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The New York Times Wants To Legalize Weed

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The Times editorial board is calling on the federal government to “repeal prohibition, again.”

Jason Redmond / Reuters

The editorial acknowledges that there are "legitimate concerns" about marijuana use, but that ultimately the negative effects of anti-weed laws outweigh the benefits.

It has been more than 40 years since Congress passed the current ban on marijuana, inflicting great harm on society just to prohibit a substance far less dangerous than alcohol.

The editorial goes on to mention the "rapidly growing movement among states" that have embraced changes to marijuana laws, as well as the hundreds of thousands of arrests that result from marijuana possession. It also argues fears about weed are overblown:

Moderate use of marijuana does not appear to pose a risk for otherwise healthy adults. Claims that marijuana is a gateway to more dangerous drugs are as fanciful as the "Reefer Madness" images of murder, rape and suicide.

Most famously, Maureen Dowd wrote a widely-circulated story about her experience trying pot in Colorado earlier this year. Dowd ended up paranoid and ill, and she supplemented the piece with tales of pot driving people to murder and suicide, among other things. (Dowd followed up with a less alarmist piece entitled "Pot Rules.")

David Brooks also condemned marijuana earlier this year, writing that embracing pot nurtures "a moral ecology in which it is a bit harder to be the sort of person most of us want to be."

Evidently, a new wind is blowing.


Men Try Women's Makeup For The First Time

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"The Avengers: Age Of Ultron" First Look Plays To A Standing Ovation At Comic-Con

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Plus: Guardians of the Galaxy 2 gets a release date.

Charlie Wen / Marvel

Charlie Wen / Marvel

Charlie Wen / Marvel


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29 Reminders That The Illuminati Is Ready To Take Over Any Second

Philip Seymour Hoffman's Last Leading Role Is A Reminder Of How Much He'll Be Missed

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The late actor’s quietly great as a world-weary spy in the thriller A Most Wanted Man .

Philip Seymour Hoffman in A Most Wanted Man

Roadside Attractions

Sadly, we're running out of new Philip Seymour Hoffman performances to watch.

The actor appears on screen in the final Hunger Games installments, which he'd almost completed shooting at the time of his death in February at age 47. The pilot he made for Showtime, Happyish, will either be recast or just fade away. It's a uniquely mournful thing, the trickling out of the last bits of work that someone left behind, performances transformed into ghostlike traces. But that shouldn't stop anyone from seeing A Most Wanted Man, which opened in New York and Los Angeles this weekend and will expand to more cities in the next few weeks.

A Most Wanted Man is Hoffman's final leading role, and it's a quiet, superb one. Not that he ever really made a bad movie, or at least, he never did a bad job regardless of the quality of everything around him — but A Most Wanted Man is the type of part that shows off Hoffman's ability to sink into a character, to find the reverberating humanity in someone who, at first glance, might be easy to overlook. Hoffman played some big, showy parts — Lancaster Dodd, Truman Capote, Lester Bangs — and he played them well. But Günther Bachmann, the shabby spy he embodies in A Most Wanted Man, isn't that kind of guy, even as he works toward the half-ironic goal to "make the world a better place."

Kerry Brown/Roadside Attractions

A Most Wanted Man is a collaboration between a director and writer who are both known for works of finely wrought melancholy. It's an adaptation of a novel by John le Carré, the great chronicler of moody espionage sagas like The Spy Who Came in From the Cold and Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, and it's helmed by photographer and filmmaker Anton Corbijn, whose feature debut Control centered on the uneasy, electric life and early death of Joy Division's Ian Curtis. A Most Wanted Man's hero, Günther, the head of a hush-hush anti-terrorism division operating out of Hamburg, is the kind of man who always looks like he's wearing yesterday's clothes. He smokes and drinks, pulling out a flask to spike his coffee while meeting with a formidable CIA observer (Robin Wright), cool as ice under the professional smile.

These things, even if not exactly a front, provide a kind of convenient misdirection for Günther, who has cultivated the air of a failure who was shunted off to his post in the port city after his information networks in Beirut were compromised. But Günther is razor sharp under the slipshod exterior, and he's pursuing two major projects, one long-term and one that lands in his lap. The big fish is Dr. Faisal Abdullah (Homayoun Ershadi), who runs a charitable organization Günther thinks is also funneling money to Al-Qaeda. The newcomer is Issa Karpov (Grigoriy Dobrygin), a twentysomething half-Chechen, half-Russian man who arrives in the city either planning something nefarious or looking for asylum.


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Florida Tow Truck Operator Charged For Illegally Towing Vehicles During Gay Days Festival

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Orange County Sheriffs deputies have arrested Jason Combs for allegedly towing more than 100 vehicles during the Gay Days festivities in Orlando June 5 to 9.

Police arrested Jason Combs on Friday after investigating several claims made by victims who said their vehicles were illegally towed. One victim said he was targeted because of his sexual orientation, the Orlando Sentinel reports.

Police arrested Jason Combs on Friday after investigating several claims made by victims who said their vehicles were illegally towed. One victim said he was targeted because of his sexual orientation, the Orlando Sentinel reports .

Orange County Sheriff / Via Facebook: OrangeCoSheriff

The Gay Days celebration, which had its 24th year last month, is an annual festival that attracts thousands of people to the area and Walt Disney World's Magic Kingdom.

Combs, who operates ASAP Towing, was charged with 29 counts of grand theft of a motor vehicle and 60 counts of violating a county towing ordinance. Authorities said he raked in $16,000, but lacked the authority to tow the vehicles.

Combs, who operates ASAP Towing, was charged with 29 counts of grand theft of a motor vehicle and 60 counts of violating a county towing ordinance. Authorities said he raked in $16,000, but lacked the authority to tow the vehicles.

FOX 35 / Via orlandosentinel.com

Combs towed the vehicles from a parking lot at Westwood Town Center, which is across the street from the Gay Days host hotel, the Doubletree by Hilton, even though his contract with Westwood expired in May and was not renewed until mid-June, according to the paper.

Police said Combs and "spotters" assisting him allegedly kept watch on the area and towed the vehicles within minutes of visitors parking to visit shops and other establishments.

"Visitors would park in the Westwood Town Center at 6109 Westwood Boulevard (across from the event's headquarters) and patronize various shops and restaurants there, only to emerge and find that their cars were towed," the Orange County Sheriff's office said in a Facebook post announcing the arrest. "We will not tolerate those who take advantage of our citizens or visitors."

Those whose cars were towed had to take a cab ride to a towing facility over 10 miles away — also a violation of the state's law — and with that, authorities said they are investigating possible collusion with cab drivers who lined up to serve the stranded motorists.

The Orange County Sheriff's office did not immediately respond to a request for additional comment.


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This Cyclops Lamb Will Probably Give You Nightmares

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Yet it’s also sort of cute?

youtube.com

In the shocking clip, the fluffy newborn bleats as it tries to walk while a farmer shows its face to the camera.

In the shocking clip, the fluffy newborn bleats as it tries to walk while a farmer shows its face to the camera.

Some commenters pointed out that since the eye doesn't seem to blink, it might not actually be functioning.

It's not clear if the video is real, but Metro reports one-eyed lambs were also born in Idaho during the 1950s. A naturally-occurring chemical in some strains of wild corn was the culprit, according to a U.S. Department of Agriculture investigation.

youtube.com

This Guy Makes Amazingly Weird Vines You Should Watch Immediately

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Hello? Hey. All from the brain of Avery Monsen .

You might know him from the "100 New Emojis" Vine.

Pause the Vine at any moment to check out the emojis.

vine.co

Or this one, which has been looped over 48 million times. It's literally perfect.

vine.co

He also makes magical Mrs. Doubtfire themed Vines.

vine.co


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17 Times Beyoncé Had The Answer To Everything

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Bow down to Beysus.

When someone sees your message but doesn't respond:

When someone sees your message but doesn't respond:

Sony Music Entertainment / Via youtube.com

When you finish getting ready in the morning:

When you finish getting ready in the morning:

CBS / Via giphy.com

When someone thinks they can throw shade your way:

When someone thinks they can throw shade your way:

Sony Music Entertainment / Via youtube.com

When your ex texts you:

When your ex texts you:

Sony Music Entertainment / Via youtube.com


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Here's A Sneak Peek Of When "The Simpsons" Meets "Family Guy" This Fall

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Is Springfield ready?

San Diego Comic-Con attendees got an early look at the upcoming crossover episode, which will introduce the Griffins of Family Guy to Springfield's beloved Simpson family.

FOX / vine.co

The Family Guy episode, which is due to air Sept. 28 on Fox, will feature both show's favorite stars interacting in the same world.

FOX / vine.co

The episode will air on the same evening as The Simpsons season premiere, during which a major character is set to be killed off.

youtube.com

So grab a Pawtucket Patriot Ale or Duff Beer (whichever you prefer) and enjoy what should be a landmark episode for both sitcoms.

FOX / vine.co


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33 Dogs Winning At Everything

A Baby Elephant Met A Cat For The First Time And It Was So Freakin' Adorable

14 Ways To Make Running Suck Less

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Because you’re sick of running like a wounded gazelle.

Get a running app.

Get a running app.

They track your pace and distance and are great at intimidating you into running. What do you mean yesterday I thought it was a good idea to be alerted to run at 8 a.m.?

RunKeeper / Via appbrain.com

Set a goal.

Set a goal.

Pizza. The goal is always pizza.

Ottoman Empire / Via husbandsgifs.tumblr.com

Walk first.

Walk first.

Tell yourself that you're just going for a walk. Once you're out there, your silly brain will probably be tricked into running. If not, you still got a walk in!

NBC / Via uproxx.com

Stretch at the right time.

Stretch at the right time.

Stretch after a few minutes of walking/jogging and at the end of your run. Never stretch cold muscles!

Paramount Pictures / Via jeremyrennergifs.tumblr.com


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This New App Lets You Turn Your Beautiful Face Into Emojis

Hercules Has Gotten Way More Relatable — And Less Queer — In The Past 2,700 Years

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Mainstream contemporary culture isn’t into the idea of a masculine hero being a cold-blooded murderer or having a young male lover. Weird, right?

Paramount Pictures

The new Hercules apparently wants its masculine hero to be eminently relatable. "I only want to be a husband and a father," he says. "I am no hero," this humble Hercules, played by Dwayne Johnson, contends. "Become the Legend," offers the website of the new Hercules, pressing you to put an image of your face in a hole underneath the hero's lion skin. Yet this modern modesty twist — Hercules as a family man who sees himself as a normal person who happens to be exceptionally strong — is fundamentally at odds with the hero's ancient origins.

The first written reference to Herakles (his Greek name) is found in Homer's Iliad; here and for centuries after, he was a Greek hero of the very old school. Classics professor G. Karl Galinsky explains that the "Iliadic hero is not a fiercely independent individualist but almost makes a cult of proper procedure (themis) and of paying proper respect (aidōs) to whomever proper respect is due." The very ancient Herakles was not even as modern as the Iliadic heroes. Thus in the Iliad and the Odyssey, Herakles is seen as hubristic and his behavior as shocking — he fights against the gods and is said to have killed a guest in his home, both sickening and inherently repulsive transgressions. The only way Herakles would have been "relatable" in the ancient world was as an athlete — poetry likened Herakles' deeds to athleticism, a line of thinking that suggests athletes should try to emulate Herakles. (Athlos, the word used to describe a sporting contest, was also the word used for his 12 labors.)

Herakles was, by ancient accounts, very sexually promiscuous. In one tale, he had sex with 50 sisters in one night. According to Aristotle, his virility produced 72 sons and a single daughter, but others report even more offspring. The canonical ancient stories tell of the hero murdering his wife and their (legitimate) children in a fit of madness brought on by the goddess Hera. His last mortal wife, Deianeira, inadvertently kills him because she is jealous of the slave-concubine he's brought home to live in their house. His is a story that makes little sense, perhaps, in the modern context, hence its sanitization.

During the Renaissance, the tale of his "choice between Vice and Virtue" became a popular Hercules story — he inevitably chooses Virtue. The Hercules of the Kevin Sorbo-led 1990s TV show was characterized in the opening credits as having "a strength the world had never seen — a strength surpassed only by the power of his heart." Hercules was born at a time when there was no chasm between thought and deed as now, hence the acceptance then of his brutality. To be a hero of antiquity meant to perform superhuman feats; to be a hero of modernity means to possess a capacity for deep morality.

In Greece, Herakles became much more popular as a comic figure than a serious figure — Classics scholar Emma Stafford terms him a "a cheerfully promiscuous glutton." Many statues remain of a drunken Hercules urinating, some of which were designed as fountains. A fragment from Hesiod suggests that Hercules had a sense of humor about himself, which was likely present in oral folktales of the hero. His "active" sexual appetites are highly masculine — Classics professor Giulia Sissa writes that "[desire] is the reaction of a mature male body to another body, whose femininity strikes and stimulates (whether or not that femininity belongs to a woman or a young man)." Although insatiable sexual desires were usually associated with women and receptive male partners, Herakles was nonetheless a paragon of manhood, down to his perfect small penis. Galinsky writes that his prodigious progeny are an affirmation of patriarchal values, in which his many sons spread the glory of his own immortal father, Zeus.

Flickr: aaron_wolpert / Via CC


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