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People Are Loving This Bystander's Pure Reaction To A Woman Proposing To Her Girlfriend

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Jessica Rodriguez told BuzzFeed News: “We hope this inspires LGBT people to not fear to express their love to one another.”

This is 25-year-old law student Jessica Rodriguez and her fiancé, Chelsea Miller, a 26-year-old full-time nanny and student. The two met on Tumblr, have been together for over four years, and now live in Chicago.

This is 25-year-old law student Jessica Rodriguez and her fiancé, Chelsea Miller, a 26-year-old full-time nanny and student. The two met on Tumblr, have been together for over four years, and now live in Chicago.

instagram.com

Rodriguez told BuzzFeed News after her grandmother passed away this year, it made her realise how short life is: "I just knew I had to hold on to love as much as I could since our days are counted. So I went and bought the ring."

She went all out for her proposal, which happened last weekend at the Art Institute of Chicago, because art plays a massive part in the couple's lives, she said: "We have traveled to various art museums in Texas, Pennsylvania, and Illinois. I once worked in an art gallery called the Wynne Home Arts Center and we even have a custom painting of our baby, Gatsby, a cavalier King Charles spaniel puppy."

When her excited 22-year-old brother, Carlos Jair Rodriguez, shared a picture of the proposal on Twitter, it quickly went viral and gained over 265,400 likes and 85,870 retweets.

When her excited 22-year-old brother, Carlos Jair Rodriguez, shared a picture of the proposal on Twitter, it quickly went viral and gained over 265,400 likes and 85,870 retweets.

Twitter: @AreYouShook / Via Eduardo Sanchez Perry

And not just because Rodriguez and Miller are slaying. 🔥

And not just because Rodriguez and Miller are slaying. 🔥

Twitter: @matteno6


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This Mannequin Challenge Featuring People With Parkinson's Is Damn Important

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“Until there’s a cure, life is our challenge.”

The #MannequinChallenge has been ~a thing~ for a little while now. You've probably seen a fair few of these freeze-frame videos.

Remember when Blac Chyna did the challenge in the delivery room? Yeah you do.

instagram.com

However a new video, featuring several people with Parkinson's disease, could be one of the most important mannequin challenges yet.

Released by Parkinson's NSW last week, the video highlights the daily challenges that come with the disease.

youtube.com

Parkinson's symptoms can include shaking, stiffness, slow movement, and difficulties with balance.

Parkinson's symptoms can include shaking, stiffness, slow movement, and difficulties with balance.

"An estimated 80,000 people in Australia live with Parkinson’s, and approximately 700,000 people are directly impacted by Parkinson’s as they care for or have a loved one with Parkinson's," Clare Audet from Parkinson's NSW told BuzzFeed.

Parkinson's NSW / Via youtube.com

The video was created to help spread awareness of the disease and the impact it can have on people's everyday lives.

The video was created to help spread awareness of the disease and the impact it can have on people's everyday lives.

People with Parkinson's were filmed alongside people without it.

Parkinson's NSW / Via youtube.com


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These Photos Show The Everlasting Bond Between Pets And Their Humans

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When David Williams, the photographer behind the Men With Cats series, watched his elderly grandmother receive a kitten as a gift, he was struck by the relationship between pet and owner. "Most of the guys I photographed for Men With Cats were millennials, along with being first-time pet owners," Williams tells BuzzFeed. "So I really wanted to talk to older people who had more experience with pet ownership. Some had pets their entire life, and others later in life."

Anna-May and Tim With Caroline

Anna-May and Tim With Caroline

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

Denise With Sparky

Denise With Sparky

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

"A lot of the seniors enjoy owning a pet for companionship, like every other generation," Williams said, "but for a lot of seniors it also helps with exercise and continuing a healthy lifestyle."

Joan With Zach

Joan With Zach

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

John With Peggy

John With Peggy

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

Karen With Dr.Wiskers, Jasmine and Jade

Karen With Dr.Wiskers, Jasmine and Jade

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

Lynn and Lane With Daytona, Sussi and Tamboo

Lynn and Lane With Daytona, Sussi and Tamboo

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

Mike With Hans

Mike With Hans

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

Richard With Leo

Richard With Leo

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com

Tara With James

Tara With James

David Williams / davidwilliamsphoto.com


Here's What All Of Your Favorite "America's Next Top Model" Contestants Are Up To Now

Female TV Writers Destigmatized Abortion In 2016

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Four TV characters who had abortions in 2016.

The CW, FXX, The CW, Netflix

Although abortion has long been considered something of a taboo on television, four shows debuted normalized, even humorous abortion plotlines in 2016, making it a landmark year for unwavering abortions. Notably, all of these episodes were written by women who work in gender-balanced comedy writers rooms. That’s particularly striking in a year when prominent male politicians weighed in on women’s reproductive health care — often loudly and inaccurately.

BoJack Horseman, Jane the Virgin, You’re the Worst, and Crazy Ex-Girlfriend all featured abortions that were not framed as tragic endings, but rather as hopeful beginnings. Women behind the shows all told BuzzFeed News that they wanted to portray a “different” type of abortion story — one where the female character knew exactly what she wanted and felt good about her decisions. These stories were told by women who could view abortion as a welcome option, not a burden. Two of the characters on the aforementioned shows didn’t even consult their male partners. On You’re the Worst, Lindsay (Kether Donohue) said with a shrug, “My body, my choice.”

It’s a clear break from the habitual equivocation around abortion on TV. Writers rooms tend to be liberal on many issues (see Orange Is the New Black for “the humanity of transgender people”); nonetheless, they’ve been remarkably skittish in the way they write about ending pregnancies. A mere two years ago, Mindy Project creator and star Mindy Kaling, whose show is literally about a female OB-GYN, told HuffPost Live that abortion “doesn’t strike me — and I don’t think this is controversial — as the funniest of areas.” In 2010, Fox declined to air an episode of Family Guy that dealt with ending a pregnancy. Television has erred on the side of "let’s keep the unplanned pregnancy": Recent examples include a 2006 episode of Scrubs that focused on the male protagonist J.D.’s (Zach Braff) feelings about what he calls the most difficult decision of his life (they decide to have a baby), and even Miranda Hobbes (Cynthia Nixon) on Sex and the City had a change of heart in the abortion clinic in 2001.

FXX

But in November 2015, Scandal set a new standard when its protagonist Olivia Pope (Kerry Washington) had a drama-free abortion. Showrunner Shonda Rhimes saw abortion as a simple fact of life: “A woman made a choice about her body that she legally has the right to make,” she told an audience during a panel discussion in March. The dramatic series offered a preview of the equanimity to come.

In July, BoJack Horseman led the way for comedies with Diane Nguyen (Alison Brie) quickly and confidently deciding to terminate her accidental pregnancy in the cold open of “Brrap Brrap Pew Pew.” In October, Jane the Virgin saw Xo (Andrea Navedo) worry that her Catholic mother would judge her for ending a pregnancy she didn’t want; Xo stands by her decision anyway. In November, You’re the Worst showed Lindsay finally nixing her very-bad-idea pregnancy, which allowed her to strike out on her own. And later that month, Crazy Ex-Girlfriend’s Paula (Donna Lynne Champlin) decides an unintended pregnancy shouldn’t derail her law school plans. Xo and Paula already have children and want to forge ahead without a baby; Diane and Lindsay have no children and want to keep it that way.

These characters are not making a difficult personal decision — a common way to characterize abortion that can undermine women’s ability to make the choice without interference. Rather, Xo, Paula, Diane, and Lindsay are making clear-cut personal decisions with eyes trained on their futures. And as more women rise to positions of power in television, more female characters are seeking abortion with certainty — and without histrionics. Writers on the series intentionally tried to tell normalized stories about abortion that had been underrepresented in pop culture.

Paula (Donna Lynne Champlin) resting after her abortion on Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.

The CW

Aline Brosh McKenna, the showrunner and co-creator of Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, said Paula’s abortion was “best for her happiness” and called her dilemma relatable. “Paula’s closer to my age, and I know a lot of women who have gone through this,” she said. Jane the Virgin showrunner Jennie Snyder Urman wrote in an email that guilt-inducing abortions are not “the only story that should be told.” Alison Bennett, who wrote the You’re the Worst episode in which Lindsay gets an abortion, said in an interview, “It’s specifically important to the female writers of the show that it’s done in a way where it’s almost casual, and not this big dramatic decision that could potentially ruin people’s lives.” And Joanna Calo, who wrote the abortion episode of BoJack Horseman, hoped her work would speak directly to women in abortion-hostile situations. “I love the idea that someone who is going through something like this — thinking about getting an abortion in a town where it’s hard to get, or not accepted, or in a family where that’s not something they’re supposed to talk about — that it might make them realize that there are other people that feel differently,” she said.

On BoJack in particular, telling Diane’s story meant “saying the word ‘abortion’ out loud a lot, and walking her through the procedure,” said Calo. There is a long history of tiptoeing around the topic: A 1991 episode of Murphy Brown about a pregnancy dilemma discussed abortion without naming it; the show’s creator told the New York Times at the time that the word itself was too “inflammatory,” and she wanted the show to speak to everyone. (The character did not get an abortion in the end.) Now, You’re the Worst calls them “abobos” — and the abortion plotline speaks directly to women.

The dour aversion that has long been tied to abortion also exists in the political sphere. In October 2016, then–Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump displayed a grave misunderstanding of late-term abortion but nonetheless expressed horror at what he imagined it might be. “In the ninth month, you can take the baby and rip the baby out of the womb of the mother,” Trump incorrectly said, raising his eyelids in shock. Female TV writers resisted this national resurgence of ignorant revulsion: Where Trump saw unfathomable darkness, the writers saw something they recognized. McKenna, whose Crazy Ex-Girlfriend writers room has more women than men, noted, “Somebody said that our show was the most gynecologically in-depth TV series.”

Diane (Alison Brie) and her husband at the Planned Parrothood clinic on BoJack Horseman.

Netflix

For these writers, their work is part of the opposition to politicians who want to limit — or eliminate — women’s right to choose abortion. “The rhetoric, especially now, especially in that third debate, was so horrific, divisive, inflammatory, and false — that I feel like it’s absolutely the right time to counterbalance that hate and fear,” Urman wrote in October. Bennett said, “There’s been such a backlash against abortion,” referencing in particular Trump’s vice president-elect, Mike Pence, who has a legislative track record of restricting decisions women can make about the contents of their uteruses.

“I think that once a woman’s fundamental right to choose gets threatened, artistically, people are interested in addressing that,” Bennett added. “For joke weirdos like ourselves, we’re gonna do it in a comedic way.”

The increasingly uncompromising depiction of bodily autonomy on TV spawned sputtering responses from conservatives online: One right-wing site said BoJack “grotesquely and callously advocates for unapologetic abortion on-demand while bashing pro-lifers.” Another criticized Jane the Virgin for Xo's lack of remorse: “Any larger hurt — any guilt or fear or regret — associated with that decision was swept under the rug, in the name of tolerance, acceptance, and ‘choice.’” The conservative Media Research Center’s blog took issue with Crazy Ex-Girlfriend, saying the show was “working the subject into casual conversation like it is nothing unusual at all.” Which is true. The Guttmacher Institute found in 2008 that one in three women would have an abortion, so abortion is nothing unusual at all. More than anything else, the hand-wringing is over the absence of hand-wringing for these characters. “What morally truncated human beings,” a mystified LifeNews writer wrote, referring to Lindsay’s abortion on You’re the Worst and those who praised the depiction. The writer summed up Lindsay’s decision sadly: “And she felt fine about it.”

That's correct — Lindsay, Xo, Paula, and Diane all felt fine about getting abortions, because women controlled the narrative. And there was no room for moral panic.

With additional reporting by Alanna Bennett.

LINK: Inside The Radical Abortion Episode On “BoJack Horseman”

LINK: “Jane The Virgin” Has Finally Portrayed An Abortion

Rob Kardashian Says He Will Seek Help For His "Flaws/Issues"

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Greg Doherty / Getty Images

After publicly feuding with his fiancee, Blac Chyna, on social media over the weekend, Rob Kardashian on Monday apologized for his behavior and announced he is seeking help for his "flaws/issues."

Kardashian also wrote on Instagram that he was in a "bad emotional place" at the time, adding that he embarrassed himself and his family:

This weekend I was in an emotional bad place and did some things that embarrassed myself and my family. I apologize and I'm seeking help to deal with my flaws/issues. Please pray for me and I'm sorry @blacchyna. You are a great mother to our child and I love you.

Instagram: @robkardashian

Over the weekend, Kardashian posted a video of his empty home, accusing Chyna of not only taking their baby, Dream, but everything in the nursery and all the food in the house. Kardashian posted and then deleted that he was "heartbroken."

Chyna responded by telling him to "stop it" and then appeared to erase all of Kardashian's photos from her Instagram account.

Reps for Kardashian and Chyna have not responded yet to BuzzFeed News' requests for comment.

The couple's relationship was tracked an the E! reality show Rob & Chyna that aired this fall.

LINK: Rob And Chyna Are Now Fighting In His Instagram Comments

LINK: So WTF Is Happening Between Blac Chyna And Rob Kardashian?

LINK: 21 Hilarious Tweets About This Whole Blac Chyna And Rob Kardashian Mess


So, Will Smith's New Movie "Collateral Beauty" Is Really Bad

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“Every so often there comes a movie so tasteless, so nakedly pandering, so bodaciously ill conceived that you’ve got to see it to believe it.”

ICYMI, a new Will Smith movie hit theaters this weekend, and it's called Collateral Beauty.

ICYMI, a new Will Smith movie hit theaters this weekend, and it's called Collateral Beauty.

"We are all connected." So deep.

collateralbeauty-movie.com

It has a powerful trailer, a star-studded supporting cast — Helen Mirren, Kate Winslet, Keira Knightley, Naomie Harris, and Ed Norton to name a few — and some of the most hilariously terrible reviews in recent memory.

With a whopping 13% rating on Rotten Tomatoes, it's clear that it's hardly Academy Awards bait.

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Many of the words that I would like to use to describe this waste of talent and time, which riffs on Dickens’s eternal A Christmas Carol and tries to manufacture feeling by offing Tiny Tim, can’t be lobbed in a family publication. So, instead, I will just start by throwing out some permissible insults: artificial, clichéd, mawkish, preposterous, incompetent, sexist, laughable, insulting.

—Manohla Dargis, the New York Times

Every so often there comes a movie so tasteless, so nakedly pandering, so bodaciously ill conceived that you’ve got to see it to believe it. This year, that movie is Collateral Beauty. [...] Pinpointing one fatal flaw in Collateral Beauty is impossible — the transgressions pile up like a trash heap of Christmas miracles.

—Stephanie Zacharek, Time


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Michelle Obama's Response To Being Labeled An "Angry Black Woman" Is Absolute Perfection

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Honestly, this woman can do no wrong.

First Lady Michelle Obama has been given the "angry black woman" label more than a few times during her eight years in the White House.

First Lady Michelle Obama has been given the "angry black woman" label more than a few times during her eight years in the White House.

Joe Raedle / Getty Images

Despite what the naysayers and haters may say, she's always kept it classy, never feeding into the negativity.

Despite what the naysayers and haters may say, she's always kept it classy, never feeding into the negativity.

DNC / Via giphy.com

But in a preview of her last interview in the White House, airing tonight, FLOTUS addressed how she felt being given the label by the media.

OWN / Via youtube.com

"That was just one of those things that you just sort of think, 'Dag, you don't even know me,'" she told Oprah.

"That was just one of those things that you just sort of think, 'Dag, you don't even know me,'" she told Oprah.

OWN / Via youtube.com


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21 Gifts For The Gwyneth Paltrow In Your Life

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Herbs, kombucha, and sex dusts — oh my!

We hope you love the products we recommend! Just so you know, BuzzFeed may collect a share of sales from the links on this page.

Getty Images / Jenny Chang / BuzzFeed

A kombucha brewing kit so they can create their own 'buch at home.

A kombucha brewing kit so they can create their own 'buch at home.

Get it from Amazon for $54.

Kombucha Shop / amazon.com

A dry skin brush to make your skin glow and kick-start your lymphatic system.

A dry skin brush to make your skin glow and kick-start your lymphatic system.

Get it from Amazon for $19.95.

SpaVerde / amazon.com

A set complete with everything you need to make matcha.

A set complete with everything you need to make matcha.

Get it from Amazon for $70.

Jade Leaf / amazon.com


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"La La Land" And The Privilege Of Nostalgia

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Sebastian (Ryan Gosling) and Mia (Emma Stone) at the movies in La La Land.

Dale Robinette / Lionsgate

Nostalgia is more than an emotion for the pair of lovers in La La Land. It’s a belief system, the scaffolding supporting their fragile yearnings for showbiz success, propping them up against an onslaught of present-day indignities. Mia (Emma Stone), an aspiring actor, and Sebastian (Ryan Gosling), a struggling jazz pianist, sleep under posters of Ingrid Bergman and collect piano stools that once allegedly propped up Hoagy Carmichael's legendary behind, as if these objects have totemic value. They dream in Technicolor, or in glimmering black and white.

Both have their own sacred spaces tucked away in not-always-pretty present-day Los Angeles. There’s the window from Casablanca on the Warner Bros. lot where Mia works, between auditions, as a barista, and there's the treasured music venue that's transformed into a combination samba/tapas joint, enraging Sebastian (“Pick one,” he fumes). Their nostalgia goes beyond a reverence for the underappreciated past and into an act of faith — they're so besotted with eras that ended long before they were born that they hold out hopes for the kind of careers their industries no longer have much interest in fostering.

La La Land's opening scene.

Dale Robinette / Lionsgate

Mia and Sebastian are just two more would-be artists in the crowd of strivers cluttering the 110-105 interchange in La La Land’s splendid opening scene, that long take in which a musical number erupts out of the tedium of afternoon traffic. They’re two more talented nobodies vying for parts in lousy-looking shows described as “Dangerous Minds meets The O.C.” and taking gigs with costumed ’80s cover bands to pay the rent. But their old-fashioned aspirations and touchstones leave Mia and Sebastian a half step out of sync with everyone around them, making them, La La Land intimates, more romantic and — in a way that should frankly be twee and irritating as hell — more pure.

That La La Land is not irritating as hell, that it is instead confoundingly wonderful (and, OK, a tiny bit twee), is one of those mysteries audiences can contend with months after first seeing it. Maybe it’s because the film reveals itself to be as much about the limits of nostalgia as it is an exercise in it. Damien Chazelle, whose last feature, Whiplash, was a musical of a less conventional sort, obviously has a lot in common with his characters. The 31-year-old writer and director wants to resurrect a form that has mostly faded from use, trying out the song-and-dance music the way someone might try on a vintage outfit.

But bittersweet and bubble-delicate as it might be, La La Land is too present to be a pastiche, filled with allusions to classics like Singin’ in the Rain and The Umbrellas of Cherbourg, but always keeping one foot planted on the grimy LA pavement. As Mia and Sebastian, Stone and Gosling give performances that are deliberately a little imperfect. Their characters have to reckon with compromises when chasing their impossible, and then maybe not so impossible after all, ambitions. As disappointment and bitterness slowly seep into the film, the effervescence drains out, only to return in full force in the epilogue imagining an alternate history that dissipates like mist. It’s a privilege, the nostalgia Mia and Sebastian feel and ultimately use as a means of personal branding, but it’s also too shallow a solace to keep reality at bay.

Mia and Sebastian in La La Land.

Dale Robinette / Lionsgate

When La La Land wins the Oscar for Best Picture, as it seems very likely to, it will look, from afar, like a navel-gazing choice to top off the chaotic, divided misery that was 2016. What’s safer and more predictable than the movie industry’s love of movies about the movie industry? But to treat La La Land as the Oscar equivalent of a “no comment” would be to do it a disservice. It’s a bittersweet answer to a year in which nostalgia turned on us. It turned on us in minor ways, in how cynically and inauspiciously it was used to leverage sequelsBridget Jones's Baby, Zoolander 2, Independence Day: Resurgence — that no one seemed to want. And it turned on us in large, frightening ways, in the war cry of “Make America great again,” which brought with it the question of when the country was last “great,” and for whom.

The complications of nostalgia for a simpler, nattier dressed, and, incidentally, more exclusionary and oppressive time could be seen in the multiple movies set in the film industry’s past that big-name directors put out in the months before La La Land reached theaters. Each of three — Woody Allen’s Café Society, Warren Beatty's Rules Don't Apply, and the Coen brothers' Hail, Caesar! — takes great pleasure in the trappings of vintage Hollywood, and each pairs that pleasure with a different degree of acknowledgment of their time periods’ respective shittiness.

In the inert Café Society, set in a golden-toned 1930s as seen through the eyes of the Bronx-born Los Angeles transplant Bobby Dorfman (Jesse Eisenberg), there’s no acknowledgment at all. The past has always had more allure than the present for Allen, and Café Society isn’t a film in which that fact is mediated by any self-awareness — there’s a tranquilizing quality to its incurious beauty. When California eventually lets Bobby, his stand-in, down, it’s not for reasons that are anything other than personal — he’s another Allen protagonist who finds the West Coast wanting.

Bobby (Jesse Eisenberg) and Vonnie (Kristen Stewart) in Café Society; Marla Mabrey (Lily Collins) in Rules Don't Apply; Burt Gurney (Channing Tatum) in Hail, Caesar!.

Amazon Studios; Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation; Alison Cohen Rosa / Universal Pictures

More interesting but more muddled in its take on an early showbiz era is the strange, arrhythmic Rules Don’t Apply. Beatty's film is a tragedy in the form of a screwball comedy about driver Frank Forbes (Alden Ehrenreich) and aspiring actor Marla Mabrey (Lily Collins), who meet in the orbit of Howard Hughes (Beatty) in the ’50s. It’s about being at the beck and call of a gradually deteriorating man everyone’s willfully pretending is just eccentric — and in Marla’s case, it’s about being one of a collection of pretty would-be starlets being kept, corralled, and occasionally summoned like expensive pets.

Marla, who starts a forbidden romance with Frank, gets treated with great cruelty, and yet the film can’t find it in itself to be cutting — it is curiously light and sunny until its melancholy coda. Rules Don't Apply should feel like a satire about our national tendency (still going strong!) to lionize billionaire businessmen as godlike, but Beatty seems to be as fascinated by Hughes as the eventual lovers his story eclipses.

The best of the trio is the Coens’ giddy Hail, Caesar!, which is set around the same time as Rules Don’t Apply. It doesn’t just acknowledge the gap between public image and messy, sometimes ugly truth in its studio setting, it turns it into the film’s central joke. Fixer Eddie Mannix (Josh Brolin) has a full-time job covering up the fact that his studio’s bathing beauty is unwed and pregnant and that its biggest star is heteroflexible.

Up-and-comers Hobie Doyle (also Alden Ehrenreich) and Carlotta Valdez (Verónica Osorio) play along with the roles of period drama stars and ethnic stereotypes assigned to them by executives. The Coens were rightfully criticized for the terrible answer they gave when asked about their film’s pervasive whiteness, but in the case of Hail, Caesar!, whiteness is part of its point. It’s a wry but cheerful portrayal of the birthplace of dreams as a manufactured, unrepresentative, barely held together lie.

Keith (John Legend) and Sebastian in La La Land.

Dale Robinette / Lionsgate

Whiteness is part of the point of La La Land as well — it is, after all, a privilege of whiteness to see yourself so easily in the stars of the studio golden age, as Mia does, and to imagine yourself among them or as carrying on in their tradition. It’s a privilege of whiteness to feel such an unabashed sense of ownership over a genre of music as fundamentally grounded in the black experience as jazz the way Sebastian does. Sebastian is gifted — it’s why Keith (John Legend), whose band is on the rise, hires him as a keyboardist, despite calling the self-appointed traditionalist a “pain in the ass” and asking him, “How are you going to save jazz if no one's listening?” Keith sees jazz as alive and adapting, whereas for Sebastian it’s frozen in the past, bound by rules about the right and wrong ways to go about it.

Keith’s right, but it’s Sebastian and Mia that the movie is about. They are passionate about their dreams, but what allows them to fulfill those fantasies is ultimately their ability to hawk nostalgia, to leverage it. That’s not the exclusive domain of whiteness, but it has certainly been a specialty of it, not just in MAGA hats but in the aesthetics of hipster Brooklyn and Silver Lake and everywhere else that can support a straight razor barbershop/bar. Mia nabs her big break, a movie shooting in Paris (Paris!), by telling a story about growing up idolizing her aunt and inheriting her desires for a bold, throwback artist’s life, turning her memories into a message more universal, a plea on behalf of dreamers. As a reward, she doesn't have to fit herself into some lesser commercial project — she becomes the film, the role being shaped around her.

Sebastian and Mia in La La Land.

Dale Robinette / Lionsgate

Sebastian, too, gets the jazz club he always longed for, and — despite his total lack of commercial sense — it’s thriving, his hardline purism having been interpreted into something that seems hip. It’s the kind of place that doesn't try to lure people off the street with its quiet retro appeal, and yet manages to anyway. It looks cool, Sebastian’s venue, and it sounds charming, Mia’s movie. Like La La Land itself, these projects are creations of a lucky and entitled collection of people for whom nostalgia for the past reads not as affectation but as authenticity. That they are so lovable in the face of their unconscious advantages speaks to the talent of the leads, to Chazelle’s measured self-awareness, and to the sincerity of the film’s joy. Or chalk it up to the magic of the movies in which La La Land so fervently believes, and which it peddles so convincingly you may not even notice what’s being sold.

Kids Are Sending Santa Letters At Elf On The Shelf Headquarters And It's Freaking Adorable

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More than 120,000 letters each year!

Everyone knows you can write a letter to Santa at the North Pole, but you might not know you can also send a letter to Santa at Elf on the Shelf headquarters — and get a response!

Everyone knows you can write a letter to Santa at the North Pole, but you might not know you can also send a letter to Santa at Elf on the Shelf headquarters — and get a response!

Elf on the Shelf receives and responds to more than 120,000 letters every holiday season.

elfontheshelf.com

The quickest way to get a response is by submitting a letter online, but lots of kids send letters in the old fashioned way too.

The quickest way to get a response is by submitting a letter online, but lots of kids send letters in the old fashioned way too.

If you'd like to mail Santa a letter you can send it to the address below, which is an official outpost for the North Pole, don't cha know?

The Elf on the Shelf®
3350 Riverwood Parkway SE, Ste 300
Atlanta, Georgia 30339

elfontheshelf.com

So what are kids writing? BuzzFeed spoke to a Scout Elf at E.O.T.S. headquarters who shared some of their favorite quotes from this year's letters:

So what are kids writing? BuzzFeed spoke to a Scout Elf at E.O.T.S. headquarters who shared some of their favorite quotes from this year's letters:

elfontheshelf.com

"I was just wondering if you liked the chicken nuggets we left you last year, and if you would like more this year."

"I was just wondering if you liked the chicken nuggets we left you last year, and if you would like more this year."

Flickr: flyingsaab / Via Creative Commons


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32 Of The Female Creators Who Made Great TV In 2016

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We’re at peak TV, but instances of women creating their own shows are still rare. For women of color, it’s even rarer. So let’s celebrate those who did the damn thing.

Issa Rae

Issa Rae

Who she is: Creator, executive producer, and star of the HBO series Insecure. Prior to that, she was known for her web series Mis-Adventures of Awkward Black Girl.

What she gave us in 2016: A much-anticipated and critically acclaimed TV debut that is artfully invested in the everyday comedy and drama of adulthood. And the promise of more to come, with her comedic anthology series Minimum Wage in the works.

Frederick M. Brown / Getty Images / HBO

Michaela Coel

Michaela Coel

Who she is: Creator, composer, lead actor, and sole writer of Chewing Gum, which aired on E4 in 2015 but came to Netflix for the US in 2016.

What she gave us in 2016: Stateside access to a series built on fun raunch and the electric presence of Coel's own star power. Not to mention production on the eagerly awaited second season, because we already need more.

John Phillips / Getty Images / E4 / Netflix

Rebecca Sugar

Rebecca Sugar

Who she is: The mastermind behind Cartoon Network's Steven Universe, working as the executive producer and storyboard artist as well as writing the story for the series and most of its music.

What she gave us in 2016: Another thoroughly beloved season of Steven Universe's particular brand of deeply felt humanity, which was especially needed in a year as bleak as 2016.

Paul Zimmerman / Getty Images / Cartoon Network

Ava DuVernay

Ava DuVernay

Who she is: Creator, executive producer, and director of Queen Sugar on OWN. You may also know her as the director of Selma, Netflix's 13th, and the upcoming film A Wrinkle in Time.

What she gave us in 2016: A beautifully realized series that employed a crew of all-women directors for its first season. DuVernay also gave the world a devastatingly necessary look at the prison system.

Mike Windle / Getty Images / OWN


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The 16 Celebrity GIFs People Used To Express Themselves In 2016

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As per your keyboard.

GIFs aren't just contained in Tumblr posts anymore. Thanks to GIF keyboards that you can download right onto your phone, you don't have to tell someone you want to party — you can show them with a RuPaul GIF.

That can lead to some fun insights. Tenor, the company that makes the GIF keyboard for some of the world’s most popular messaging apps — iMessage, Facebook Messenger, Kik, Twitter, Google Gboard, and the Android’s Touchpal and Kika keyboards — has compiled data on how people used celebrity GIFs to express themselves in 2016.

According to the company, people search for GIFs on their keyboards 200 million times every day. Half of the company's user base, according to CEO David McIntosh, is in North America, around a quarter is in Europe, and the remainder can be found in Latin America, the Middle East, and Asia.

Most GIFs in Tenor's database use emotions or emotional actions as a primary tag — “sad,” “smile,” “ewww” — so using a celebrity GIF usually has a tag that indicates the tone. You can, for instance, search “Steph Curry nervous” for a GIF of the basketball player biting his nails.

McIntosh told BuzzFeed News, "The world is voting with what they search for and share on how the world perceives these [celebrities]."

Here are the celebrities people turned to most in 2016 to express their emotions when words failed and only a GIF would do:

Kobe Bryant: #Smile

Kobe Bryant: #Smile

This GIF is also tagged with "really," "deal with it," and "forreal."

Tenor / Via tenor.co

LeBron James: #Eww

LeBron James: #Eww

Gross.

Tenor / Via tenor.co

RuPaul: #Party

RuPaul: #Party

San Diego searches for this tag more than any other city every night of the week, according to Tenor.

Tenor / Via tenor.co


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Lamar Odom's Next Project Isn't A Reality Show, But It Will Be For TV

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Kevork Djansezian / Getty Images

Lamar Odom has not signed up to do a reality show despite reports to the contrary, a source close to the former Lakers’ star told BuzzFeed News on Tuesday. Instead, Odom's next television project will be something totally different than what viewers are accustomed to seeing him in.

The source, who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matters, declined to elaborate, but said the new project would likely be revealed early next year.

Meanwhile, Odom is at an undisclosed drug and alcohol clinic as a preventive measure and doing “very well,” the source added.

Odom checked into the 30-day program earlier in December after taping a brief segment with The Doctors about seeking help, during which he revealed being in a “dark place” right before collapsing at a Nevada brothel in 2015. Odom will also tape a segment with The Doctors after he is released in January.

There are no cameras filming the actual recovery.

Odom and Khloé Kardashian, with whom he regularly appeared on Keeping Up With The Kardashians, officially divorced Dec. 9.

LINK: Lamar Odom Used Cocaine, Sex Enhancers At Brothel, 911 Callers Reported


Here's What People Are Excited About In Culture For 2017

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Michelle Yeoh, Beyoncé, Wonder Woman, the Magnetic Fields, G.L.O.W., and a whole lot more. Mark your calendars.

Lixia Guo / BuzzFeed News

Maris Kreizman, editorial director, Book of the Month Club

Maris Kreizman, editorial director, Book of the Month Club

"My favorite book that I never thought would be a TV series but more importantly never ever expected to be More Relevant Than Ever is The Handmaid's Tale. Hulu's adaptation of Margaret Atwood's dystopian masterpiece starring Elisabeth Moss airs in April. I hope it isn't merely an echo of what America looks like by then. In the meantime, 'Nolite te bastardes carborundorum,' or, 'Don't let the bastards grind you down.'"

Hulu

Syreeta McFadden, writer

Syreeta McFadden, writer

"Light always combats darkness. And while the political climate may augur extremely dark times to come, I resist surrendering to those forces, because we have great art and culture works on the horizon. As far as books in 2017 that I'm excited will be in the world, Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah's The Explainers and the Explorers, Morgan Parker's There Are More Beautiful Things Than Beyoncé, Safia Elhilo's The January Children, Melissa Febos's Abandon Me, and George Saunders' Lincoln in the Bardo. This year, while crappy, managed to yield an abundance of great music from Jamilah Woods, Noname, Frank Ocean, Solange, Chance, Radiohead, Beyoncé, A Tribe Called Quest, Anderson Paak, Blood Orange, James Blake, and, and...that I feel really fortified entering 2017 on that end. Ah! A web series I'm really excited to see debut next year is Brown Girls, set in the South Side of Chicago and centering on the friendship of two women of color. Also, the I'm Not Your Negro documentary!"

Tin House Books


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Germans Came Up With An Adorable Way To Fight Fake News After The Berlin Truck Attack

Rainbow-Headed Snake Among 163 New Species Discovered

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Scientists this week announced the discovery of 163 new species, including a newt that resembles a Klingon from Star Trek and a rainbow-headed snake resembling David Bowie’s Ziggy Stardust.

Here are some of the more eye-catching discoveries:

Rainbow-headed snake

Rainbow-headed snake

Parafimbrios lao, Laos

Alexander Teynie / Via via WWF

Researchers on a hike in northern Laos just happened upon the rainbow-headed snake, which they likened to David Bowie's Ziggy Stardust character, as it was perched on a mossy rock.

“It did not look like something known,” Alexander Teynie said in the World Wildlife Fund report. “We approached with shock, bringing to mind all known species in Asia that it may resemble, but there was no match!”

In fact the snake, with its distinct coloration, rows of scales, and unique number of upper teeth, wasn’t just a new species, it was part of a new Genus: Parafimbrios, scientists reported.

The "Klingon" Newt

The "Klingon" Newt

Tylototriton anguliceps, Thailand

Porrawee Pomchote / Via via WWF

The so-called Klingon newt, with its distinctive dorsal ridge and red markings, is only the fourth newt species found to exist in Thailand. Between 6 and 7 centimeters long, it was discovered in the Chiang Rai province.

Wooly-Headed Bat

Wooly-Headed Bat

Murina kontumensis, Vietnam

Nguyen Truong Son / Via via WWF

The medium-sized bat was found in the Central Highlands of Vietnam, adding to the diversity of a family of bats known for the thick, woolly fur on their heads and forearms, the WWF reported.

Phuket Horned Tree Agamid

Phuket Horned Tree Agamid

Acanthosaura phuketensis, Thailand

Montri Sumontha / Via via WWF

Discovered on the island of Phuket, the forest-dwelling lizard is distinguished from its mainland cousins by intimidating horns along its back and head. It was also a surprise find for scientists on an island that is relatively developed as a major tourist destination.

"The reptile fauna of Phuket has been ignored for many years by biologists because most of the forest cover of the island has been destroyed by human activities,” conservation biologist Olivier Pauwels said in the WWF report.

And despite its appearance, researchers say the lizard is totally harmless.

In all, scientists discovered 9 amphibians, 11 fish, 14 reptiles, 126 plants, and 3 mammals in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.

In all, scientists discovered 9 amphibians, 11 fish, 14 reptiles, 126 plants, and 3 mammals in Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, and Vietnam.

Nobuyuki Tanaka / Via via WWF

The WWF warns that habitat loss and destruction, as well as pollution and other manmade intrusions, are putting pressure on Southeast Asia species, many of which depend on delicate, single environments.

Poaching and illegal wildlife trade for rare species are also taking their toll, scientists said in the report.

"These scientists, the unsung heroes of conservation, know they are racing against time to ensure that these newly discovered species are protected," said Jimmy Borah, wildlife program manager for WWF-Greater Mekong.

To read the full WWF report, Species Oddity, go here.

LINK: The World’s Oldest Known Breeding Seabird Just Laid Another Egg

LINK: Giraffes At Risk Of “Silent Extinction” After Population Plunges By 40%


These Beautifully Haunting Photos Illustrate How Much We're Polluting The Ocean

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Save the mermaids! #MermaidsHatePlastic

This picture, taken by photographer Benjamin Von Wong, features a beached mermaid laying on top of 10,000 recycled plastic bottles.

This picture, taken by photographer Benjamin Von Wong, features a beached mermaid laying on top of 10,000 recycled plastic bottles.

"If the average American uses 167 plastic bottles a year, in 60 years they will have used 10,000 plastic bottles," a statement on his website reads.

Vonwong / Via blog.vonwong.com

By using the recycled plastic bottles as a stand-in for the ocean, Von Wong hopes the images start a conversation on how plastic bottles are polluting our oceans.

By using the recycled plastic bottles as a stand-in for the ocean, Von Wong hopes the images start a conversation on how plastic bottles are polluting our oceans.

Vonwong / Via blog.vonwong.com

In addition to having a camera crew help him, Von Wong brought in a team of volunteers, a professional makeup artist, and an airbrusher.

In addition to having a camera crew help him, Von Wong brought in a team of volunteers, a professional makeup artist, and an airbrusher.

The silicone tails were made by Canadian designer Cynthia Cyntault of Cyntault Créations, who made them specifically for the project.

Mathieu Harvey and Paul Kepron / Via blog.vonwong.com

"Hopefully people feel empowered by this series," Von Wong told BuzzFeed.

"Hopefully people feel empowered by this series," Von Wong told BuzzFeed.

He wants people to remember "that we can make a difference and make sure there are 10,000 less bottles in the ocean, rather than get depressed and think, 'Oh, what difference will it make anyways.'"

Vonwong / Via blog.vonwong.com


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A Mom Gave Her Daughter A Hilariously Stern Talking-To After She Got Cropped Out Of A Photo

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“I gave birth to you with such difficulty and you repay me by cropping me out.”

This is 18-year-old Abeera Tariq with her mom, Noreen. Their entire family attended her cousin's wedding recently, and this specific photo was apparently among hundreds of photos taken that day.

This is 18-year-old Abeera Tariq with her mom, Noreen. Their entire family attended her cousin's wedding recently, and this specific photo was apparently among hundreds of photos taken that day.

Abeera Tariq

Upset, Noreen screenshotted the photo and asked her daughter why she was cropped out of it. "[You] all are here in this world because of me," she proceeded to say as she addressed the indignity.

Upset, Noreen screenshotted the photo and asked her daughter why she was cropped out of it. "[You] all are here in this world because of me," she proceeded to say as she addressed the indignity.

Momma Noreen then texted in Urdu and said (loosely translated to English), "Ungrateful kids...I gave birth to you with such difficulty and you repay me by cropping me out."

Tariq said she and her mom "joke around like that all the time," but she genuinely "felt bad" when she got saw the texts.

But her mom ended up calling her, and they were able to laugh about it all after.

Abeera Tariq


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20 Movies To Binge Watch

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Don’t know what to watch? Here’s some help!

The Martian

The Martian

Starring: Matt Damon, Jessica Chastain, Chiwetel Ejiofor, Kristin Wiig, Kate Mara
Director: Ridley Scott

DIY greenhouse? Check.

filmlinc / Via giphy.com

The Lord of the Rings

The Lord of the Rings

Starring: Elijah Wood, Ian McKellan, Viggo Mortensen, Orlando Bloom
Director: Peter Jackson

Even if you do not like fantasy films, the film score is amazing.

teendotcom.tumblr.com / Via giphy.com

Starring: George Clooney, Brad Pitt, Matt Damon, Don Cheadle, Bernie Mac, Scott Caan, Casey Affleck, Carl Reiner, Elliott Gould, Eddie Jemison, Julia Roberts, Shaobo Qin
Director: Steven Soderbergh

Look at the cast. Again.

Starring: Tyler Perry, Denise Richards, Eugene Levy, Danielle Campbell, Romeo Miller, Doris Roberts, Tom Arnold
Director: Tyler Perry

Everyone needs a small dose of Madea in their lives.


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