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WATCH: 'Misfits' Season 4 Trailer

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"Misfits" Season 4 is just around the corner. The popular E4 series, which is now airing on Logo and Hulu in the U.S., will return with new episodes super soon, but to whet your appetite, E4 has released a new trailer featuring the new super-powered delinquents.

Season 4 of the series will stream exclusively on Hulu and Hulu Plus this fall
. "Misfits" lost three stars between Season 3 and 4. Iwan Rheon left the series and will now appear in "Game of Thrones." Lauran Socha, the BAFTA-winning actress known to "Misfits" fans as the foul-mouthed Kelly, was arrested and sentenced to jail for racially aggravated assault against a taxi driver and [SPOILER WARNING] Antonia Thomas' character was killed off in the Season 3 finale.

The series will introduce new characters, including Jess (Karla Crome) and Finn (Nathan McMullen).

"So we have Jess [Karla Crome] and Finn [Nathan McMullen] on community service and we meet them in episode one," producer Matt Stevens said in a web chat by way of Den of Geek. "Then we have Alex [Matt Stoke], who is not in orange but is key to the series story arc and finally Abby [Natasha O'Keefe] who the gang meet at a party later in the series but you will have to see if she joins the main gang or not ... We do have a fab new probation worker called Greg who has anger management issues. He’s played by the wonderful Shaun Dooley."

Take a look at the trailer below.


Christopher Lloyd's New TV Gig

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Christopher Lloyd is going back to the future ... again!

According to EW, the actor has been cast in a "Back to the Future"-themed episode of "Raising Hope" as a loan collector named Dennis Powers.

In other casting news...

Dave Navarro is hitting "Sons Of Anarchy."
Navarro will guest star on the FX drama as a gang member who is tied to a "companionator."[THR]

Gina Torres is "Hannibal"-bound.
Torres has joined the NBC series as Jack Crawford's (Laurence Fishburn) wife. [TVLine]

Ryan Sypek and Kate Lang are joining "Phys Ed."
Sypek and Johnson have nabbed the lead roles in ABC's new comedy pilot. [Disney]

PHOTOS: Post-Baby Reese Witherspoon Is Looking Good

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Reese Witherspoon picked up a few items during a shopping trip around Santa Monica yesterday.

Hoda Searches For New Best Friend

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With Kathie Lee Gifford busy with the production of her new Broadway show “Scandalous,” her "Today" co-host Hoda Kotb was feeling a little lonely Monday. So she set out on a quest to find a new best friend.

Hoda tried to have a drink with some unwelcoming quilters, hung out with three drag queens and tried to befriend a few canines, but nothing quite clicked. Will she ever find a new BFF? "Today" promised a few more installments of the segment so viewers can keep tabs on her progress.

TV Replay scours the vast television landscape to find the most interesting, amusing, and, on a good day, amazing moments, and delivers them right to your browser.

Chris Krapek: If Ethan Hawke and I Were Best Friends

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My entire life, I've wanted to be best friends with Ethan Hawke.

There's just something about him that seems super cool. Like, he isn't even trying to be cool either, he just is. He would be able to recommend all the important literature I've never read and would discuss all of the intricacies of post-modernism and advise me on the proper depth of V-necks. But he'd still be sooo down to earth, you know?

Our spiritual connection started when I was a kid, when I found out we shared the same birthday in the newspaper. In high school, I would let my friends borrow my DVD of Before Sunrise, billing it as a movie that "will change your life." Last year, I purchased his novel The Hottest State at a used bookstore and found it autographed: "To Jessica, Ethan Hawke." There's some sort of existential, I Heart Huckabees, thread-pulling going on here.

Naturally, this weekend I sought out his new flick Sinister over Oscar hopeful Here Comes The Boom and that other movie where Ben Affleck adds a new hairpiece to his already immaculate repertoire. Although Sinister is semi-disturbing and a pretty decent piece of "OMG, LOUD NOISE!" horror, the Hawke-man carries the movie like a newborn child. Since it made an impressive $18.2 million at the box office, the 41-year-old actor's visbility is at a renewed high.

E. Hawke is back, baby! Now's as good time as any to make my case:

If Ethan Hawke and I were best friends...

  • We would go to Buffalo Wild Wings and order obscure gin and call the bartender a Philistine for not carrying it. We'd order Bud Light instead to experience how the proletariat lives and we'd max out on some Jammin' Jalapeno wings because we're here anyway, so why not?
  • We'd roll our own cigarettes from all natural tobacco grown on Phillip Seymour Hoffman's farm.
  • Being a posterboy for Generation X, he'd confide in me and tell me that nobody really gave a shit about Pavement back then and everyone was really all about Spin Doctors.
  • I would make fun of his cheekbones for looking "heroin chic" and he would make fun of my eyebrows for being "Scorsese chic" and we'd not talk for a few days. He'd try to FaceTime me and on his fourth attempt, I'd pick up and we wouldn't even have to say we're sorry to each other because that's what friends do.
  • We'd both have interesting facial hair, which would evolve every month. Sometimes it would be coordinated.
  • When Richard Linklater would show up at the bar, I'd say "Nice to see you again, Dick" in a really condescending way that would let him know that just because you make six movies with someone, it doesn't automatically make you BFFs.
  • He'd introduce me to Lisa Loeb and we'd all hang out together at first, but then I'd start seeing Lisa without him. He'd get surprisingly jealous after I break plans with him to go to a Wilco show so I could go to Martha's Vineyard with Lisa instead. He'd get pissy and Lisa would describe it as being "typical Ethan." We'd meet up in a few weeks at a neutral location and I'd ask, "Why can't you just be happy for me?" and he'd say "I am, I just miss my best friend."
  • Three times a year, we'd fly to Paris and just meander around with Julie Delpy.
  • I'd be like, "E., WTF, why did you agree to do Daybreakers?" and he'd show me Walt Whitman's original manuscript for Leaves of Grass and he'd be like "That's why."
  • When we are at cocktail parties and someone says something is "Kafkaesque," we'd laugh under our breaths because seriously, stop trying so hard.
  • While everyone is discussing Downton Abbey at one of our renowned dinner parties (free range so-and-sos, red velvet whatevers) we'd say our favorite show is Manswers and begin dissecting if you could really get herpes from your cat, just to see the disgusted look on Vincent D'Onofrio's face.
  • For Christmas every year, he'd let me recreate scenes from Training Day where I'm Denzel and Ethan is Ethan. I'd always want to do the part where he smokes PCP and he would always want to do the scene where he's put in the bathtub. We'd comprise and do half-and-half.
  • On Sunday afternoons in the fall, we'd skip football (or"doltball," as Ethan calls it) and instead read Sylvia Plath and discuss her use of silence. Feeling isolated, I would suggest we start a society; a dead poets society. Ethan would say "good one," in a really sarcastic snarl and I'd be confused at first, then ultimately realize what a fool I am.

That's it, Ethan. If you want to be best friends (seriously, why wouldn't you?), please fly me to Manhattan and put me up in a modest four bedroom, three bath apartment so we can begin this new journey together.

Is Justin Bieber's Career Losing Steam?

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Sharon Osbourne predicted that Justin Bieber’s star will soon fade. “His fans are growing up -- they’re 18, 19-year-olds now. … They’re young women. And he still looks like that little boy!” she said in Sydney. She added that her gut tells her Bieber won’t stand the test of time.

Although Bieber tweeted that he wasn’t worried about Sharon’s comments, the “America’s Got Talent” judge and her gut might be onto something -- especially considering how Bieber's hoax last week to promote his new video and song seems to have backfired.

“Beauty and a Beat” failed to ignite on iTunes, with downloads putting it at only No. 50, while Bieber's album "Believe" has so far been just a modest hit.

“Tweeting that his computer and camera were stolen and then having a naked photograph that was reported to be him show up online seemed desperate,” one PR professional told me. “Next, his new official video comes out and the whole thing was a hoax! It is all so stupid. Fans never like being made a fool out of.”

Additionally, Justin has been accused of scalping his own concert tickets to inflate the value by selling them on stubhub.com.

“No artist can remain as hot as Justin was forever,” one industry insider told me. “However, creating PR stunts and silly hoaxes is not the way to prove Sharon wrong. If Justin wants to remain relevant in the long run, he should focus on putting out great music and not worry about the other stuff.”

Melissa Webster: What Would John Lennon Think?

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"Revolution" by the Beatles [remastered for HD] performed on the David Frost Show in 1968 and published for the Beatles Anthology.

As one of the greatest rock legends of all time, and one of my personal heroes, I can't help but wonder what John Lennon would think of the digital music scene that has transformed the music industry from a physical content distribution powerhouse to a crowd-sourcing, fan-driven social platform of equals, and all the technological accessories it has spawned. Would he secretly embrace the technology while publicly spurning anything short of vinyl records as a bastardization of music, claiming to be a stoic purist? Or, would he publicly welcome the changes and call it evolution, or shall we say "Revolution," of sorts for music and artists? My guess is he'd probably do a bit of both, casting aside some things while endorsing and supporting others. The charge of "sell-out" is, after all, a mainstay among rock 'n' roll purists, and even the Beatles weren't immune to the accusation.

I imagine with Lennon's free-thinking, hippie, liberal ways (he did actually live the life he preached), he'd shrug his shoulders and view the file-sharing of free, downloadable music as the unstoppable, inevitable conclusion to an archaic industry that once served its purpose but is now past its prime as the new technologically advanced industry emerges. But, what about apps that allow musicians to download and play sheet music to his lyrics on a computer they can hold in their hand? Or apps that let him write his own lyrics on his telephone? Would he use them, or stick to pen and paper? And live-streaming his concerts online for anyone with an Internet connection to watch free of charge: What would he think about that?

So, it was in the week of John Lennon's birthday that I pondered these questions, when I stumbled upon a new digital sheet music app, featuring this week music from the Beatles in honor of his birthday. Being the free-thinking liberal he was, I'd like to think this falls in the category of one of the things he'd endorse as a way to share his music with the world, mostly because I just think it's cool. Called Tonara, it partners with major sheet-music retailers to provide a variety of sheet music of every genre of major artists for musicians to download and play. And, it isn't just normal sheet music -- it actually listens to musicians as they play, follows their progress and turns the pages for them. It also allows musicians to record their work and make notes as they go along. The convenience alone, and the trees it saves along the way, makes me think John Lennon would approve.

And livestreaming? This thought makes me laugh, because there's no doubt in my mind John Lennon would be the first to lead the charge, illegally climbing to the roof of a building advertising free Wi-Fi, with cameras in tow, to play the first free concert via the Internet; and it wouldn't be preceded by ad-heavy content or a promotional roll-out or sponsorship by one of the handful of music conglomerates that dominates the industry. Just a few men and their instruments, a cheap Internet connection and a camera, gifting the world with a concert most would never get to see in reality. Supposedly a bit of a prankster, I imagine he'd consider this a real lark and laugh at the possibility.

And the other app? The one that lets him write his lyrics on a computer he holds in his hand? This one may be a little more complicated. In this one thing, I believe John Lennon would have been a stubborn purist, preferring the connection of pen to paper, resisting the move towards the convenience of digital and the environmentally friendly impact it has on the world around us. I imagine him pulling out his iPhone and jotting down a burst of inspiration that hits him while he's sitting in the waiting room of a doctor's office. Ya know, once he figured out how to work his smartphone. But, I also imagine him transferring those lyrics to paper the moment he got home, at least in the beginning, clinging to the feel of holding a pen in his hand and the way the words flow from the brain, down the arm and onto the page, a release of creative energy and brilliance.

So what would John Lennon think about the new digital music environment and other's ability to access his music instantly in a variety of formats? Alas, we'll never really know, but the speculation is as limitless as the Internet itself. Maybe they should make an app for that.

On The Prowl?

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Is Katie Holmes ready to throw her hat back in the dating ring?

Not yet, according to Radar Online. But when she does, it reportedly won't be with any Hollywood types, the site revealed.

Holmes filed for divorce from Tom Cruise -- her husband of five years -- in June 2012. The split was finalized in August 2012. The former couple have one child together, daughter Suri.

Below we've put together five prospective matches for Holmes based on her former flings and reported preferences -- with few wildcards thrown in for good measure. Click through our picks and weigh in: Who should Holmes date next?


'Top Model' Renewed, Adds Male Models

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"America's Next Top Model" will be back for a Cycle 20 and this time it's returning with some testosterone. That's right, the next season "America's Next Top Model" will include male models.

Cycle 20 will debut in summer 2013. A specific premiere date has not yet been announced.

The male models will move into the same house as the female models, and the new cycle will include Cycle 19's added social media elements that let viewers vote for their favorite models.

There's no word on what the judge panel will look like for Cycle 20. Host and executive producer Tyra Banks shook up the series when she parted ways with Nigel Barker, Jay Manuel and J. Alexander. The three were replaced with Johnny Wujek as photo shoot creative consultant, social media correspondent Bryanboy, and male model Rob Evans. The judge panel for Cycly 19 also included Kelly Cutrone.

Sharon Needles: 'RuPaul's All-Stars Drag Race' Is 'My Football'

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Drag superstar Sharon Needles can't contain the excitement for the new season of "RuPaul’s All-Stars Drag Race," which makes its highly anticipated premiere on Monday, Oct. 22.

Aaron Coady (aka Sharon, the fourth season winner of "RuPaul's Drag Race") speaks in length about the show in this special teaser. Coady calls the show "my playoff season. This is my football."

He went on to note, "I see a lot of myself in these characters and I think other people do, too -- not just visually but in terms of their struggle, their stories and their humanity."

"RuPaul's All-Stars Drag Race" airs Mondays on Logo at 9 p.m. EST. For more information, click here.

WATCH: Sophia Bush On Stripping Down For 'Partners'

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"Partners" star Sophia Bush stopped by HuffPost Live earlier this week to discuss her recent charity work and her role on the new CBS comedy, which has apparently already put her in some fairly compromising positions ...

This week's episode focused on the theme of boundaries (namely, how Michael Urie's character, Louis, doesn't have any) which required Bush to strip down to her underwear in front of a live studio audience -- and her parents.

"Now that I'm in Joe's [David Krumholtz's] life ... [Louis] cannot just barge into our apartment whenever he wants to, because I'm a lady and sometimes I don't have any clothes on," Bush explained. "So not only does Michael Urie barge in on me in my bra ... our audience got to do that as well."

When she's not stripping down for the sake of comedy, Bush is involved with a number of charities. Her latest endeavor, Pencils of Promise, builds schools in countries with high needs in education infrastructure. Check out the clip above for more on "Partners," or watch Bush's HuffPost Live segment in full.

"Partners" airs Mondays at 8:30 p.m. ET on CBS.

Kate Gosselin's Out Of A Job.. Again

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Better luck next time!

Kate Gosselin was fired from her job as a blogger for CouponCabin after her personality didn't mesh with the company's standards. Company CEO Scott Kluth announced Tuesday that "a series of recent events have made it clear" that the 37-year-old single mom of eight and her ideas "do not align with the authenticity that we set out to build almost a decade ago." Ouch.

And that's not all Kluth had to say. He added, "Ms. Gosselin is simply not a good fit with the wonderful team and culture at CouponCabin."

Gosselin, who has been trying to get another reality show since "Kate Plus 8" was canceled last year, did not contribute to the company the way Klutch would have liked and had to be let go. "Her contributions garnered both positive attention and criticism" during her 11 months working for the site. "We wish Kate, her family and her support staff all the best."

Although Gosselin has yet to release a statement regarding her current debacle, the former reality star tweeted today, "Good afternoon! I'm alive! I've been super busy working away! I'm having lots of fun and can't wait to share! No worries..we will chat soon! XO."

Guess Gosselin's on to her next project ...

Still Dating: John Mayer, Katy Perry Get Birthday Lunch

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They're dating! They're not! They've over! They're not! Katy Perry and John Mayer looked very much like a still-together couple as they grabbed a birthday lunch at New York's trendy ABC Kitchen on Wednesday. Mayer, who turns 35 today, was also spotted Sunday night in the city, noshing at Pearl restaurant with Perry, 27, in the West Village before ducking into a private nightclub together.

Perry and Mayer reportedly first started dating in June, spurring endless speculation about the couple's breakups and subsequent reconciliations. Quick, someone tell Taylor Swift to write a new song.

john mayer katy perry still dating


Steve Karras: Ian Fleming: The Real Life Behind Cinema's James Bond

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Skyfall is the latest installment in the James Bond franchise to hit theatres in November. Daniel Craig is the sixth 007 to climb into an Aston Martin and run the usual gauntlet of poison-tipped-shoe-wearing psychopaths, cunning femme fatale and double-agents with exploding briefcases powerful enough to take out Portugal. 

Bond's fictional roots can be traced somewhere back to the Second World War, when a British intelligence officer named Ian Fleming told a colleague that he planned to write a spy novel, someday, when he returned to civilian life. 

And in 1952, at 44 years old, drawing from his own wartime experience, Fleming sat down to create the most enduring spy drama in history, its main protagonist a British intelligence officer known only to other MI6 agents by his code number, 007, and with the rather innocuous nom de guerre James Bond.

Fleming died 12 years later, but made full use of that short period of time, cranking out the 12 novels and two collections of short stories that became the blueprint for a 53-year franchise -- 22 feature films and the popular Bond-inspired The Man From U.N.C.L.E. TV series.

Fleming was born into privilege in 1908. His father, Valentine Fleming, was a descendent of William the Conqueror and the son of a wealthy Scottish banker. Valentine was a conservative member of Parliament and close friend of Winston Churchill that was commissioned an officer in the British Army at the outbreak of war in 1914. Major Valentine Fleming, of the Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars, was killed by shelling in Picardy, France in 1917. Ian Fleming was nine at the time of his father's death, and spent the rest of his life endeavoring to live up to his father's enormous legacy.

In his teens, Fleming distinguished himself as an athlete at Eton College, but left before graduation and was admitted to the prestigious Royal Military College. Military regimentation was unsettling for fiercely independent Fleming, and he dropped out after a year, then was off to strengthen his language skills at the Universities of Munich and Geneva. For the next few years, he knocked around Europe, covering events for the Reuters news agency (including a Soviet spy trial) before returning to England in 1933 to work the next six years in banking.

At the outbreak of war in 1939, Fleming was recruited into Naval Intelligence, was commissioned a lieutenant and was assigned to the office of Admiral John Godfrey, later considered Britain's foremost experts in espionage. The war was Fleming's proving grounds and he excelled, rising to the rank of commander.

"Before the war, he had tried several careers with mixed success," Fleming's official bibliographer Jon Gilbert told us.

"His role in Naval Intelligence really focused his skills as an 'ideas man,' and he became a valued member of his department with increased responsibilities."

Under Admiral Godfrey, Fleming earned a solid reputation for his imaginative suggestions of ways to gather German intelligence and also showed a flair for writing (his eloquent reports were favorites among superiors).

Fleming oversaw the establishment of No. 30 Commando, the 30 Assault Unit (30AU), composed of highly trained German experts and saboteurs, sent ahead of invasion forces to amass enemy documents valuable to allied intelligence services. 

"We can imagine that 30 Assault Unit's capture of the entire German naval archives at Tambach in 1944, which was supervised by Commander Fleming, was a personal triumph and likely his finest hour in service," Gilbert said.

Fleming also played a role in the creation of a highly mobile intelligence gathering unit called T-Force, attached to different allied army groups tasked to capture German soldiers, documents, and any valuable information deemed useful to the allied advance on Germany.

When the war finished, Fleming got a job with the Kemsley news group, overseeing its correspondents posted around the world. He lived the free life of a bachelor and satisfied his taste for travel, expensive clothes, and women.

"In appearance he was quite dapper, with a liking for polka-dot bow ties and tailored suits," Gilbert said.

"He was also rather flamboyant with his cars -- he owned several exotic imported vehicles such as a Ford Thunderbird, an AC Aceca Coupe and a Studebaker Avanti. He adored motor cars, and this is apparent in his detailed written descriptions of them -- especially the Aston Martin, which became the signature car of James Bond. In an article for The Spectator (1958) he even foretold of electric motors succeeding the internal combustion engine."

On his many winter holiday trips to Jamaica, he fell in love with the island and eventually bought the property where he would write his first book, Casino Royale, and the 11 others to follow.

It's not exactly clear if the character of James Bond was Fleming's idealized image of himself or a composite of people he came across during the war. There are, however, certain tastes and characteristics shared by the character and Fleming; but it's for certain that his experiences with various operatives during the war also influenced his writing.

"It has been suggested elsewhere that he struggled for recognition from more literary circles, but he actually did not mind what people thought or said of his books. At the time, there was a good deal of critical acclaim for the Bond books from contemporary heavyweight authors such as Raymond Chandler and Somerset Maugham," Gilbert said.

The war had left Fleming exhausted. He was a heavy smoker and drinker for the rest of his life, and thus struggled with his health. He was able to maintain a highly disciplined writing schedule after settling down to get married. He suffered a massive heart attack in 1961, and while recuperating wrote his only non-Bond book, Chitty Chitty Bang Bang -- a book for his son Caspar about a magical car with the ability to fly -- that was also eventually made into a feature film. 

Fleming continued to drink, smoke and satisfy his tremendous appetite for travel, all with little regard for his physical well-being. It was a second heart attack in 1964 that killed him, while he was in England attending his mother's funeral.

While he only made it to 56, he lived an active and fulfilling life. Though he only became a novelist later in life, his Bond novels are what he's best known for, and he lived to see two of them made into movies, Dr. No (1962) and From Russia With Love (1963).

To read more posts like this, go to Web2Carz.com

Ricky Gervais' Advice For Tina Fey & Amy Poehler

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Ricky Gervais may have scared the pants off of A-listers as the snarky, saucy host of the Golden Globe Awards for the past three years, but he good-naturedly said Tuesday he decided to pass the baton to Tina Fey and Amy Poehler as co-hosts of next year’s Golden Globes.


The Return Of 'Trapped In The Closet'

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This Thanksgiving, R. Kelly is giving fans one more thing to be thankful for: 20 more chapters of "Trapped in the Closet."

The epic 22-part song series/soap opera/cultural phenom was originally released in chapters by Kelly between the years of 2005 and 2007. Now, Kelly has announced in an interview with Time that he has filmed 20 more chapters of "Trapped," to be released the day after Thanksgiving.

The series may not end at 42 chapters. As Kelly says in the interview, "'Trapped in the Closet' is forever."

For more on R. Kelly, head over to Time.

William J. Mann: The Gays Behind Barbra (And Nearly Every Other Gay Icon)

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As I travel around the country for my book Hello Gorgeous: Becoming Barbra Streisand, I've been getting some surprised reactions from interviewers and readers about how many gay men helped shape Barbra's look, sound and stage presence at the beginning of her career. Isn't it ironic, they ask me, that she would then go on to become such a quintessential gay icon?

Actually, it's not ironic at all. In the early 1960s, when Streisand was just starting out, gay audiences instinctively recognized something very familiar about her, a shared sensibility. That was only logical, given that her sensibility had been nurtured by gay men, after all. And this was hardly a new phenomenon. Virtually every other significant gay icon had followed the same path. Almost to a dame -- from Mae West to Lady Gaga -- the greatest gay icons have been molded early in their careers by gay mentors and collaborators.

Now, before anyone protests that I'm making too much of a claim here, let me add that, of course, Streisand (and her fellow icons) first had to have that certain X factor, that magical star quality, as well as heaps of talent. Without any of that, even the best gay Svengalis couldn't do much. But when we go looking for the reasons why certain stars -- Streisand, West, Gaga, Judy Garland, Madonna, Marilyn Monroe -- have such appeal for gay men and inspire such devoted gay followings, I think we have to pay careful consideration to who and what influenced them in their formative years.

As I document in my book, the young Streisand was surrounded by a triumvirate of gay men who contributed enormously to how she was first presented to the world. Her boyfriend Barry Dennen (who would later come out as gay) was one of the first to recognize the gift of Barbra's voice and encourage her to pursue work as a singer. Dennen introduced Barbra to the music of all the legendary chanteuses, from Helen Kane to Mabel Mercer to Billie Holliday to Judy Garland, while helping her develop her singing style and stage banter. Barbra's pal Terry Leong taught her about fashion, creating her whimsical, thrift-shop, avant-garde clothing sense. Another pal, Bob Schulenberg, polished her look, aiming for a more "goddess-like" style and creating Barbra's signature eye makeup and early hairstyles.

So it was this heavily gay-influenced creature who walked onto the stage at the Lion, a gay bar, and wowed everybody present. Word spread quickly through New York's gay communities that this Streisand kid was special. Soon she was dazzling at other nightclubs with large lavender followings, including the Bon Soir and the Blue Angel. Among those in the audience who recognized something magical about Barbra was Arthur Laurents, one of the least disguised gay men to ever work in the theater. Laurents cast Streisand in I Can Get It for You Wholesale and refined her persona even more. This was the show that launched Barbra on her swift rise to the top.

For longtime theater aficionados, however, Streisand's gay tutelage was acknowledged as merely part of a long tradition, one with a very impressive track record. At the beginning of the 20th century, a bawdy, busty young woman by the name of Mary Jane West was inspired by the campy, cheeky female impersonator Bert Savoy and other drag-queen pals to create her own stage persona, which she called Mae West. As a young, wide-eyed innocent in Hollywood, Lucille LeSueur was lucky that her first friend at MGM was top actor William Haines, who was unapologetically gay and supremely talented at star making. It was Haines who helped turn Lucille into Joan Crawford.

Katharine Hepburn's early screen image -- tomboyish, defiant and subversive -- was molded by the gay director George Cukor. Judy Garland, right from her days as a child star, was modeled into the icon she would become by a series of gay mentors who helped her develop her singing style and stage persona. Among them were composer-producer Roger Edens, director Charles Walters and director Vincente Minnelli (whom she'd marry). Marilyn Monroe relied on gay choreographer Jack Cole not just for dance moves but also for help in how she looked, how she sounded and how she dealt with the studio and the press.

The tradition continued. Cher had Bob Mackie and others. Liza Minnelli had more gay godfathers than most, given all the gay men who surrounded her mother. Bette Midler emerged straight out of the gay baths; who would she be without Bruce Vilanch? Madonna came out of the New York gay scene of the late 1970s and early '80s and has paid tribute to the formative impact of such gay friends as Keith Haring and Martin Burgoyne. Thirty years later Lady Gaga blossomed within a similar milieu, influenced by gay club kids and musicians. Her very name is a tribute to Freddie Mercury and Queen, after their song "Radio Ga Ga." Today practically every new female celebrity makes a show of her gay collaborators and fan base, trying hard to cultivate gay iconhood. They've seen how well it's worked for Barbra, Judy and the rest.

Again, none of this takes away from the talent or star appeal of these legendary ladies. The magic has to come first from inside. If Streisand wasn't as spectacular as her early handlers -- gay and straight -- believed, then she wouldn't have become the superstar she remains. But it shouldn't be surprising to learn that gay men have played significant parts in the creation of gay icons. It used to be said that behind every great man was a woman. What seems to be more true is that behind every great gay icon is a gay man (or two or three or 20).

Andrew Sharpless: World Food Day - Let's Talk About the Oceans

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Today is World Food Day. Established in 1979 by the United Nations, the day was meant to bring attention to, and ignite political will for, the fight to end world hunger. At Oceana this day means a lot to us. We believe that ending world hunger and establishing food security on a more crowded planet will require not only innovations in land-based agriculture but an entirely new approach to managing what could again become a bountiful resource, our oceans.

The theme of this year's World Food Day is cooperatives, a model that has been proven to work both at land and at sea. But if any model of harvesting more food from the ocean (including cooperatives) is going to work, we need to make sure it's abundant and full of fish. This renewable source of food covers 70 percent of the world, but we're not maximizing its potential to feed people. If managed better, estimates show that the ocean could provide a nutritious meal to 700 million people every day at a sustainable rate.

Some of the very countries that are struggling most with food insecurity are also fortunate to control some of the most productive fisheries in the world. For example, India and the Philippines, which were just ranked poorly in terms of food security in the newly published 2012 Global Hunger Index, both rank in the top 15 countries in the world for fish catch. But their fisheries, like many others, are being overfished, limiting their potential to produce even more fish and feed more people. In fact, a new study published in the journal Science suggests a global fishery recovery could increase fish yield up to 40 percent. Many of the most food insecure countries have the ability to create more food for their hungry citizens just by better managing their fisheries.

There are clear examples of how to turn exploited fisheries around and ensure that they will be able to help feed the 2 billion more people expected by 2050. We've seen overfished species rebound quickly with this type of management. After discard bans were imposed for Norwegian cod in the late 1980s, the once overfished species came back quickly. The same story can be told of the Eastern Baltic cod which have recovered in the last decade. We see similar stories happening all around the world.

By combating overfishing and practically restoring key fish stocks, like it has been done in the U.S. and Norway, countries like India and the Philippines have it within their reach to make more wild seafood accessible to their hungry citizens. It takes the implementation of just three tried and true fisheries management policies to bring back fish stocks: enforcing scientific quotas, reducing bycatch and protecting habitat. Doing this in the places that produce the most wild fish will allow fish stocks to rebound enough to feed hundreds of millions more people.

While global fish catch has been declining since the late 1980s, we're not doomed to fish out the oceans. If India, the Philippines and the other 23 countries that control 75% of the world's fish catch begin to manage their fisheries in a sustainable way, we'll see global fish catch increase beyond historic peak levels. The oceans will be able to help offset the 70 percent increase in food production needed by 2050 -- and it can do so indefinitely.

Restoring the ocean's abundance will ensure that artisanal fishermen and fishing cooperatives all over the world will again have access to the kind of resources their ancestors once did. And with nine billion people projected to live on earth by 2050, we need everything on the table, including a healthy ocean full of fish.

It's Official: Khloe Kardashian & Mario Lopez To Host 'X Factor'

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After months of speculation, Fox has chosen Khloé Kardashian Odom and Mario Lopez as hosts of "The X Factor" Season 2, the network announced Tuesday.

The pair will make their first appearance when the reality competition's live rounds kick off in November. “The worst kept secret in Hollywood is out,” said producer/judge Simon Cowell in a statement. “Mario and Khloé are our hosts. They will debut on our first live show in November and I couldn’t be happier.”

“I’m so thrilled to become a part of 'The X Factor' family,” said Odom. “I’ve been a big fan of the show and look forward to working with Simon and all of the judges. It’s going to be so much fun!”

“I’m very excited to be joining 'The X Factor' team,” said Lopez. “I love the show, and I’ve been a big fan of Simon Cowell and the judges for a long time. Khloé and I have been friends for years and I know we’ll be a great team and have a blast.”

The pair are replacing Welsh presenter Steve Jones, who exited the show after the first season, along with judges Paula Abdul and Nicole Scherzinger. The coaches were replaced by Britney Spears and Demi Lovato, but the show wasn't so quick to name a successor for Jones. Others reported to be in the running were Stacy Keibler and Darren Criss.

"The X Factor" live shows begin Thursday Nov. 1 at 8 p.m. ET, continuing on a special night, Sunday, Nov. 4 at 8 p.m. ET on Fox.

Do you approve of Kardashian Odom and Lopez as hosts? Weigh in below!

'Emily Owens M.D.' Cast Talks Drama, 'Grey's' Comparisons & More!

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"Emily Owens M.D." (premieres Tues., Oct. 16 at 9 p.m. ET on The CW) has been hailed the all-new "Grey's Anatomy." But the cast says there's more to it than that.

The CW series follows Mamie Gummer, the titular character herself, who is starting her medical internship; Will Collins (Justin Hartley), Emily's best friend, but possibly more, who also works with her; Cassandra Kopelson (Aja Naomi King), Emily's high school rival who resurfaces at her internship ... and has her eye on Will; Tyra Granger (Kelly McCreary), Emily's new friend and closeted lesbian due to her father being chief of surgery at the hospital; and Micah Ellis (Michael Rady), the fifth-year resident guiding the new interns through the hospital halls.

Below, the actors talk about "Grey's Anatomy" comparisons, love triangles, mastering medical jargon and more!

"Emily Owens M.D." premieres Tues., Oct. 16 at 9 p.m. ET on The CW.

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