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Watch a bunch of attractive people get Tased in slow-motion

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Want to watch a slow-motion video of attractive people getting Tased? You’re in luck, because that is exactly what photographer Patrick Hall created in his new piece, "The Taser Photoshoot." 

Hall took photos of roughly 100 people over the course of a night, as they received 300,000 volts, to show what people’s faces look like when Tased. His reasoning?

"As a portrait photographer, I am always trying to make people feel comfortable in front of my camera so I can capture a real emotion from them.  But what if I was able to make people feel so uncomfortable in front of the camera that I could guarantee an interesting portrait every time?"

The Taser was apparently strong enough to get a rection but not enough to physically injure the participants. And yes, this collection of faces does look like the poster art for Lars Von Trier’s Nymphomaniac.

Hall explains the psychology behind this project, too:

"Each person was tazed by their friend or significant other which created an interesting dynamic in itself.  The emotions on both sides of the taser were extremely entertaining to watch. The person getting tazed was almost always nervous and jittery with either a sense of fear or anxiety. The participants doing the tazing had a different demeanor altogether. Most of them were excited to cause pain to their friend and only showed remorse immediately after executing the shock."

The video portion shows the participants as they brace for the jolt, and then as they experience the actual Tasing. The behind-the-scenes video offers a bit more context.

Lest you think Hall is just a masochist with a camera, he got Tased too.

Screengrab via Fstoppers Fans/YouTube 


What it's like behind the scenes at the Primetime Emmys

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Even with the advent of backstage livestreams and 360-degree social media coverage, the actual behind-the-scenes experience at a major awards show like the Primetime Emmys is daunting. On Monday night, I donned my most sensible black dress and low heels, armed myself with an iPhone as part of the on-hand social media team, and embarked on my first-ever Emmys experience to learn about how one of Hollywood’s biggest nights functions. Here are my CliffNotes.

1) The rehearsal is unintentionally hilarious.

Some of the celebrities do show up for rehearsals the day before, like Amy Poehler, but many celebrities who aren’t also presenters don’t. That means random members of the production staff get to take their place, wearing placards around their necks and giving fake acceptance speeches so the camera team can practice their shots. Even the red carpet clips need rehearsal, so the feed cuts to more production staff doing their best over-the-shoulder looks while wearing signs that proclaim them to be Anna Paquin. It’s very serious business getting things just right for showtime, but also pretty funny to see random folks playing at being big celebs.

2) Imagine how many people you think it takes to throw a show like this. Now multiply that by 10.

There are simply hordes of people making the Emmy magic come true that you never see. On the social media front alone, our team soared into the double digits, and that’s just a fraction of the digital production crew. There are talent runners who make sure celebrities don’t miss their cues, crews dedicated to simply making sure the seats are completely full at all times, and countless others who make the Emmys chaos look like a well-oiled machine to the TV viewing audience.

3) You will definitely bump into a celebrity, literally, before the night is through.

The famous quotient is so high it’s impossible not to brush elbows with a celebrity while doing your job. While my coolest moment was perhaps casually passing Bryan Cranston as the set was coming down at the end of the night and being able to tell him congrats, my most fear-inducing was a collision with Katherine Heigl, in a dress that probably cost more than my yearly rent, as we both re-entered the theater. She was totally gracious and apologized to me as I was apologizing to her.

You also spend a lot of time waiting for commercial breaks so you can re-enter the theater with A-Listers who’d popped out to use the bathroom and are now stranded outside with you, clutching their weighty Emmys. The red carpet is also an obstacle course filled with the trains of celebrities’ gowns you could step on and possibly destroy. The best part about the carpet is watching the celebs themselves bump into castmates and friends, although most of that is easily captured by the various press outlets stationed there. However, there is one hedge-lined stretch just before celebrities enter the venue that’s press-free, and it's perhaps the most zen place of the entire night. It was here I got to compliment several Orange Is the New Black stars on their outfit choices without the fear of flashbulbs catching my fangirling.

4) The questions in the press room will make you groan.

Sure, you read those quotes in Us Weekly where they ask female celebrities what food they’re going to gorge on now that they don’t have to starve themselves to fit into a ball gown, but having to sit there and listen to that question asked every time a female winner walks into the room is downright depressing. Also the delegation from Israel’s celebrity news service was on point, getting a question in to every single winner who came into the room. No one escaped without a grilling from Israel.

The most unfortunately awkward press room moment was with Sarah Silverman, who won for the writing on her HBO comedy special. She had to follow the Robin Williams in memoriam piece, and then got grilled about a pot joke she made on the red carpet earlier. Nothing she tried to joke about landed with the still-sad press corps. “I feel like I bombed,” she mused as she left the stage.

The funniest press room moment of the night was hands down when Bryan Cranston was asked about his “viral” kiss with Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and he exclaimed, “You’re telling me she has a virus!?” After a long day, we all needed some actual laughter.

5) Celebrities can hear you when you talk about them and they’re three feet away.

A casual reminder that, no, there’s not a screen separating you and your favorite TV stars. 

Our press room spot was prime front-row territory, and usually after a winner was done, they disappeared from the room forever. Not true for Modern Family, who came back through five minutes after their interviews to exit through another door. “They’re back!” I exclaimed to my coworker, and Eric Stonestreet stopped to wave at me and went, “We are, hello!” I had been so used to viewing the night through my digital lens that I forgot sometimes the celebs are, you know, right there.

6) There’s actually a ton of empty seats.

The area that the camera catches in the middle of the theater is packed, filled in by designated seat-fillers when the stars are backstage or in the bathroom, and the upper decks are pretty full as well. However, the sides of the orchestra are relatively empty during the show. These are seats that either house the seat-fillers when they’re not filling in up front, or are tickets that are given to productions staff who sometimes need to be in the theater but are often running around frantically dealing with backstage issues. 

7) The most exciting time in the theater is during commercial breaks

You’d think you want to be in the room to watch the awards being won, but actually the most fun time is during commercials, when celebs are up and out of their seats. For the social media team, that’s when we got the most interesting shots of the stars, and the people-watching can’t be beat. I saw Lena Dunham leaning over her seat to chat with Peter Dinklage, Amy Poehler and Kristen Wiig plopping down on their knees to chat with Jon Hamm in the front row, and Ryan Murphy and Julia Louis-Dreyfus making post-show plans, just to name a few A-List interactions. Also, in a musical-chairs-style shuffle, sometimes you end up thrust into a new seat right before the cameras turn back on and accidentally surrounded by the staff of The Colbert Report as they win their Emmy and get to feel like you’re part of the moment.

8) After you win, you head… outside?

That’s right, you’re ushered off stage and then out of the building. That’s because the media center and the place where you receive your actual Emmy (not the prop you’re handed on stage) is in a tent on top of a parking garage. I ended up making the trek with Stephen Colbert and crew, who definitely noticed and commented on the odd location. I almost blended in enough to snag an Emmy of my own, except that you have to prove you’re who you say you are to actually walk away with a statue. 

9) The food is actually great.

You’d think that the crew and press would get less-than-stellar food, but they actually serve great snacks and a full dinner meal for the hardworking backstage folks. They even came around with candy bars when the press room wrapped as an extra treat. Kudos to the Emmys for taking care of the people behind the scenes!

10) When it’s over, you hardly even register that it’s done.

The awards end, but winners keep streaming into the press room for about an hour after the show finishes, so there’s no real sense of finality when you’re backstage. Only after the last press appearance is done and people start to jump ship for parties do you exhale and come out of your Instagram tunnel-vision haze. And realize your back is killing you. And you definitely did not eat enough of the salmon.

Photos via televisionacad/Instagram | Remix by Fernando Alfonso III

R.L. Stine announces he's 'killing off more teenagers' with the return of Fear Street

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Big news for anyone who grew up in the ’90s and had a morbid fascination with the slumber party massacres and evil cheerleaders of R.L. Stine: The author of the Fear Street series announced on Twitter today that he’s going to be “killing off more teenagers.”

Party Games is his new novel, out next month, and the premise is very much in keeping with the Fear Street series:

Her friends warn her not to go to Brendan Fear's birthday party at his family's estate on mysterious Fear Island. But Rachel Martin has a crush on Brendan and is excited to be invited. Brendan has a lot of party games planned. But one game no one planned intrudes on his party—the game of murder.

Stine also saw success with the Goosebumps series, but he’s jumping back into Fear Street at an interesting time for young adult lit. Authors like Stine and Christopher Pike created a successful teen horror lit subgenre in the '80s and '90s, which focused mainly on teenage girls enduring murderous prank callers, murderous stepsisters, and murderous ghost lifeguards. The covers of the books are seared into my brain, and became as iconic as the series itself.

Fear Street covers

Screengrab via Google

It will be interesting to see how he updates the series for the social media age. Can't wait to read The Doxxer

H/T Jezebel | Illustration by Jason Reed 

All you do in this new game is tap Beyoncé's butt

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Nicki Minaj’s “Anaconda” video has given the world a new anthem for rear-end empowerment, as well a great Drake meme. For all the breathless, pearl-clutching opinions it's elicited, it is, at it’s core, a song about women owning their assets. 

Minaj performed the song at Sunday’s VMAs, and rapper Kitty Pryde, who rose to prominence in 2012 with her single “Okay Cupid,” created the game Tap That, which debuted yesterday. The objective: you're pitted against another player and compete to tap the butts of Minaj, Kim Kardashian, Iggy Azalea, and Beyoncé, in an attempt to make their butts expand and… that’s pretty much it. If you don’t tap the booty hard enough, you are subjected to a sad Drake image from “Anaconda" and a fart sound effect, which is almost worth losing for.

Tap that

Unsurprisingly, people had a lot of opinions about it. Does this game objectify women? Is it really empowering? Do we need another game featuring a Kardashian?

Essentially, this game is one big fart joke, so think about that when you start to take it too seriously. Welcome to your new time-waster. 

H/T Spin | Screengrab via NickiMinajAtVEVO/YouTube 

Grace Helbig and Hannah Hart to host 2014 Streamy Awards

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Two of YouTube's brightest stars will take center stage at September's Streamy Awards when Grace Helbig and Hannah Hart join forces as hosts of the 2014 event.

“Grace and Hannah are two talents that truly embody the hard work and success of today’s digital age," said executive producer Assaf Blecher in a statement. "There is no better team to co-host the show, and we couldn’t be more excited to watch their comedic talents collide.” 

Helbig and Hart have collaborated multiple times in the past, in various YouTube videos and in live settlings as part of their #NoFilter performance group with fellow YouTuber Mamrie Hart (no relation to Hannah). Helbig and Hart's individual successes are also noteworthy, and together they command an audience of more than 3 million subscribers. Hart recently released a cookbook under the My Drunk Kitchen moniker, and Helbig is tapped to host her own E! talk show. The pair will preside over the awarding of 14 honors live, with additional categories awarded prior to the show.

“The Streamys will be filled with memorable moments, show-stopping performances, and plenty of surprises,” Helbig and Hart jointly stated (in unison, presumably) in a press release. “We’re overjoyed about hosting this year’s show together and spotlighting our talented peers who are ushering digital entertainment into the mainstream.”

The Streamys will honor the best and the brightest of digital video live from Los Angeles Sept. 7. The last Streamy Awards were hosted by Chris Hardwick of Nerdist fame, who is currently dominating Comedy Central late night programming with his @Midnight game show.

The Streamys also announced today the audience choice finalists for Entertainer and Show of the Year.  Voting is now open on the Streamys website where fans can vote once per day.

Entertainer of the Year:

Bethany Mota

Brittany Furlan

Grace Helbig

Jack Vale

Jenna Marbles

Maiah Ocando

Michelle Phan

Ryan Higa

Toby Turner

Tyler Oakley

Show of the Year:

Emma Approved

EnchufeTV

Kids React

MyMusic

Nerdy Nummies

Rooster Teeth

SortedFood

SourceFed

The Philip DeFranco Show

Video Game High School

Screenshot via Grace Helbig/YouTube

Spoon and Outkast dominate as Metacritic's most consistent bands

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America’s political polarization is at a dangerous high right now. It feels almost as if nobody can agree on anything, and it’s getting harder to see where common ground might lie. 

This ties into the state of art, which is also remarkably fractured at the moment. Music in particular feels inescapably divisive, to the point where we fight about our favorite artists more than we talk about them. Critically adored superstars like Kanye West aren’t afraid to put out albums which basically dare people to keep listening (and that’s not saying anything about his much-hated-on personal life.) And even perennial favorites like Radiohead have left a few people scratching their heads as of late. 

There is something to be said for a musical landscape which elicits strong emotions, positive or negative. A fascinating failure can in theory be more interesting than a piece of competent adequacy. But where do music-lovers go when they want to know what they’re going to get? Where do the vinyl-collecting, bootleg-having, listening-to-everything among us end up when they want something consistent? 

Ladies and gentlemen, I give you Spoon.

With the release of its new album, They Want My Soul, the indie outfit, most famous for its appearances in The OC and movie trailers, has retained its position as the most consistent band on the planet. As Metacritic noted when Spoon came out No. 1 in its list of artists with the highest average of positive record reviews from the last decade, “the band topping the list was a surprise to us… albeit a pleasant one. The Austin, Texas indie-rock band Spoon may not be the most prolific band of the decade, but they were the most consistently great. From 2001's stellar Girls Can Tell to 2007's, well, stellar Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, the Britt Daniel-led group received accolades from the music press and music fans for their impeccable songwriting and addictive songs.” 

With Metacritic putting all Spoon's releases in the 80-85 range (81 denotes “universal acclaim” on the site), it’s hard to figure out why this little band has resonated the way it has. Without a doubt, there have been other indie rock acts who have broken out bigger, won more awards, and gotten larger acclaim for specific albums. But it is Spoon who emerges as the “sure thing.”

For Flavorwire’s Jillian Mapes, this is because Spoon is all about the music; the band doesn’t rely on gimmicks or tricks the way other bands do. Because of this, Spoon doesn’t always make for the best headlines either. But there is a purity to what it does. 

“An album cycle for Arcade Fire would not be complete without secret shows at warehouses and salsa clubs, cryptic graffiti teasers in major cities worldwide, even papier mâché heads worn by each band member… Vampire Weekend took out an ad in the 'Notices and Lost & Found' section of The New York Times to announce last year’s Modern Vampires of the City. While promoting 2011’s El Camino, The Black Keys pretended to be hawking a beat-up minivan — the album’s namesake model — with newspaper ads, a phone line, and a website called WannaBuyAVan.com. Entertaining? Definitely. Exhausting? A little.

...Spoon’s music has very little to hide behind — and it doesn’t need to. Every album they’ve released since the turn of the century has worked off the same sound with neither major revisions nor the elaborate narratives that accompany musical changes in direction… I can see how Spoon would be a frustrating band for people who dislike what they do. They never change, yet they get tons of press for it. They’re infuriatingly cool without ever trying too hard. They’re easy to get into but hard to connect with emotionally… But as far as their specific brand of rock ‘n’ roll — clever but not so clever that you can’t shake your ass to it —They Want My Soul is right up there with 2007’s Ga Ga Ga Ga Ga, the album that perfected Spoon’s formula.”

So there you go. Spoon’s odd key to success has simply been to keep their distance. This isn’t necessarily a band determined to mean everything to you, but they mean something. And while what that “thing” is appears to be slightly elusive, it’s clear that they’ve figured out how to deliver it again and again. 

Are there other musicians like this working today? There are definitely none exactly like Spoon, but the utensil-named band does present a good opportunity to talk about just what consistency looks like in today’s confusing musical hierarchy. 

Looking at other indie bands, Spoon’s most direct parallel in terms of consistency is likely the Brooklyn group TV on the Radio. Accumulating a track record over the last 10-plus years that indeed rivals that of Spoon’s, TV on the Radio is another case of the frequently lauded, but rarely over-hyped. The band hasn’t put out quite as much as their Austin brethren (who haven’t really put out that much themselves), but they are still working, having dropped Nine Types of Light in 2011 and with the upcoming Seeds expected later this year. 

That said, the important and obvious difference between the two bands is the music itself. TV on the Radio is actively experimental, whereas at least some of the appeal of Spoon comes from how well the band knows its formula, and how reliable it is in dispensing that. 

According to Metacritic though, Spoon’s closest relation as far as consistency goes is not an indie act, but a hip-hop one: the Atlanta duo Outkast. Praising the skills of MCs Antwan "Big Boi" Patton and André "André 3000" Benjamin, Metacritic gushed, “Even less prolific than Spoon but almost more accomplished is the Atlanta rap duo OutKast, who scored two of the best-reviewed albums of the decade in Stankonia and Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. If they could have pulled off the trifecta, they would have finished with the decade's highest average Metascore; instead, OutKast's third and final release of the period, Idlewild, was merely good.” 

Idlewild being “merely good” aside, the importance of Outkast in modern music cannot be understated, in no small part because this is 2014. Among popular genres right now, hip-hop is probably the most divided of all. At the end of 2012, Pitchfork’s Andrew Nosnitsky wrote, “Rap fans tend not to agree on very much these days. The hip-hop monoculture dissolved around the turn of the century and, ever since, dissensus has reigned supreme. Still, the world of rap music has felt especially fragmented in 2012, as if everything that was once cracked had finally shattered.”

It follows then that a group as universally loved as Outkast can only be an exceptional thing in 2014. That’s why when the rumors of their reunion from last year turned out to be true, it was kind of a big deal, despite the mixed reaction their tour ultimately elicited. 

However, the intrinsically amazing thing about Outkast is how its consistency has struck a chord not only in the hip-hop world, but with people who would normally have nothing to do with hip-hop; these were the guys who were going to convert you to rap or make you realize you would simply never “get it.” Jeff Weiss (also of Pitchfork) hypothesizes that, “There are people who think the Beatles are too sappy. Prince is too weird. Radiohead is too icy. James Brown wore everything a little too tight. But everyone agrees on OutKast. At their peak, the duo’s popularity rivaled income tax refunds, cute puppies, and free samples.” 

But Outkast also represents a fascinating strain of beloved, uniformly dependable artists who rose to prominence in the 2000s but aren’t really together anymore. Another thing you have to give Spoon credit for: After almost 20 years, they’re still going strong. The same cannot be said for The White Stripes, who were ranked in 2009 as Metacritic’s fifth highest-rated band of the decade. Moreover, although Jack White has remained a constant force in the music industry, he’s made it clear that a reunion in the form of the band that made him famous is pretty unlikely, giving a controversialinterview in May in which he called former partner Meg White a “hermit.” 

Then there’s Sleater-Kinney, who have been making music for a long time, despite the fact that they haven’t put out a new release in 10 years. Of course, in this case, that probably has something to do with member Carrie Brownstein’s increasingly successful attempts to take over Hollywood. But for what it’s worth, the highly regarded group is supposedly toying with the idea of a reunion

Brownstein’s story makes for a good introduction to the next artist in the consistency conversation, Mr. Tom Waits. Like Brownstein, many surely know the gravel-voiced singer more as an actor than as a musician. But the remarkable thing about Waits’s presence today is just how far back his career stretches (his first major release came out in 1973). Sure, in a discography that long, there are bound to be some lesser efforts, but with Waits, the whole picture is astonishingly polished. 

Waits hasn’t been sporadic in his output either. His last album, Bad as Me, arrived in 2009. And the fact that he has time to do films without letting his music career slip makes him somewhat singular. To call him a dinosaur is technically fair, but if he is a dinosaur, he’s more a velociraptor than anything. No one else has put out as much music, for as long, while remaining as consistently good, while also dodging labels of “classic rock” or “indie rock,” instead falling into a category all his own. To say the least, Waits’s story is undeniably impressive. 

Finally, there’s a certain joy in this uncertain era that’s found not only in consistency, but in consistently improving. In that, there’s hardly any other artist working today as formidable as St. Vincent, a.k.a. the elusive indie queen, Annie Clark. St. Vincent’s Metacritic scores range from 78-89, and have gone up with each subsequent release (her self-titled latest arrived in February). 

But the other element that makes Clark so compelling is the way she has managed to be regularly great, without losing any of her unpredictability. This is an artist who at once seems both completely in control and wildly unhinged

These days, talking music is often more about the discussion around the music than it is about the music itself. This isn’t always a bad thing, as these discussions are frequently interesting in an entirely different context than the sonic or even lyrical merits of a given performer/performers. But there’s also something wonderful about a band like Spoon, which demands nothing of you except that you shut up and listen. Consistency is not required to create great music, but it can be a refreshing change of pace in a world that won’t stop yelling at itself. 

With simple, steady grooves, Spoon has become the most surprising kind of musical act of all: one known for its output, not its antics. 

Photo via k.par.photo/Flickr (CC BY ND 2.0)

Maker Studios now partnered with top 3 YouTube gaming channels

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BY SAM GUTELLE

The Diamond Minecart is now partnered with Maker Studios. The Minecraft-focused YouTube channel of Englishman Daniel Middleton has signed with Disney-owned multi-channel network in a deal that brings another big gaming hub to Polaris.

The Diamond Minecart is one of the many YouTube channels born out of the Minecraft boom that began when Markus “Notch” Persson‘s indie sandbox game launched in 2011. Middleton started his channel a year after that, and in just 25 months, he has amassed more than 3.4 million subscribers and upwards of 1.1 billion views. His videos often feature Minecraft mods, and many of his most popular offerings feature his in-game assistant, Dr. Trayaurus.

In joining Polaris (which serves as a home for Maker Studios’ gaming talent), Middleton will enter the same network as other top Minecrafters, including Stampylongnose, The Yogscast, and Vegetta777. The deal also means that Maker Studios is now partnered with the three most-popular gaming channels on YouTube, in terms of monthly views. In the June 2014 edition of our Tubefilter charts, PewDiePie, Stampylongnose, and The Diamond Minecart took the first, second, and third spots, respectively. Taken together, those three channels had 668 million views that month.

“I have many friends and close collaborators working with Maker, which inspired my decision to join forces with the team, and couldn’t be more excited to be part of the many exciting things happening at Maker and Disney,” said Middleton. “Minecraft allows me to be incredibly creative not just in the game, but also in terms of video making, and I am excited to join a community of partners who also love the process!”

“We are thrilled to welcome The Diamond Minecart into our network—having started only just two years ago, Middleton’s growth is hugely impressive,” said Chris M. Williams, chief audience officer, Maker Studios. “He’s one of the most extraordinary storytellers creating short-form video today, and we look forward to helping him grow his creative vision in the years to come.”

Maker Studios will manage Middleton’s channel and will help him score deals with brands. Maker and Polaris were attractive options before they were acquired by Disney, but that deal offers a further incentive for Middleton. As with many other Minecraft channels, The Diamond Minecart uses a family-friendly tone, which aligns perfectly with the Mouse House’s brand.

Screengrab via TheDiamondMinecart/YouTube

Jon Stewart annihilates Fox News for racist Ferguson coverage

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Jon Stewart returned to The Daily Show in fine form last night, taking on Fox News for its questionable characterization of the shooting of Michael Brown and the protests in Ferguson, Mo., that have followed.

After a cold open that featured Stewart taking the “Ferguson Challenge”—that is, getting sprayed with mace—the host began the show by highlighting the ways in which Fox anchors and guests tried to deflect from the real issue of racial disparities in policing at the heart of the Ferguson story.


Stewart played a montage of conservative commentators making allegations about “the race card,” which ended with one man who said, “You know who talks about race? Racists.”

Stewart’s reaction was predictably perplexed. “Did you just ‘He who smelt it, dealt it’ racism?” he asked faux-incredulously.

What bothered Stewart the most, it seemed, was the contrast between Fox hosts’ documented outrage about a “War on Christmas” for which there is little evidence and those same hosts’ documented apathy and deflection about a system of institutionalized racism in law enforcement practices for which there is ample evidence.

To hit home his point, Stewart told a story about Daily Show correspondent Michael Che, who is African-American, being stopped while entering a building “in this liberal bastion” of New York City. The white producer who accompanied Che entered without incident, even though he was “dressed in what could only be described as homeless elf attire and a pretty strong five-o’clock-from-the-previous-week shadow,” according to Stewart.

Che, meanwhile, was “dressed resplendently in a tailored suit.”

“That s**t happens all the time, all of it,” Stewart said right before going to a commercial break. “Race is there, and it is a constant. You’re tired of hearing about it? Imagine how f**king exhausting it is living it.”

The next segment after the break featured Che reporting from different locations as he tried to escape cities with a history of racially tinged police brutality. The segment ended with Che in outer space.

“Nowhere safer for a black man than the infinite blackness of outer space,” Che said, right before the disembodied voice of a police officer (played by correspondent Jason Jones) accosted him.

Screenshot via Daily Show video


Star-studded roster couldn't save this 'Chelsea Lately' sendoff from itself

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Some celebrities just cannot gracefully say goodbye.

On the Aug. 26 final installment of her E! talk show, Chelsea Lately, Chelsea Handler dug deep to end her run in the least tasteful and clever fashion possible. Two unrelated skits/gags/tributes proved that Handler either needs better writers, more powerful meds, or both. Netflix fans be warned: Handler might revel in the idea she is an iconic loose cannon, but her misfires far outnumber her infrequent snippets of humor.

As they say in the newsroom, let’s go to the videotape.

The sight of a pixelated naked Handler in the shower bantering with Ellen DeGeneres is neither titillating nor particular funny. Handler attempts to set the Guinness record for the most times she can blurt out the word “lesbian” in a painful three-and-a-half-minute clip. The punchline of the yuck-free gag is that Ellen wants to know why Handler never had her as a guest on Lately, with DeGeneres appearing uncomfortable with the dialogue, appearing as if she was at the losing end of a really bad wager. Ellen even jokingly (maybe) asked Handler whether she was on some sort of medication. This nasty piece of video ends when her sidekick, Chuy Bravo, appears (also nude) on screen, somewhat baffled that the show was ending. (Obviously, the video is NSFW.)

Audiences did get a hint that Handler was likely to appear sans apparel at some point on her last show. Two weeks ago, she posted a fetching, semi-nude picture on Instagram, saying that she was a Kardashian. If only her dare to go bare had ended there.

Coming up with the least original way to bring Lately to a close, Handler is surrounded by a gaggle of A- and B-listers who join her in an off-key, reworked version of "We Are the World." The musical exit starts off funny enough with Gwen Stefani poking at her own Emmy malaprop (she mispronounced Stephen Colbert’s name) by calling her “good friend” Chelsea Hammer. Sadly, it goes downhill from there. It is fun to identify the members of the chorus, but even Dave Grohl cannot save this mess.

Handler begins her Netflix late night talk show in early 2016.

H/T Uproxx | Photo via NBC Universal

Nash Grier and Cameron Dallas ink livestreaming deal

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Vine superstars Cameron Dallas and Nash Grier will be giving more access to their dedicated fans thanks to a new livestreaming partnership with site GANDER.tv.

Dallas and Grier are no strangers to expanding beyond their Vine roots, after signing a film deal with AwesomenessTV in April and branching out beyond six seconds into the YouTube world. The pair, who have almost 15 million Vine followers combined, will each host a regularly scheduled, subscription-based livestream on the video-streaming network, as well as appear together on special occassions. Grier will make an appearance first, with his livestream going live today at 7pm ET. 

Fans can subscribe annually for $29.99, or buy a single month of subscription for the introductory price of 99 cents, with monthly subscriptions jumping up to $2.99 in the future. For now a month of Grier is equal to a iTunes download, or an app purchase in the future, but it remains to be seen just how many fanatics will pay a premium for more content when the stars are both still posting on their Vine and YouTube channels for free.

Screengrab via AwesomenessTV/YouTube

David Duchovny wrote a political novel about farm animals

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Just 70 years after George Orwell altered the way we understand political revolutions and regimes with a literary critique of Stalinism featuring talking pigs and horses, we’re headed back to the animal farm.

This time, though, the author is none other than X-Files and Californication star David Duchovny. Amazon is now taking pre-orders for what appears to be the actor, screenwriter, and director’s first novel, an allegorical romp titled Holy Cow.

Here’s the capsule description for this 224-page, FSG-published, totally real book, slated for release on February 3, 2015:

Elsie Bovary is a cow, and a pretty happy one at that—her long, lazy days are spent eating, napping, and chatting with her best friend, Mallory. One night, Elsie and Mallory sneak out of their pasture; but while Mallory is interested in flirting with the neighboring bulls, Elsie finds herself drawn to the farmhouse. Through the window, she sees the farmer’s family gathered around a bright Box God—and what the Box God reveals about something called an “industrial meat farm” shakes Elsie’s understanding of her world to its core.

From there the story would seem to veer into Chicken Run territory, following Elsie’s escape along with “Shalom—a cranky, Torah-reading pig who’s recently converted to Judaism,” and “Tom, a suave (in his own mind, at least) turkey who can’t fly, but who can work an iPhone with his beak.” In the course of their “globe-trotting adventure,” Shalom “ends up unexpectedly uniting Israelis and Palestinians,” which seems like a bit of a spoiler?

But hey, we can give Duchovny the benefit of the doubt—he does hold an English degree from Princeton, where he wrote a thesis on “The Schizophrenic Critique of Pure Reason in Beckett's Early Novels.” And while you’re waiting to find out just how weird this book is, you can read the first novel of Duchovny’s X-Files costar and maybe-paramourGillian Anderson: A Vision of Fire, her sci-fi thriller written with Jeff Rovin, drops in October.

Your move, Smoking Man. 


 

Photo by Gage Skidmore/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

A Roger Federer trick shot brought a smile to Michael Jordan's face

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You know you’ve accomplished an incredible sport feat when you have Michael “I believe I can fly” Jordan grinning like a child.

During a match Sunday against Australian tennis player Marinko Matošević, 29, racquet god Roger Federer, 33, performed a through-the-legs trick shot that dropped the jaws of everyone at this year's U.S. Open.

Federer, who is Swiss and in search for his 18th grand slam, not only made the incredible save but ended up pegging Matošević in the rear with the ball as well.

This was Jordan’s exact reaction.

Federer ended up winning the match at Flushing Meadows 6-3, 6-4, 7-6 (7-4). If he keeps this up, you could be seeing this post-trick-shot face many more times.


H/T Reddit | Photo by Richard.Fisher/Flickr (CC By 2.0)

'College Musical' is coming to YouTube for one night only

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"From the guys who saw Pitch Perfect and watched an episode of Glee…" starts the voiceover to the trailer for College Musical, a new 90-minute film coming to YouTube for one night only and starring some of it's most musical stars.

The movie is the brainchild of Kurt Hugo Schneider, the YouTuber who rose to fame with his elaborate cover song videos. He started a College Musical webseries on his channel, but opted to expand the project into a film, tapping fellow Yale alums Sam Tsui and Allison Williams (of Girls fame, and the forthcoming star of NBC's live Peter Pan). The group shot the film four years ago while in school and are finally giving it a release this fall. And yes, as the name suggests, there's singing and dancing.

The film will debut at the YouTube Space L.A. on Sept. 3 with a livestream to Schneider's 4.4 million fans. Following the one-night-only stream, College Musical will be available for download on iTunes and other digital retailers.

H/T Tubefilter | Screengrab via Kurt Hugo Schneider/YouTube

How remix culture lives and dies on SoundCloud

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Do a search on SoundCloud for “Turn Down for What” and you get over 500 results, most of which are unofficial remixes done in a laundry list of styles: trap, reggae, hardstyle, bhangra. Given the track’s popularity, and SoundCloud’s enormous community of bedroom hip-hop and EDM producers, it’s no surprise that the hit club anthem by DJ Snake and Lil Jon has been reworked so many times.

There’s just one problem: None of these “bootleg” remixes were authorized by DJ Snake, Lil Jon, their publishers, or their label, Columbia Records. They are acts of copyright infringement, which means that SoundCloud could, at any time, remove them from its site.

But for now, the “Turn Down for What” remixes remain, along with thousands, perhaps even millions, of SoundCloud-hosted bootleg versions of tracks by major artists like Kanye West, Daft Punk, Adele, and Bob Marley. They’re not hard to find or identify; many proudly declare their unlicensed status with a “#bootleg” hashtag. Some percentage of them (SoundCloud won’t provide exact numbers) do get removed, but most stay up, often for years.

Despite the openness with which they post, most SoundCloud remixers understand that what they’re doing is not, strictly speaking, legal. “I was just hoping and praying I never received an email saying, ‘Oh, hey, you gotta take your song down for copyright infringement,’” says M. Breeze, a Jersey club producer from Newark whose “Turn Down for What” remix has gotten over 15,000 plays. He’s also done bootleg versions of well-known tracks by Iggy Azalea, Sam Smith, and Steve Aoki, but so far, he’s been lucky: “Never have I had to take anything down.”

Another “Turn Down for What” remixer, Matt Rage, hasn’t been so fortunate. “I’d say about 80 percent of the tracks I post get taken down because of copyright issues,” the Hawaii-based DJ/producer reports. “I see why they do it, but at the same time, guys like me that enjoy taking great songs and putting your own twist on them can’t share any of our work… It’s definitely a bummer.” For now, Rage’s trap rework of “Turn Down for What,” co-produced with fellow Hawaiian DJ Osnizzle, remains available.

Despite the occasional flurry of takedowns, a widespread perception persists among remixers that their work is the online equivalent of driving 5 miles per hour over the speed limit: technically illegal, but tolerated as something relatively harmless.

“The general consensus is it’s OK,” says Jasper Patterson, a Los Angeles-based electronic musician who works under the name Groundislava. “It’s probably not completely legal. But it’s odd that if it is illegal, it kinda gets ignored.” Patterson’s Groundislava SoundCloud page features his original music alongside ethereal bootleg remixes of songs by Drake, Katy Perry, and Gotye, among others. He’s never received a takedown notice for any of them. (He is, seemingly, one of the few remixers who hasn’t tackled “Turn Down for What.”)

•••

SoundCloud has long had a reputation, despite explicitly banning “any Content to which you do not hold the necessary rights” in its terms of service, for letting users post DJ sets, podcasts, mashups, remixes, and other “derivative works” built on copyrighted material from other sources. But since 2011, when it introduced Audible Magic’s digital fingerprinting technology to identify and remove infringing content, the service has begun taking steps to change its Wild West image.

The word “remix” never appears in SoundCloud’s community guidelines or terms of service, but a statement from a company representative makes its official stance on such content clear: “SoundCloud is a platform for creators to share their originally created sounds… [W]here content is blocked or removed at the direction of rightsholders because the relevant rights have not been cleared, we need to take appropriate action as a responsible hosting platform.”

Still, myths regarding SoundCloud’s policy on remixes persist. “The accepted policy seems to be, as long as you aren’t selling it, it’s OK,” says Patterson, echoing a common sentiment among other remixers we spoke to. Some remixers even go one step further and claim that since they’re not profiting from their work, it falls under the legal provision of “fair use.”

But “probably eight out of 10” musicians don’t understand fair use, according to Jonathan Tobin, an attorney (and occasional electronic musician) whose Counsel for Creators legal firm specializes in representing creative types on issues of contract negotiation, intellectual property, and copyright.

“Among people who are creative, there’s sort of a resistance to understanding how the law actually works,” Tobin says. “In light of that resistance, what has sprung up is a mythology—the key figure in that mythology being fair use.”

While fair use does protect criticism, commentary, academic works, and, in certain cases, parody (which is why The Daily Show can get away with running seemingly any film or television clip it chooses to), it doesn’t protect common 21st century musical practices like remixing and sampling. “I actually disagree with the law,” says Tobin, “but that doesn’t make the law any different.”

Another common misconception is that if the original artist approves your remix, it’s OK. Lil Jon, for example, is an active SoundCloud user and occasionally comments favorably on remixes of his work (including M. Breeze’s), which may lead some producers to believe that their Lil Jon reworks are safe from takedowns.

But copyright ownership in music is complex, and most artists don’t control 100 percent of the rights to their songs. Official remixes must obtain permission both from whoever owns the composition (typically the songwriters, although a record label or third-party publisher may own a percentage) and whoever owns the original recording upon which the remix is based (typically a combination of the artists to whom the track is credited and their record label).

“The artist doesn’t even know that sometimes,” says Morgan Crozier, a 23-year-old musician and entrepreneur from Austin, Texas, who has researched music copyrights extensively. “They don’t even know that they don’t own their music.”

Based on his research, Crozier has created a microsite called DontSample.Me, which lists nearly 3,000 artists whose labels—mostly the majors—frequently issue takedown notices against online infringing content. Despite the abundance of “Turn Down for What” remixes on SoundCloud, Lil Jon is one of the artists listed, because he releases music through Columbia and Epic Records, which are both subsidiaries of a major label, Sony Music Entertainment. “He’s still a high-risk artist,” says Crozier.

•••

Columbia Records, which released “Turn Down for What,” would not comment for this story, so it’s impossible to know why the label hasn’t issued more takedown notices against the track’s many bootlegs. But both Columbia and its parent company, Sony, have requested SoundCloud takedowns in the past. One of their targets was Ethan Hein, a professor of music technology at NYU and Montclair State University who dabbles in remixes and mashups, often for academic purposes. His reworks of tracks by two Sony artists, Britney Spears and Michael Jackson, were both removed. (He’s since restored his megamix of Michael Jackson’s “Wanna Be Startin’ Somethin’” with a new version that he believes better disguises its source material from SoundCloud’s Audible Magic filters.)

Hein believes the only possible resolution to the cat-and-mouse game played between remixers and SoundCloud lies in copyright reform. “I believe that sampling should work like cover songs: There should be a compulsory license with a fixed fee structure. I strongly believe that the right to comment on culture via remixing far outweighs the rights of copyright holders to control transformative uses.

“Copyright law in America in general is severely lopsided in favor of rights holders,” Hein continues. “Terms should be much shorter and restrictions should be much looser. As things stand, a guy like me has to continually break the law to make art, which is crazy.”

But until the law changes, SoundCloud is a company that, in many ways, finds itself at odds with its own user base. A type of content that many of those users see as mere creative expression remains a form of copyright infringement, one that SoundCloud is legally obligated to remove from its servers when asked to do so by copyright holders.

For SoundCloud, the stakes couldn’t be higher. According to Bloomberg, the company is currently in negotiations to license music from all three major labels (Universal, Sony, and Warner) in exchange for giving the majors an equity stake in their business, which might be worth as much as $600 million. If the negotiations succeed, SoundCloud could become the next Beats Electronics, which also traded ownership stakes for licenses with major labels, before being acquired by Apple for $3 billion. If the negotiations collapse, the labels could sue SoundCloud out of existence for failing to adequately police its content.

Photo via mrhayata (CC BY-SA 2.0) | Remix by Jason Reed

Jimmy Kimmel staged a mini-'Friends' reunion and made them read fanfiction

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There hasn’t been a complete Friends reunion since the show ended 10 years ago, but that doesn’t mean people have tried for who they can get. Ellen DeGenerestried last year, and now Jimmy Kimmel’s doing his part in making that mini-Friends reunion happen no matter what.

With Jennifer Aniston on his show, he 'fessed up to being a huge Friends fan while breaking a cardinal rule of fandom: He told her about fanfiction. After explaining what it was, he went even further and asked her to read a scene with him all about Ross's "love-making abilities" in a near-perfect duplicate of Monica's apartment.

The saving grace about this entire sketch is that Kimmel (along with his writing staff) wrote the piece of fanfiction—and not an actual fanfiction writer—so Kimmel was the subject of most of the jokes and self-deprecation. And it’s hard not to get excited when Aniston’s castmates join in on the scene and act it out with them.

Even with all the jokes, things get bleak when we find out what happened to Joey and Chandler.

H/T Vulture | Photo via Jimmy Kimmel Live/YouTube


Stop looking for answers: 'The Sopranos' left us in limbo

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Warning: This article does not contain spoilers for the series finale of The Sopranos.

Well before his publicist stated his words had been “misconstrued” in a Vox feature, and even before another journalist flipped out over a jokey Twitter account ruining the “experience” of reading the pertinent quote for themselves, we knew that David Chase, creator of The Sopranos, was messing with us. 

We knew this because what he said—on the topic of New Jersey mob boss Tony Soprano’s unclear and widely disputed fate—made zero sense. “No,” he told writer Martha P. Nochimson when she asked if Tony was dead, following a brief outburst. “No he isn’t.” To a true fan of the show, this can only read as a cosmic joke: Oh, you want an answer? Here’s an answer. Not very satisfying, is it. Have a nice life.

The fact is, you don’t abruptly cut to black mid-scene in a series finale to create a sense of mystery. That’s a season finale move, suggestive of a coming resolution you’re free to guess at: “Who shot J.R.?” It’s the final suspension in a Bach piece before it resolves, as it must, into the dominant key. The Sopranos’ ultimate silence—and don’t forget, Chase originally wanted three full minutes of nothingness between the diner and the closing credits—is irresolution itself. Maybe Tony dies, maybe he doesn’t. The world goes on just the same.   

So why don’t fans get that? Why is a writer with a deep understanding of Chase’s work and methods even bothering to ask what “happens” to Tony? Perhaps it’s because Chase succeeded, as Stanley Kubrick did with The Shining, in trapping his audience in the same purgatory his characters walk through. Ever since Chase pulled the plug on The Sopranos in 2007, people have parsed the final frames for clues that will never add up to proof of anything, just like the fevered theorists of the documentary Room 237.

It’s fun to play with these ideas, but in the grand sense, the detectives are wasting their time. For all their obsessiveness, it’s somehow lost on them that the last shot of a character surnamed Dante shows him in the limbo of a coma, that Paulie Walnuts explains the difference between hell and the afterlife’s waystation to a hospitalized Christopher Moltisanti, and that Tony spends a healthy portion of the series caught in a dreamworld between life and death. (The Sopranos Family Cookbook even includes a recipe for Uova in Purgatorio—“eggs in purgatory.”) Not the subtlest motif, yet we continue to overlook it.

Chase’s initial irritation at Nochimson’s question speaks volumes: “Why are we talking about this?” he asked, because in his view, there’s nothing to be curious about. Life is full of things you can’t and won’t ever know, undefined spaces, stories purely tangential to one’s own, people who vanish suddenly, without a trace. Why should art be any different? Consider the masterly digressive novel The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, in which the narrator tries to pen his memoirs but never gets past the moment of his birth: experience is far too rich to fit within book covers or a TV screen. But one thing’s for certai—

Photo by That Hartford Guy/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Johnny Manziel Snickers ad is almost as embarrassing as his preseason

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If Johnny Manziel becomes the latest Cleveland Brown quarterback bust, he will need to look beyond television for a fallback career.

A week before the start of the 2014 season, Johnny Football appears in a Snickers commercial as Johnny JamBoogie, an ersatz fitness instructor who leads his class through a series of incoherent exercises. “Who’s got a pelvis?” the former Texas A&M star asks his female followers. Aside from an obscure inside joke, the spot is rather unremarkable and lacks the punch of Snickers Satisfies ads featuring Richard Lewis and the late Robin Williams. The expression “don’t quit your day job” certainly applies here.

In case you missed it, the teammate who comes to Manziel’s rescue in the commercial appeared the film The Waterboy. In the TV spot, his uniform name is Sandler, perhaps as a tribute to Adam Sandler, star of the 1998 comedy.

Manziel is not going into the 2014 season with a lot of promise. His performance in the preseason can generously be called lackluster, and he was fined $12,000 for flipping the bird at the Washington Redskins sideline during a recent exhibition game. The former Heisman Trophy winner will start the regular season on the bench behind starter Brian Hoyer. Fans remain optimistic that top draft pick will not reenact the brief, less-than-stellar career of the Browns’ 1999 No. 1 draft pick, quarterback Tim Couch. Couch is a leading character in every “where are they now” sports story.

H/T BroBible | Photo via Snickers Brand/YouTube

Hip-hop all-stars collab on gut-wrenching Ferguson track

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Rapper The Game responded to the Ferguson, Mo., headlines by assembling an all-star team of top-shelf rappers for protest song “Ferguson Anthem.” Game premiered the track Wednesday via Instagram.

Speaking to Rolling Stone, Game outlined his rationale:

"I am a black man with kids of my own that I love more than anything, and I cannot fathom a horrific tragedy like Michael Brown's happening to them. … That is why this song must be made and why it was so easy for so many of my friends to come together and unite against the injustice."

The song itself features nine rap verses, four R&B singers, both of Game’s kids, and ceremonial yelling from DJ Khaled. It’s a six-minute middle finger to Fox News’ America and is veritably moving in scope. As Christopher Weingarten points out, the assembled talent poaches indiscriminately across regions: New York (Diddy, Fabolous, Swizz Beatz), Los Angeles (the Game, Problem), Atlanta (2 Chainz), D.C. (Wale), Miami (Rick Ross, DJ Khaled), New Orleans (Curren$y), and Memphis (Yo Gotti).

The united front plays out with exasperated performances about young black men and the police—speaking personally and tangentially about Michael Brown. It’s cool to see drum majors like Diddy just kinda show up and rap some honest (almost surely ghostwritten) material, then cede the floor.

The song is worth breaking down a little bit because the chorus—performed by vocalist King Pharoah, Tyrese, Ginuwine, and Tank—is lasting and forceful: "God didn't put us on the Earth to get murdered." And each rapper leaves a mark with one or two interesting lines.

“As we keep our heads up high and scream for justice. Rest in peace, Mike Brown.” —DJ Khaled on the familiarly snarling DJ voiceover intro.

“They left that boy four hours in the cold out there.” —Game, on his curatorial intro verse

“Police takin' shots, and I ain't talkin about Ciroc.” —Diddy, always a promotional performance artist

“Hands in the sky still was left in the road / ribbon in the sky Michael Brown another soul.” —Rick Ross, the velvet-voiced wonder

“There’s a lot of rotten eggs in the crow's nest … Turn on the news and seen a tank rollin’ down the street" —2 Chainz, pointing out how bad it is out there

“Shot down with his hands up—that's what occurred? Man, that sounds absurd. Matter fact to me that sound like murder" —Fabolous, really stretching out the word “murder” so that it sounds like “absurd”

“I had a crib out there. I used to live out there. So I know how niggas feel out there.”  —Yo Gotti, tapping into the groupthink

“I'm sure the general population trying to be more active, but when the light finally catches you you Ice Challenge.” —Wale, venting disdain for insular, armchair, social-media-based activism

“They don't really respect Obama out here / Lights out go dark, it's like a nightmare.” —Swizz Beatz, who's really more of a producer anyway

“I heard he surrendered, but we all saw how they did him.” —An always acutely sharp, observationally brilliant Curren$y, who goes on to preemptively vent about the Brown family’s imminent legal process

“Who cares who ain't on our side because we on our own / How you preach peace to a family that just lost they own?” —Problem, making a splash at the end and raising the most pulses with his militant, aggro, call to arms part.

“Ferguson Anthem” can be purchased on iTunes, with proceeds going to the Justice For Mike Brown GoFundMe account.

Photo via demxx/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

5 reasons it's time to 'Party Down' again—on Hulu

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Four years ago, we were devastated to learn that Party Down had been canceled. Soon afterward, the best dead-before-its-time sitcom since Arrested Development disappeared from Netflix, with parent network Starz promising it would be back after “a breather.”

Well, the series seems to have finally caught its breath: All 20 flawless episodes of the madcap catering comedy will hit Hulu on Friday. If you haven’t watched Party Down yet, now is the time to start. If you’ve already memorized every line, it’s time to relive them all.

Why? I’ll give you five good reasons.

1) Ron explaining the downside of marijuana:

2) Constance’s tales of Hollywood in the 1970s:

3) This amazing defense of living at home with your parents:

4) Lizzy goddamn Caplan:

5) Kyle’s accidentally white supremacist emo lyrics:

If you’re still not convinced, there’s no hope for you—go read some hard sci-fi.

Photo by matchfitskills/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Here's what's new on Netflix in September

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The dawn of another month is upon us, and you know what that means: New content is heading to Netflix. And, of course, current content will be disappearing.


READ MORE:
These titles will disappear Sept. 1

 

According to the latest information from allyourscreens.com, several new movies and TV programs will be available for your binge-viewing pleasure throughout September (and possibly beyond). Classic comedies like Crocodile Dundee, Robin Williams’s Good Morning Vietnam, and School of Rock will debut, as will drama titles like Blue Lagoon and Silver Linings Playbook.

As far as television is concerned, fans can look forward to the fourth season of The Walking Dead, the ninth (and final) season of How I Met Your Mother (complete with that dreadful series finale), and the first season of James Spader’s The Blacklist (which the streaming site reportedly acquired for a staggering $2 million per episode).

Here is the full list, organized by release date:

Sept. 1, 2014

A Simple Plan

Californication: Seasons 1–7

Chasing UFOs: Season 1

Cool Runnings (1993)

Crocodile Dundee (1986)

Detention (2011)

Doomsday Preppers: Seasons 1–3

Flubber (1997)

Girl Rising (2013)

Girlfight (2000)

Good Morning, Vietnam (1987)

Guess Who (2005)

Hinterland: Season 1

Hoodwinked (2005)

Jay and Silent Bob's Super Groovy Cartoon Movie (2013)

Lords of Dogtown (2005)

Mirage Men (2012)

School of Rock (2003)

Small Apartments (2012)

Swiss Family Robinson (1960)

The Believers (1987)

The Blue Lagoon (1980)

The Unbelievers (2013)

Unsealed: Alien Files: Season 1

Zero Hour: Seasons 1–3

Sept. 2

The League: Season 5

Sept. 5

All Is Lost (2013)

Trailer Park Boys: Season 8

Sept. 6

Kid Cannabis (2014)

Le Week-End (2014)

Refuge (2012)

Your Sister’s Sister (2011)

Sept. 7

The Blacklist: Season 1 (2013)

Sept. 9

Who Is Dayani Cristal? (2013)

Sept. 10

Crash & Bernstein: Season 2

Deadly Code (2013)

Sept. 11

A Single Man (2009)

Dennis Miller: America 180 (2014)

Filth (2014)

The Moment (2013)

Sept. 12

Grace Unplugged (2013)

Sept. 13

Justin and the Knights of Valor (2013)

Sept. 14

About a Boy: Season 1

Arrow: Season 2

Sept. 16

Beginners (2011)

Bones: Season 9

New Girl: Season 3

One Day (2011)

Silver Linings Playbook (2012)

Sept. 17

3 Days to Kill (2014)

The Fosters: Season 2

Sept. 22

Revolution: Season 2

Sept. 25

The Double (2013)

Sept. 26

How I Met Your Mother: Season 9

Parks and Recreation: Season 6

Sept. 27

Bad Grandpa (2013)

Sept. 28

Comic Book Men: Season 3

The Walking Dead: Season 4

Sept. 29

Lullaby (2014)

Sept. 30

Killing Them Softly (2012)

H/T allyourmovies / Illustration by Jason Reed

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