Quantcast
Channel: BuzzFeed - Latest
Viewing all 215890 articles
Browse latest View live

Watch The Cast Of "The Force Awakens" Get Crushed By A 7-Year-Old In "Star Wars" Trivia

$
0
0

The defeat took place on Jimmy Kimmel Live, and J.J. Abrams hosted the battle.

Arden Hayes, a 7-year-old genius went on Jimmy Kimmel Live last night and completely destroyed Star Wars: The Force Awakens cast members John Boyega, Adam Driver, Carrie Fisher, and Daisy Ridley in a game of Star Wars trivia.

The film's director J.J. Abrams played host and judge.

youtube.com / Via youtube.com

Meet Team Star Wars:

Meet Team Star Wars:

From left to right: Adam Driver, Carrie Fisher, Daisy Ridley, and John Boyega.

Jimmy Kimmel Live / Via youtube.com

And meet their very worthy opponent, Arden Hayes:

And meet their very worthy opponent, Arden Hayes:

Now, that's an entrance.

Jimmy Kimmel Live / Via youtube.com

When Jimmy asked Arden if his opponents should be scared, the kid genius served up some serious trash talk.

When Jimmy asked Arden if his opponents should be scared, the kid genius served up some serious trash talk.

Adorable.

Jimmy Kimmel Live / Via youtube.com


View Entire List ›


19 Confessions From People Who Aren't Excited To See Their High School Friends

Can We Guess Who Your Celebrity Spirit Guide Is Based On These 3 Questions?

$
0
0

You may never meet them, but in dreams will you two connect.

Thumbnail image courtesy of Kevin Mazur / Getty Images

Olympic Athletes Get Surprised With Live Turkeys, Because Why Not?

$
0
0

Turns out, Olympians aren’t completely fearless.

In the tradition of Thanksgiving and surprising unsuspecting people, BuzzFeed Motion Pictures decided what better way to interview Olympians than to surprise them with a live turkey?

BuzzFeed Video / Via youtube.com

And given that turkeys are, eh, not the cutest animals — we knew it'd be interesting.

And given that turkeys are, eh, not the cutest animals — we knew it'd be interesting.

BuzzFeed

Matt Centrowitz, track and field Olympian, said he wasn't a huge fan of turkeys when asked how he felt about them.

Matt Centrowitz, track and field Olympian, said he wasn't a huge fan of turkeys when asked how he felt about them.

BuzzFeed

And Dawn Harper-Nelson, two-time olympic medalist, was immediately suspicious of where the interview was going.

And Dawn Harper-Nelson, two-time olympic medalist, was immediately suspicious of where the interview was going.

BuzzFeed


View Entire List ›

What Is Your Weirdest Fear?

24 Tweets That Will Make Every Nurse Laugh Out Loud

Where Do You Stand On These Controversial Parenting Subjects?

Michael B. Jordan Will Never Stop Fighting

$
0
0

Michael B. Jordan as Adonis Johnson in Creed.

Barry Wetcher/Warner Bros.

There’s a moment in Creed, the new Rocky spin-off of sorts, where Adonis Johnson knocks the living daylights out of a local rapper who mocks him by calling him Baby Creed.

The up-and-coming boxer is the son of legend Apollo Creed — who had an affair with Adonis's mother — but Adonis is pissed. He’s worked hard to get to where he is, to make a name for himself, and to keep the name of his father (who died in the ring fighting an unsympathetic Russian contender in Rocky IV) a secret. So when some guy — who, like the rest of the world at this point in the film, has learned of his heritage — tries to belittle Adonis’s accomplishments, as if he’d be comfortable riding on someone else’s coattails (or stars-and-stripes shorts), he decides to start the fight before the fight.

That scene, in many ways, parallels where the actor who portrays Adonis, Michael B. Jordan, is in his career right now: He is ready for his own battle.

By all accounts, Hollywood insiders consider 28-year-old Jordan the heir apparent to the thrones that Denzel Washington and Will Smith have built. For decades, those actors have established themselves as box office champions and they’re in a very small and exclusive fraternity — black men who can land leading roles in successful, high-profile feature films.

Creed is a continuation of the beloved, long-running Rocky franchise that made Sylvester Stallone famous in the title role, and now it’s about to do the same for Jordan.

But no matter how hungry we are for the next Washington or Smith, Jordan isn’t quite ready to raise his hand for that part.

He’s got other plans.

“I don’t think I have the pressure to be the next anybody,” he said, after tossing the idea around in his head for a few minutes. “I don’t put that on myself. I need to be the best version of myself. I put that pressure on myself to be the best version of Michael B. Jordan. And whoever that person is going to be, I’m still growing. I’m not even 30 yet.” He paused to slightly laugh at himself. “So I’m going to be a different person two years from now. I’m a different person now than I was a year ago: same core values, same person on the inside, but just growing to the next stage of my life of being a man. Will and Denzel have such phenomenal careers that anybody would be in awe of. [But] I think the time has changed. I think they came up in a different era, a different generation of film and cinema, which was molded and shaped by that as well. I think now, the timing, the platform is there for me to be able to be a version of what they had at their time.”

Jordan and Sylvester Stallone in Creed.

Courtesy Of Warner Bros.

Jordan’s heard plenty of times that Creed could catapult him into a superstar stratosphere. After Warner Bros. screened the film for journalists, the consensus was unanimous: the film — and most importantly, Jordan — was fantastic. Jordan offers “the best all-around performance of his young career,” reads a USA Today review.

Creed is Jordan’s first leading role in big feature film, a victory tantamount to Adonis nabbing his first taste of certifiable respect and getting dapped up by an opponent for being the real deal, not just a flash-in-the-pan wannabe boxer hoping to score off daddy’s name. Jordan has been working to get to this moment since making his debut in a 1999 episode of The Sopranos, before finally landing his big break on HBO’s The Wire in 2002 as teen drug dealer Wallace. Since then, he’s had roles in TV series like Parenthood and Friday Night Lights, been a part of ensembles in films like 2012’s Chronicle, and showed his dramatic chops in 2013’s Fruitvale Station, also directed by Creed’s Ryan Coogler.

Creed could also mean that Jordan has found a franchise that he can star in for years to come, an effort that didn’t exactly work out with the Fantastic Four reboot earlier this year. He won the part of the Human Torch — who has previously been portrayed as white, which sparked some controversy and a ton of conversation — but the movie was critically panned and a box office failure. But Creed? Critics already love it; if fans turn out, it could fall right in line with its predecessors, giving him a stability he’s yet to experience.

Coogler, Stallone, and Jordan at the L.A. premiere of Creed.

Todd Williamson / Getty Images

“This is something that I’m super proud of, and I feel like, as an origin story it could become a franchise and have success, and have multiple films. You have to be strategic,” Jordan said of Creed. “After Fruitvale Station, I started to be a little more selective. That was the first opportunity I had to think about my career moves, and really have real control over the projects that I was doing. Up until that point … with The Wire, it's not like I had a choice between six different roles. Those were the auditions that I went in for and I got.”

Coogler told BuzzFeed News earlier this summer that Jordan is “kind of like a LeBron James," saying, "Not only is this dude the perfect size, the perfect build, but he's come along at the perfect time and he has a crazy work ethic. He’s the perfect storm.”

And now, the actor is starting to work on his strategy, gearing himself to perhaps, like Adonis, defy the odds of a newly minted contender. Next up, he and Coogler will team up again for Wrong Answer, a film about the cheating scandal in Atlanta Public Schools. Jordan also wants to return to his television roots to develop and produce, and he said he wouldn’t mind giving the comic book world another go-round. “I'm interested in producing and developing a film, and a novel, a comic book, animation,” he said.

Perhaps most importantly, he’s finally at a point now where he can say “no” — a first in his career — and that means staying away from roles where his character dies, because it upsets his mother too much.

Jordan as Wallace and J.D Williams as Bodie in The Wire.

Courtesy of HBO

“She would be bawling, she used to be crying. Like, Mom, stop it! Nobody wants to see their mom cry; that’s not a good feeling, regardless of the performance. It was just traumatizing over a period of time. It’s something that people don’t think about, but a mom can’t be seeing her son die over and over and over again, in dramatic ways. I’m not going out on a hospital bed in a dramatic fashion,” he said, referencing the fact that nearly all of his onscreen deaths have been violent, starting with young Wallace on The Wire. “I need a break. And I want people to see me live, to evolve into a leading man that survives some accident. That’s very important. Audiences get the chance to see this character live and try and be victorious and have some type of closure without ending his life.”

He paused and then added: “I’m trying to break those stereotypes [of black men].”

Like he tried to do earlier this year when he played the Human Torch. Even though the film didn’t do what he’d hoped it would, he still challenged what audiences thought a superhero looked like. And now, he’s actively looking for similar opportunities to be cast in a role traditionally reserved for a white actor.

It’s a notion Jordan first mentioned in a GQ article this past September, in which he said he wanted “roles that were written for white characters.” His intention, he told BuzzFeed News, was to challenge Hollywood on its race issue and get decision-makers to think outside of the box with more color-blind castings. But readers’ negative reaction to the quote forced Jordan to clarify his words in an open letter in Essence. Jordan also felt the need to come out strong in support of #BlackLivesMatter in the same letter in an effort to debunk a bogus Snapchat about him supporting #AllLivesMatter.

He wants to be clear that he’s not shying away from his blackness or onscreen stories that feel black. If anything, he plans to go harder as his career continues and make sure that the stories he signs up for feel more universal, diverse, and, yes, black.

“There’s a lack of a black perspective in cinema. And I think it starts from perception, from the point of view of where the content is being created. You have more black writers and creators, and new developers in content that aren’t just the stereotypes that we’re used to being created or portrayed. The African-American experience is different. There are more genuine portrayals in characters that are diverse that somebody from any walk of life can play,” Jordan said. “I think that’s very important to the growth and progression of black cinema — matter of fact, people of color in film generally. The more opportunities, the more roles that are created, the more of those things you start to see, then you will start to see black actors in cinema, in movies, in television.”

Jordan running through North Philly as Adonis Johnson in Creed.

Courtesy Of Warner Bros. Picture

It’s a platform he’s taken on not just because his recent success affords him the opportunity to have that kind of power; it’s also an undeniable fact that as his star rises, more eyes are on Jordan’s every move.

And he’s well aware.

“It’s overwhelming at times,” Jordan said of his new level of fame. “Day by day you see it: Your privacy is stripped away. You start to move differently; you’re cautious. Oh man, I can’t go to the mall today. What day is it? Saturday? Ooh. Lot of people. No, I’m not going to go to the mall. No, I’m not going out. That's something that I'm getting used to, and it's happening pretty fast. I'm going to make mistakes; I’m going to learn some lessons — some things that I used to do that I can't do anymore. I have to learn how to separate Michael Jordan, the actor, and Michael Jordan, the person. There are no guidelines that exist how to navigate this journey that I’m on.”

His compass is the same circle he’s looked to for years. “I definitely rely and lean on people: my family, my friends, my mom, my parents. They are people that tell me straight; they’ll call bullshit when they see it,” he said before adding with a laugh, “I just got to meditate more.”

Of course, that gets harder when you’re on the verge of the world seeing a movie like Creed. But Jordan is ready to knuckle up and take this big step in his career — and just like Adonis, it’ll be on his own terms.

“A film this size, man … it changed the chessboard. The pieces got rearranged. I just got to sit back and look at the board and figure out what’s the best move,” he said. “I’m in a very fortunate situation. It doesn’t come around a lot.” He offers another pregnant pause, then speaks again after a few silent beats.

“I’m still working, you know? I feel like I still have so much to do. As successful as I’ve been so far, and the blessings that I know I’ve had — and I acknowledge my blessings — I’ve still got so much more that I want to do and accomplish. I just want to put myself in a position to be able to create and expand and grow and be progressive, period.”


34 Foods That Are Safe To Make When You’re Drunk

$
0
0

Don’t let your drunchies be your last meal.

Original article by Laura Harvey for Spoon University.

Apple Cinnamon French Toast Waffles

Apple Cinnamon French Toast Waffles

Microwave your frozen waffles and you'll be set. Recipe here.

Dylan Barth / Via spoonuniversity.com

Pimped Out Easy Mac

Pimped Out Easy Mac

When you’re literally just too lazy and drunk to make it homemade. Upgrade it like this.

Photo by Kai Huang / Via spoonuniversity.com

4-Minute French Toast in a Mug

4-Minute French Toast in a Mug

Get brunch started at 2 am with this recipe.

Photo by Rebecca Siminov / Via spoonuniversity.com


View Entire List ›

The Guy Who Voiced Arnold In "Hey Arnold" Is Insanely Hot Now

$
0
0

His head isn’t football-shaped at all.

You remember Arnold from the iconic '90s cartoon Hey Arnold, right?

You remember Arnold from the iconic '90s cartoon Hey Arnold, right?

Nickelodeon

Of course you do! Who could ever forget that lovable football-shaped head?

Of course you do! Who could ever forget that lovable football-shaped head?

<3

Nickelodeon

Well, it turns out that the guy who voiced Arnold's character for the first 41 episodes of the show is insanely good-looking now.

instagram.com

Like, ridiculously hot.

instagram.com


View Entire List ›

Can You Guess The Movie From The Family?

$
0
0

Take a break from hanging out with *your* family to take this quiz about fictional ones.

25 Faces Everyone Who's Home For Thanksgiving Will Recognize

14 Reasons People Truly, Desperately Need To Learn How To Spell

22 Pictures That Perfectly Sum Up Every Single Thanksgiving

Miss World Contestant Was Stopped From Flying To China To Take Part In The Finals

$
0
0

Anastasia Lin says China is punishing her because of her human rights activism.

Canada's outspoken Miss World contestant, Anastasia Lin, was stopped from boarding a flight on Thursday from Hong Kong to mainland China, all but ensuring she will miss the finals of the competition.

Canada's outspoken Miss World contestant, Anastasia Lin, was stopped from boarding a flight on Thursday from Hong Kong to mainland China, all but ensuring she will miss the finals of the competition.

Unlike contestants from other countries, Lin had not received an invitation letter from Chinese authorities to take part in the annual pageant, to be held in the city of Sanya on Dec. 19. Lin believes her public criticism of China's human rights record led to her being left out.

"I was never given an explanation as to why I did not receive the letter," she said in a statement on Facebook. "Under Chinese law, however, Canadian citizens are eligible to obtain a landing visa upon arrival in Sanya, so I decided to try attending anyway."

Despite her best efforts, though, she was unable to get a visa or board the plane.

"No reason was given for the denial," she said.

Tyrone Siu / Reuters

Lin is a practitioner of Falun Gong, a banned spiritual movement in China the government has described as "an evil cult" and whose members have faced arrests, harassment, and torture, according to Human Rights Watch.

Lin is a practitioner of Falun Gong, a banned spiritual movement in China the government has described as "an evil cult" and whose members have faced arrests, harassment, and torture, according to Human Rights Watch.

Lin has strongly criticized China's treatment of Falun Gong members, including at a U.S. Congressional committee in July.

In an interview with BuzzFeed Canada earlier this month, Lin said her father, who still lives in China, had been threatened over her activism.

"He said the security forces approached him and told him I should stop my human rights work,” Lin told Buzzfeed Canada.

Anastasia Lin / Via Facebook: AnastasiaLinforMWC2013

Despite Lin's high profile, the Chinese embassy in Ottawa last week said she was barred from visiting the country.

Despite Lin's high profile, the Chinese embassy in Ottawa last week said she was barred from visiting the country.

A statement was sent to the Globe and Mail in response to questions over Lin's status that declared her "persona non grata."

The embassy spokesperson added: "I simply do not understand why some people pay special attention to this matter and have raised it repeatedly."

Caylan Ford, a friend of Lin's, told BuzzFeed Canada that Lin would stay in Hong Kong and figure out her next step.

"If she has any hope of getting in, she would like to try again, but having been turned away it seems like she got the answer she went for," Ford said.

She also said the Miss World Organization tried to secure Lin's entry into China and, having failed, is considering letting Lin hold on to her title as Miss World Canada for another year to let her compete again in 2016.

Tyrone Siu / Reuters


View Entire List ›


How Full Are You?

$
0
0

Not too full to take this quiz, I hope.

You probably ate some delicious food this Thanksgiving, so now the question on everyone's mind is:

You probably ate some delicious food this Thanksgiving, so now the question on everyone's mind is:

Thinkstock / BuzzFeed

17 Dogs And Cats Who Are Being Peaceful For Thanksgiving

$
0
0

We can learn from their example.

These two are in naptime solidarity after eating way too much.

These two are in naptime solidarity after eating way too much.

Instagram: @www.instagram.com/p/-bHbcpjttE/

While these two are hesitant, but willing to be polite at the very least.

While these two are hesitant, but willing to be polite at the very least.

Instagram: @www.instagram.com/p/-aLzXyEUrg/

And even these mortal enemies have decided it's OK to play around a little bit on Thanksgiving.

And even these mortal enemies have decided it's OK to play around a little bit on Thanksgiving.

Instagram: @www.instagram.com/p/-Z2Yw7w2Bk/

These guys were just caught talking crap about your weird Uncle Bob.

These guys were just caught talking crap about your weird Uncle Bob.

"WELL. This is awkward."

Instagram: @www.instagram.com/p/-ZRkkRp9_Y/


View Entire List ›

Should I Delete Photos Of My Ex From Instagram?

$
0
0

Rebecca Hendin/BuzzFeed

My long-term boyfriend and I just broke up. Because we’ve been together for so long, there are obviously a ton of photos of him (and us) on my Instagram. I don’t really want the photos on there anymore since we’re not together, but is it petty to go through my account and delete the photos of him? Or is it weirder to still have him all over my account?

Millennials! If there’s anything they like to do, it’s fuck. And if there’s any place they’re going to talk about who they’re fucking, it’s the Internet. What a quandary, then, when our tangible lives shift, but our web lives remain stagnant, like an iTunes playlist that just. Won’t. Sync.

There are plenty of people who will argue that the Internet is not real life and, objectively, this is true. You cannot block people in real life, unfortunately, meaning you still have to be polite and calm when faced with someone who sincerely supports a men’s rights movement. The Internet allows you to have the entire world at your disposal, unlike the real world, which requires that you pay for things like music or movies or the privilege to watch someone ejaculate on a pie and then make another man eat that pie.

The Internet might not be an accurate representation of reality but it is an accurate representation of what you want your reality to be. That’s gotta count for something. You used your Instagram to spread word about your relationship and there was a good reason for that. At some point you loved each other. You say you were together for a while, so presumably there was something meaningful and heavy that kept you two together. Maybe you had a kid or a cat or an apartment or maybe you both feared the ceaseless march towards death and thought it better to do it together. Whatever the case: you wanted the world to know that you had found someone who understood you.

So maybe take a beat to think about why you want to take all these photos down. Do you hate the idea of being associated with this person? Did they hurt you in a big, meaningful, tragic way that you can’t even bear to think about what took you so long in breaking up? Do you want to hurt him? Do you want him to see that you’re FINE, that the breakup has been just FINE, that you don’t even think about him because you’re FINE?

Or does the ongoing existence of the photos just make you sad? Do you think deleting them will cure you of whatever residual heartbreak remains? Do you think you can extract from the tar of your soul whatever influence he had, whatever devotion you had to each other, that you can scrub it away by spending 40 minutes going through your accounts and hitting delete? Are you still ruminating over what went wrong, how this happened, how to move on? Do you think you’ll find answers?

The worst breakup I ever had was with a friend of mine, not a partner. She and I had known each other since we were 5, and when we were 22, she broke up with me big time. Not your typical ebb of a long-term friendship, but a sudden stop. We stopped speaking immediately, and I was ready to pack her life away and never think about her again—I did it fast, too.

The day we had our big fight, I stormed into my apartment and tucked away all the little physical items I had that reminded me of her: earrings from Zambia, a photo on my mirror of us on my 13th birthday, a lip balm she once left at my house that I took with me when I moved across the country. I put them in a shoebox along with the 50 or so pages of notes we passed in grade school, that I had kept, for some reason, and tucked it under my bed. I deleted her from Facebook and wiped the pictures clean from all my accounts. I thought I tucked away every tangible memory I had left, but of course I didn’t.

Cracks in my online life let her in, like bright light first thing in the morning when you want to be left in the dark. A mutual friend would talk to her and somehow it would appear in my feed. Facebook is relentless in pulling up “memories” from years ago: photos I’ve posted of us together or little inside jokes we’ve sent back and forth. The stupid Cloud (which I am almost 100% sure is just trying to get me to cry) keeps pulling our text messages back to my phone, reminding me when her birthday is (IT’S IN DECEMBER, I GOT IT), reminding me when her mother’s birthday is (IT’S THREE DAYS AFTER MINE, HOW COULD I FORGET). Later, when she blocked me online, I’d notice people having conversations with themselves, and I’d assume she was somewhere there, lurking, just out of my reach. It’s almost like no matter what you do, the people who left you, or whom you left, they are ultimately inescapable.

So why fight it? I miss her desperately, all the time, a horrible ache that climbs out of my body and spills into my daily routine. The reminders I get from the Internet always make me feel a little sad, a little sickly, but sometimes it’s good to feel that intensity.

The right amount of pain makes you feel alive. It makes you know you did something real, even if it didn’t last. The Cloud never hides my pain from me. Once, my old friend texted me months after our fight, to wish me a happy birthday. (It was my first birthday since I was 5 where she didn’t send me a handmade card.) It was curt and awkward, and worse, it pulled down to my phone, our entire text message thread. Every stupid comment, ever dumb topic, every weird date, every sad memory. “Remember this?” my phone asked. “Remember this person who you spoke to almost every day? Weren’t you stupid!” The Cloud brought back the last time we saw each other in person, the photos of the last day we spent together not fighting. The Cloud brought the fight we had over text. “Are you still hurting? I bet you are. Let me press real hard on this bruise you thought already healed.”

Admittedly, this is a feeling you’ll only ever want when you’re not currently feeling it. Maybe you’re mired in it right now, which is why you want to scrub your life of these imprints, but when you’re feeling better and less connected to this person and this moment in your life, you might want to revisit it. When I’m content, or when I feel like I’m forgetting parts of my old friend, I’ll go digging for something that can remind me, even if it makes me feel bad. Feeling bad, for a little while, is good for you.

You owe it to yourself and your relationship—whatever it was—to feel a little bad. In a few years, many years maybe, you will want these photos as nice keepsakes of a love that never worked out, but maybe, that you liked. Of New Year Eves and concerts and birthdays and even warm nights in. If you can’t stand the risk of you or anyone else scrolling back to your former happiness, then save them in a folder tucked in the recesses of your computer that you’ll only find at 4 in the morning while drunk and trying to find that Pirates of the Caribbean porn parody you downloaded five years ago as a joke and never deleted because, whatever, it was kind of hot, don’t judge me.

Soon enough, you’ll forget most of this relationship, and maybe you’ll be in another one, and this life will feel another lifetime away. Then, when you are your least guarded, Facebook will send you some stupid fucking notification about a “memory” from five years back: a photo of you and your ex on a beach back when you were happy. You’ll either find it a hilarious blip, or, emotionally devastating. But, how will you know how you feel about this person, this life you had, if you bury your digital footprint so deep that you can’t be confronted by them?

Submit questions to It's Not You, It Me here.


17 Photos About Thanksgiving That'll Make You Laugh Out Loud

24 Tweets That Prove Your Thanksgiving Wasn't That Bad

Viewing all 215890 articles
Browse latest View live


Latest Images