of perfection, David Letterman harbored a deep disdain for anything suggesting rehearsal. The observations, the comedy, the biting conclusions had to be conjured in the moment. This was not a teleprompter guy, if it was being read, it wasn't a conversation, and if it wasn't a conversation you're not a broadcaster.



Dave is painfully self-aware. He lives in a state of perpetual examination and is incredulous that others don't make the same effort. If they did, the world wouldn't be populated by so many fools. He is easily the fastest knife in any fight and lights, microphones, cameras and direction only interfered. He was impossible to please, and if you stumbled into doing something right, he was convinced it would lessen your next effort. Was it simply some noble, Midwestern work ethic? I may never know.



Dave possessed a fierce drive to honor his opportunity. He threw everything he had at the show and left nothing on the table. Defying an earlier generation of generic NBC executives, David Letterman did become the uncontested heir to Johnny Carson. He walks off with his dream fully realized. He also gave me and many others a shot at their own professional dreams. The entertainment business is deep with people who passed through Dave's world and have gone on to considerable success.



Now it's time to hand the keys to a new owner. One day you're a big shot with fat budgets and vast resources and the next day you're not. Like the high school we leave behind or the vacated summer rental, someone kind of like you will occupy the space that was once yours and create memories of their own.



When Warren Zevon was leaving the theater that early autumn evening the impossible silence returned. The stage was dim and the theater's ghost light was in place. As Warren gingerly lowered himself into the backseat of a town car, Stagehand Kenny Sheehan attempted a goodbye -- "We'll see you around, Warren." A weary grin came to Warren's face as he reached for the door. "Yea, I'll see you somewhere."

-- 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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