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Don't miss these Netflix titles before they disappear Sept. 1

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For most folks, Labor Day Weekend marks an end to summer and all the pool parties the season brings with it. But sadly, Sept. 1 also marks the expiration date of some of your favorite titles from NetflixCancel your big barbecue plans and get ready to spend your three-day weekend on the couch enjoying these titles before they depart like summer.
 

READ MORE:
Netflix titles coming soon


Of particular note: Two of Robin Williams's great films, The King Fisher and Popeye, will be disappearing on Monday, so make sure to catch the late actor in some of his greatest roles while you still can.

If you need to entertain some restless kids during a party this weekend or you’re just feeling nostalgic for your youth, then hurry up and get to watching the entirety of Sesame Street before it disappears for good.

Also taking their exit stage left:

  • 30 for 30
  • About Last Night…
  • Ali
  • Ali G Indahouse
  • The Apartment
  • A Slipping Down Life
  • Bellflower
  • Black Mama, White Mama
  • Bugsy
  • Candyman 2: Farewell to the Flesh
  • Can't Hardly Wait
  • Capote
  • Caution
  • Charley Varrick
  • Dirty Dancing
  • Doctor Doolittle
  • Double Jeopardy
  • El Dorado
  • Failure to Launch
  • Flyboys
  • Fool for Love
  • Gothic
  • Harriet the Spy
  • The Haunting
  • I'll Sleep When I'm Dead
  • I.Q.
  • Just One of the Guys
  • The Long Goodbye
  • Lord of Illusions
  • Lust
  • Midnight Express
  • The Mummy
  • My Summer of Love
  • Never Back Down
  • Panic Room
  • Penelope
  • The People Under the Stairs
  • Return to the Blue Lagoon
  • The Seven Year Itch
  • Something's Gotta Give
  • Star Trek
  • Star Trek: First Contact
  • Star Trek: The Voyage Home
  • Stir Crazy
  • Superstar
  • Thieves Like Us
  • Wicker Park
  • William Shatner's Get a Life!

H/T Morning After | Photo via _tar0_/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)


Rosa G's Labor Day anthem is the ultimate ode to laziness

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YouTube's favorite patriotic songstress, Rosa G, is back with a follow up to her hit "Fourth of July," with an ode to the end of the summer called "Labor Day."

Rosa G is a comedic rapper created by YouTuber Kara Solarte who evokes the Lonely Island in her laid-back style and delivery.  In the video for "Labor Day," she sings about how this is when we salute American workers "for grinding hard 9-5/like a hustler/three days off to jock the last day of summer." "Labor Day" also encourages the adoption of a dance move called the "lazysway" that virtually anyone can do. You just sway, in a lazy fashion. 

When you're grilling and avoiding your work this weekend, cue up on Rosa G tunes to inspire your own "lazysway."

Screengrab via Karla Solarte/YouTube

What it's really like to attend a YouTuber meet-up

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YouTuber meet-ups have shut down places like Taco Bells and caused traffic jams in multiple cities, but some fans are just hoping for some one-on-one. Los Angeles-area fans got that opportunity Saturday when YouTubers Ricky Dillon, Jenn McAllister, Andrea Russett, and Rebecca Black descended on the Hollywood and Highland Center for a controlled yet chaotic VMA-sponsored meet-up.

The MTV affiliation gave it a more corporate feel than the spontaneous feeling of a single creator simply tweeting his or her location to their legion of fans. But the YouTubers still used the same tactics they would for any other guerrilla meet-up. Black and the other YouTubers announced the event one day in advance on their Twitter feeds, with support from the MTV VMAs channel, which also encouraged their 11.2 million fans to meet at the Hollywood and Highland Center.

Many fans who weren’t in the L.A. area responded sadly about their inability to attend, and others questioned logistics like how early to arrive. This reporter decided to aim for 45 minutes early, assuming a large enough crowd would have amassed by then. While there were teens in the area with telltale T-shirts proclaiming their affiliation to specific YouTubers, they weren’t congregating in advance anywhere visible, although there was a stage and crew milling about. The, 10 minutes before the start, a line of teens began filling in. They had been forced to queue elsewhere out of the way of shoppers, and now the earliest arrivals were getting prime front-row positions.

“I’m excited about everyone, but I love Ricky,” Kimberly, a 12-year-old who was attending her first-ever meet-up and had arrived at 2pm for the chance to see her favorite stars, told the Daily Dot. “I’m hoping I can get a selfie with them.”

Dillon, Black, Russett, and McAllister walked out on stage to screams, quickly said hello and then promised to meet as many fans as possible, cueing the DJ and beginning to snap selfies and sign autographs with the fans closes to the stage. While security tried to hold fans back to leave a pathway for pedestrians, unaware shoppers began to stop in that area, and the fans swarmed forward to get a closer view, closing off the pathway. Security continued to run around, telling people they had to keep moving if they weren’t in the designated standing zones, and confused shoppers and tourists wondered who these famous people were who could cause such a riot. One 5-year-old boy began yelling “I’m a YouTuber!” to his parents' amusement when they found out the stars in question were digital video producers and not TV or film actors.

At least one girl was pulled from the crowd suffering a panic attack, and ended up behind the stage area, fanned by her mother. After less than 20 minutes of signing, the YouTubers disappeared backstage, the DJ continued on, and suddenly a flash mob appeared, dancing to Fifth Harmony’s latest single. The X Factor-created group was the surprise of the day, running on stage to dance to their hit as the screams ratcheted up a notch. The YouTubers soon joined them, pulling some fans on stage to award the lucky group with free VMA tickets for the following night.

MTV packaged the event as a "VMA meet-up," but fans there had little to no understanding that the event was in any way related to the MTV award show. While fans said they were excited to see musicians like Fifth Harmony, they had attended the event solely to see their favorite YouTube stars. Regardless of who they came to see, in less than an hour, the whole affair was over. The YouTubers and the pop stars disappeared off stage, and security began urging fans to leave. A quartet of teenagers who were too far back from the stage to get a picture or anything signed deemed the affair still worthwhile, and discussed their next moves in a chorus of undiscernable speech. After all the excitement they’d probably go get some food.

“And if we hear a crowd, we’ll go running,” they exclaimed.

Photo by Rae Votta

Ridley Scott explains why the cast of 'Exodus' is so white

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Ridley Scott has finally responded to the backlash against his new movie Exodus: Gods and Kings, but his explanation is unlikely to stem the tide of criticism.

Exodus is a Biblical epic inspired by the exodus of the Hebrews, with Moses and Ramses II as the two central characters. The movie isn’t out until December, but it’s already faced criticism for casting so many white actors in Egyptian and Middle Eastern roles. The most damning example is how the heroes and royals are almost all played by white actors, while most of the black actors in the movie have minor roles as slaves, thieves, and assassins.

In an interview with Yahoo!, Scott explained why he decided on what is described as an “international” cast.

Egypt wasas it is nowa confluence of cultures, as a result of being a crossroads geographically between Africa, the Middle East, and Europe. We cast major actors from different ethnicities to reflect this diversity of culture, from Iranians to Spaniards to Arabs. There are many different theories about the ethnicity of the Egyptian people, and we had a lot of discussions about how to best represent the culture.

This makes about as much sense as the explanation that Darren Aronofsky’s Noah had an all-white cast because it was “mythical.”

While the overall cast of Exodus is relatively “international,” Scott’s answer fails to acknowledge the unrealistic prominence of white European and American actors onscreen. The vast majority of main characters are played by white actors from the U.S. and U.K., with Christian Bale as Moses, Aaron Paul as Joshua, and Sigourney Weaver as Egyptian queen Tuya. Scott mentions discussing how to represent Egyptian culture, but the result was casting Joel Edgerton as an Egyptian pharaoh, and then covering him in fake tan to give him darker skin.

The idea of Egypt as a cultural melting pot is more or less acceptable, but Exodus illustrates this by casting pale-skinned people of Northern European descent as leaders and heroes, while dark-skinned people are criminals and background extras.

This “confluence of cultures” explanation is simply the latest excuse for filmmakers to keep doing what they’ve done for years, and cast white people in as many roles as possible. No matter what the setting, from ancient Egypt to modern-day New York to the imaginary world of Middle Earth, Hollywood will find a way.

Photo via exodusgodsandkings

Christopher Nolan's version of 'The Incredibles' is pretty dark

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They’re the heroes Metroville deserves, but maybe not the ones it needs.

Every fun part of The Incredibles you remember is gone in a new rendering of the trailer from Bobby Burns, in the style of Christopher Nolan— more specifically, the Dark Knight trilogy. Like Michael Bay’s version of Up, it’s a completely different movie once you edit things.

The Parr family plays second fiddle as the main focus falls on the mind games between Mr. Incredible and Syndrome. They’re a lot more similar than either would care to admit, and it’s not going to end well for anyone who gets in the way.

Why so serious, Mr. Incredible?

H/T Devour | Photo via Bobby Burns/YouTube

Lucas Cruikshank revamps his Fred YouTube channel

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One of YouTube's major success stories is getting a brand new look now that Collective Digital Studio and Lucas Cruikshank have partnered to relaunch the Fred YouTube channel as a family-friendly entertainment destination.

Cruikshank launched the channel in 2008, and within a year it was the first YouTube channel ever t reach 1 million subscribers. The popularity of his Fred character led to a 2010 TV movie for Nickelodeon, Fred: The Movie, which captured 7.6 million viewers. Cruikshank's focus has returned to YouTube and the channel that started it all. However, the relaunch won't focus solely on the Fred character. CDS and Cruikshank are opening the 2.3 million subscriber channel to submissions from fans and as a breeding ground for other tween-friendly fare.

“Think of this as an expansion on the original FRED Channel, with the same spirit of irreverence, and a really talented group of new kids creating cool stuff," Cruikshank said in a press release. "Plus we’ll be creating opportunities for fans to upload their own content. Fred Figglehorn will make the occasional appearance and so will I.”

Cruikshank and CDS shared a new video outlining the revamped channel.

“The genius of FRED is its wide appeal to a broad audience—kids, tweens, teens, and young millennials," said Gary Binkow, Chief Content Officer at Collective Digital Studio, via a press release. "We want to reach a new generation of fans and content creators, and we believe we have the opportunity to create YouTube’s first original tween and family entertainment destination with a mix of programming that will include animation, sketch comedy, game shows, a puppet show, and more.” 

Screengrab via Fred/YouTube

Tyler Oakley dishes on Darren Criss and the guests of Auguest

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Collaboration is a core of the YouTube experience, and Tyler Oakley takes each August to celebrate that with his annual Auguest, a month of collaborations between Oakley and a rotating cast of fellow YouTubers. Promising something special for the final day, Oakley revealed a collaboration with Glee’s Darren Criss, one of his favorite celebrities and a frequent topic of Oakley’s vlogging.

“I’ve been a fan of Darren’s for years and years now,” Oakley told the Daily Dot. “We’ve always interacted on the [red] carpets. We kind of go way back and we always keep crossing paths. Last year I had my finale with One Direction, and I thought, ‘What is the one person for me that would be another culmination of my YouTube career,' and that would have to be Darren. He’s been a staple of a lot of the stuff I’ve talked about. I thought it would be an amazing way to put an endcap on all the amazing stuff that is Auguest.”

Criss has some YouTube experience of his own as part of Team Starkid, the theater group he founded with his college friends after their Harry Potter parody musical went viral in 2009. He flexes his YouTube muscles admirably here, and Oakley says he wasn’t surprised by any of Criss’s answers, save for one -- finding out when Criss found out about Oakley. He had assumed it was when he began talking about Criss widely in his vlogs, but that’s not the case.

“He had found me long before then, doing something very, very embarrassing,” Oakley said. “I did a video recording myself doing "The Witch's Rap" from Into the Woods. He found it, I never knew he even saw it. I was so embarrassed. He’s got such a theater background that he appreciated it.”

Oakley said working with Criss was a breeze, but that the biggest challenge in the video was Criss’s penchant to talk a lot.

“The thing about Darren is, he could just talk and talk and talk to explain himself,” Oakley laughed. “One of the challenges for the games was you had to answer these rapid-fire questions with no explanations. He could not do it for the life of him.”

Oakley boasts 5 million YouTube subscribers and 3 million Twitter followers, metrics that put him above Criss’s digital reach. Of course, Criss has a variety of platforms that amplify his celebrity, including his songs and an internationally distributed hit TV show. The juxtaposition and subsequent collaboration of the two stars is a sign of how media is continually changing and adapting to fit the new digital reality.

“We come from such similar backgrounds, but took such different paths, and yet somehow found ourselves together again making a video,” Oakley explained. “This is where the entertainment industry is. The traditional and new media coming together to figure out what’s the next step. That’s the finale in a nutshell.”

Auguest is more than just a big-name celebrity appearance. It’s 19 other videos across each weekday of August, documenting collaborations with YouTube luminaries like Jenna Marbles and Oakley’s own mother. Oakely filmed the videos over a two-month span, but has been planning the event for much longer.

“For the past year, I’ve been taking notes in my phone,” Oakley said. “It’s hard to keep things fresh and exciting for the audience. Then when I came up with the ideas, I’d think, ‘Who would I have fun doing this with?’ For example, for the photobooth challenge it needs to be someone who cracks me up, and there’s nobody better than Miranda [Sings] for that. We’ve been wanting to collaborate but she’s been on tour and I’ve been abroad. Knowing we were going to do that together, it was the perfect synergy.”

For each collaboration, Oakley said he took into account his history with the YouTuber, what their fans want from them, and what he’ll ultimately enjoy.

“When it came to a collaboration with Dan [Howell], I knew I wanted to do something completely new,” Oakley said. “He and I have never collaborated, but we’ve been each other’s most requested collaboration for years. With Connor [Franta], I wanted to do something where I’d have fun doing it with the cameras off, because he’s one of my best friends. With Mamrie [Hart], I knew she’d do anything. She’s down to do anything. So we did a puppet show, because why not?”

While the sky’s the limit for collaborations, the time and logistic constraints of a single month of videos means not everyone can fit into the plan. It also meant traveling to the U.K. to work with friends is less of a vacation than his fans might imagine.

“It would be if I had time to chill out and hang with friends, but that’s not the case,” Oakley explained. “I was filming two sets of videos the day I got there, and then another set the next day, and then Summer in the City, and then at night I flew back to America. There was no time for anything except filming. It’s been the busiest craziest, summer of my life.”

Aside from Brits like Zoella, Joe Sugg, and Alfie Deyes, Oakley also tie-dyed withHannah Hart, and participated in a totally new challenge invented by Korey Kuhlthe poopy diaper challengewhich he hasn’t seen emulated yet. (“I think people are intimidated by the concept," he said.) He also managed to fit in Troye Sivan, one of his fans’ most requested collabs, for the penultimate video of the week. The pair recently won a Teen Choice Award for their “Boyfriend Tag” video, and this time they had their own Ghost moment with a kids' pottery wheel.

There’s no rest for the ambitious, and Oakley says he’ll kick off September with two major announcements on Sept. 2.

“They’re the biggest projects that I’ve ever attempted,” Oakley said. “Auguest is tiny compared to what’s coming.”

With a little prodding, Oakley revealed hints about what directions the projects will take.

“They’re ways that I can be a part of people’s everyday lives in another way,” he explained. “And then another project is a way for me to meet more people than I’ve ever met before that have supported my life.”

Cue the Internet speculation machine.

Screengrab via Tyler Oakley/YouTube 

5 Seconds of Summer rocker sends fan 6 seconds of Snapchat dong

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Warning: This story contains sexually explicit material and may be NSFW.

If Benjamin Franklin were alive today, he might muse, “Only three things in life are certain: death, taxes, and if you’re moderately famous and you send someone nudes, they will get leaked.” Unfortunately for Calum Hood, bassist of the boy band 5 Seconds of Summer, sometimes you have to learn the hard way (no pun intended).

The 18-year-old Australian—who recently played with his band at MTV's Video Music Awards—sent a six second naked Snapchat to a female fan. While the app's disappearing images can deter users from sharing your nudes, this is not always the case. Calum Hood's sext recipient took a clever analog approach by recording the video with another phone so it could be shared with the masses.

The infinite loop of Hood's member, which was captioned with a winky face emoticon, was uploaded to Vine, where it quickly went viral. You can watch it on Gawker. Warning: It's an autoplaying video of a teen rocker's erection.

Though his face is never seen in the video, Hood seemingly fessed up to it on Twitter. He took the earnest route, rather than trying to stumble his way through some precarious dong-damage control.

At least it's a sexy mistake to learn from. 

H/T Defamer | Photo via horlik/Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)


Getting to the bottom of Taylor Swift's Instagram commenting spree

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If you ignore her 10 million followers and the occasional selfie with a famous friend, Taylor Swift leads a pretty normal life on Instagram. She posts snaps of her travels, her cats, and her baking. But while she’s been deliberating over filter choices as a poster to the photo-sharing service for almost three years, it wasn’t until recently that she took a turn as an active commenter. Swift’s dive into the comment section of her fan’s photos incited a riot on the app among her devotees and caused some to wonder if it was as innocent as it appeared. 

In July, Swift penned a guest column for the Wall Street Journal about the future of the music industry, writing: “I think forming a bond with fans in the future will come in the form of constantly providing them with the element of surprise.” Surprise is just what hit lucky Swift devotees in June, as Swift launched her new social media outreach campaign and began commenting on random fans' photos. 

To a girl named Hannah, Swift wrote, “I think unrequited love is just as valid as any other kind. It's just as crushing and just as thrilling.” But for many “Swifties,” as fans affectionately refer to themselves, their love wouldn’t go unrequited for much longer. This summer, the mediacaughtwind of two separate instances of the songstress leaving long, sympathetic advice on love and heartbreak on fans’ accounts.

Brandon, a 14-year-old admirer, finally received a missive from Swift in July after 11 attempts at trying to get the singer’s attention through tagging her in posts. In an email, he told the Daily Dot, “to have her notice me is relieving just to know that someone who I've been chasing for all of these years cares about me is just so beautiful.” A fan of eight years, Brandon repeatedly wrote to Swift, calling her music and her spirit his inspiration to persevere through bullying and ultimately to write and perform his own music. 

Kaleigh, a fan since she was 14, received well wishes from her favorite singer after posting a photo of herself with a sprained ankle. “For me she is almost like an older sister,” she said. “I've always wanted to meet her, so it’s amazing to get noticed and know she took the time to send me a long well-wish.” 

Though the singer has always been known for having a strong relationship with a highly devoted fan base, leaving messages of hope, humor, appreciation, or playfulness in the comment section of fan’s Instagram accounts is something new for the 24-year-old. The commenting is even more unexpected given her restraint on Twitter, where she rarely replies to or retweets her 42.6 million followers. 

Many of the Swift fans I spoke to for this piece see Taylor’s interaction with fans on Instagram as a more intimate experience, akin to a private message from a friend, or as Kaleigh put it, “an older sister.” For admirers that have come of age with Swift, experiencing the high school angst and heartbreak her music catalogs, the relationship is less fanatical and more familial. Brandon explained to the Daily Dot that the support didn’t end with Taylor’s words:

“When she comments on our photos it's like we're all family because she makes us feel so special and so loved like after she commented I got an overflow of fellow swifties congratulating me and by Taylor reaching out to me it inspired me to help them get noticed and congratulate other people and thank everyone and just in general appreciate more.”

As Washington Post writer Emily Yahr analogized, follow requests and commenting pleas on social media have become the modern day fan letter. If that’s the case, then Swift’s responses are the signed headshots that fans of yesteryear would receive as a response in the mail. One admirer,15-year-old Natasha, was so enamored with the response of her idol, she had it printed on an iPhone case. For her, the phone case represents a tangible piece of the intangible, the highly sought-after recognition and attention from a hero. 

“Lots of celebrities notice fans on Instagram, but none take the time out of their day to write such long and heartfelt responses,” she offered. For her 16th birthday at the end of this month, she’s hoping for a birthday wish from Swift on Instagram. 

But is Swift’s commenting as innocent and sincere as it seems? While most of the fans and comment recipients I spoke to believed it has all been done in earnest, Mary, a 24-year-old Swift enthusiast who runs a Canadian fansite, had an interesting point about the PR goodwill this has generated for the singer. “The instagram activity increased dramatically after Taylor was paired with a new Publicist,” Mary told the Daily Dot in an email. That said, she concluded, “If it's benefiting her in a branding sense and it's benefiting us as well, I don't see any harm to it.” 

Indeed, April of this year saw Swift split with her publicist of seven years, Paula Erickson, for a new PR spokeswoman, Tree Paine. After her hire, Paine immediately took to Twitter to call out bogus stories about her client, taking an aggressive role in managing Swift's new image. Tynicka Battle, CEO and co-founder of ThinkTank Digital, a media agency that specializes in Social Media Strategy, spoke with the Daily Dot at length about the work that goes into managing an artist’s social media presence and virality. “I won't say there's no mistake in viral content, but for the most part, there is usually a lot of coordination behind something that does get a lot of play across social media,” Battle said. 

The timing is interesting to say the least. June and July’s commenting sprees saw fans turn a razor-sharp eye to the Swift’s activity on the app. Accounts like @taylornoticed began surfacing, monitoring her commenting activity and keeping time logs of when she was last active. For many fans, Swift’s most important Instagram act came in early August, when she took to the app, releasing a series of three clues that culminated with the announcement of a Yahoo! webcast in which she released a new single and revealed the release date for her fifth studio album. 

When asked if they believe Swift comments on photos herself, there was a resounding yes from each of the six Swift enthusiasts that I spoke to for this article. But who wouldn’t want to believe their idol had taken the time to tailor a personal response to their photo and accompanying story? Each of them cited being able to read Taylor’s unique voice in her words. As one fan put it, “I think our whole fandom knows Taylor’s personality and the way she speaks.” While the Washington Post was able to get confirmation from her rep that she does in fact run her own Instagram account, the Daily Dot did not receive a response from Swift or her management on this story.

As a millennial herself, who’s been navigating the ever-growing sphere of social media since her early career, Swift recognizes the importance of digital fan interaction. In her trend piece for The Wall Street Journal, Taylor recounts having brought up her fan communication on Myspace during record-label meetings in 2005. “The only memento ‘kids these days’ want is a selfie,” she penned. “It's part of the new currency, which seems to be ‘how many followers you have on Instagram.’” Given the recent deluge of comments from the star, that’s a line that can either read as dubious or savvy. For now, fans can rest easy, because all evidence seems to point to the star’s appreciation for her fans.

Photo via rwoan/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Hundreds of alleged celebrity nudes leak on the seediest corners of the Web

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It’s been called "Celebgate." It involves 4chan and a huge library of never-before-seen nude photos of Jennifer Lawrence, McKayla Maroney, and Krysten Ritter.

Sometime over the past 72 hours, a user of 4chan’s /b/ imageboard—where pornography, pranks, and vigilante justice rule supreme—offered up nudes of the world’s most recognizable celebrities in exchange for bitcoins.

As is often the case with any promise posted on /b/, no one took it seriously and proceeded to call the user a “fag,” 4chan’s double-edged term of endearment and insult.

Today, that user made good on his promise in a huge way.

They dumped photos allegedly showing Lawrence in a strappy black piece of lingerie, Glee star Lea Michele in a black lacy bra, and Olympic star Maroney in a black thong on /b/.

The Daily Dot will not include the photos in this story or links to them because it is unclear whether they are legitimate or Photoshopped. Most of these photos can be found on Reddit’s r/celebs and Imgur. According to the 4chan user, the photos appear to have been obtained through the iCloud accounts of these celebs. 

On Reddit’s r/nsfw, it has become a sort of game to see who can post the latest nudes first and reap a windfall of karma, the site’s internal mechanism for awarding comments and links. All of these photos are pornographic and NSFW.

The master list of celebs also includes soccer star Hope Solo, singers Victoria Justice and Ariana Grande, and actress Kirsten Dunst. The full list from 4chan can be seen here.

The leak has set 4chan off in a frenzy. Dozens of threads have been created across /b/ and /tv/ to share each image. As further proof that this immense library of nudes exists, the original 4chan user shared these two images of his desktop, showing thumbnails of photos yet to be leaked.

 

“This might be the best but also the saddest day in /b/'s history,” commented one random 4chan user in one of the threads. “We've been teased with all of these glorious pics. BUT there's lot's of videos out there, and I have a feeling that we will never get our hands on them because the dude is a hero but simultaneously a greedy hero. Think about it.. There's 60~ [Lawrence] vids out there that you might or might not see. It's going to haunt you forever.”

Update: On Twitter, Victoria Justice claims the alleged photos of her are fake. 

Photo by gageskidmore/Flickr (CC BY-SA 2.0) | Additional reporting provided by 4archive

Pixar's upcoming short is a story millions of years in the making

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Volcanoes can take anywhere between 10,000 to 500,000 years to form, making them some of the oldest—and loneliest—natural phenomenons on Earth.

These facts have been captured in a clip from Disney Pixar’s “Lava,” a short set to premiere before the studio's upcoming film, Inside Out.

Inspired by the isolated beauty of tropical islands and the explosive allure of ocean volcanoes, 'LAVA' is a musical love story that takes place over millions of years,” Pixar states on YouTube, where the clip has collected more than 66,000 views in the past 48 hours.

H/T Gizmodo | Screenshot via Pixar/YouTube

Remember when Katy Perry was a 17-year-old folk singer?

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Way back before Katy Perry took Riff Raff to the VMAs and shot fireworks from her boobs, she was a normal teenager with chunky highlights and a fondness for Patty Griffin. 

In this 12-minute clip, we see Perry in 2001 on her first tour, when she was just 17 and signed to Red Hill Records. The video was posted by Jim Standridge, who explains he has 90 minutes worth of footage, and that he found this while cleaning:

“The other day I was cleaning out some old footage in my office and found 90 minutes of raw footage I had totally forgot about. Pamplin had the originals but I had always made backups of everything I shot. I quickly put together a short edit of the experience with Katy. Funny how she spent so much time messing with her hair….”

She hadn’t hit her pop phase yet, and the live footage shows her very much embracing the folk lifestyle, and touring with Christian bands who laugh at her jokes. 

Also, the denim trench coat she’s wearing a little after the four-minute mark is a reminder of how universally awful fashion was in 2001.

Katy Perry Uncensored Raw Talent from Jim Standridge on Vimeo.

H/T Digg | Screengrab via Jim Standridge/Vimeo

John Oliver takes on YouTube commenters, and it's 'BRILLENT'

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After posting a commentary on America's nuclear weapons arsenal in July, John Oliver, host of the HBO late-night comedy program Last Week Tonight With John Oliver, received much backlash—and support—from the YouTube community.

This time around, he decided to address some of the comments, no doubt lighting a second set of fires.

Oliver highlights and addresses several comments left on the video, including "John Oliver's face does look like a parrot" and "this guy is BRILLENT."

When Last Week Tonight returns to HBO on Sept. 7 (something one cherry soda connoisseur will definitely be boycotting), he will no doubt have plenty of new material.

Screengrab via Last Week Tonight With John Oliver/YouTube

How not to respond to Jennifer Lawrence's leaked nudes

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The massive privacy violation that exposed naked pictures of numerous celebrities has inspired a lot of discussion about taking, sharing, and storing private images. Because this is the Internet, there’s a fair amount of awfulness mixed in with the scattering of sensible comments.

Comedian Ricky Gervais is the highest-profile person to land in hot water over insensitive remarks about the incident. In a tweet that he subsequently deleted, Gervais wrote, “Celebrities, make it harder for hackers to get nude pics of you from your computer by not putting nude pics of yourself on your computer.”

In a series of follow-up tweets, Gervais remained unapologetic and criticized those whom he offended.

Gervais is far from the only person making the argument that celebrities who don’t take the proper security precautions are to blame for the results. This line of reasoning, which often surfaces whenever a woman is the victim of an invasion of privacy either physical or virtual, is out in full force today. Both men and women are blaming the celebrities who were victimized yesterday for failing to prevent the actions of a determined hacker.

While it is fair and uncontroversial to suggest that people take precautions online, victim-blamers have been twisting the notion of personal responsibility to suggest that celebrities who are hacked deserve their fate if they didn’t do everything they could to prevent such a breach.

This phenomenon is not new. Witness this tweet from June commenting on a story that could have turned tragic and was already deeply depressing.

Meanwhile, the leak was too creepy even for some redditors:

And several celebrities whose photos were seemingly exposed have responded with grace and humor. Here's what Glee's Becca Tobin, whose alleged leaked photos showed her next to a Christmas tree, tweeted:

Photo via TK

Perez Hilton removes 'Celebgate' photos, calling his post a mistake

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Celebrity blogger Perez Hilton has backtracked and apologized for posting the nude photos leaked by 4chan of Jennifer Lawrence, Victoria Justice, and other celebrities on his site.

Over the weekend, someone on 4chan posted dozens of photos on the site’s /b/ imageboard, part of an alleged iCloud hack. Many news sites reporting on the hacks chose not to post the photos online or link to them. Ariana Grande and Justice both claimed that pictures of them were fake while Lawrence’s rep confirmed the authenticity of the pictures to BuzzFeed, calling the leaks “a flagrant violation of privacy” and said that authorities would prosecute anyone who posted the photos.

Mary E. Winstead also confirmed that her photos were real and was forced to take a break online after the backlash against her became too much.

Hilton first posted uncensored photos on his site and then changed his mind about that, choosing to reupload censored versions of photos.

“This hacking story is too big to ignore, though,” he said in a deleted tweet. “The post will remain up and photos in censored version.”

A previous tweet, which has since been deleted, went around as people called out Hilton for posting the photos in the first place and accused him of bullying celebrities.

Hilton later had a change of heart, but quickly denied he had been contacted by anyone representing Lawrence or Justice, claiming that he put the article up in haste without thinking.

Then he decided to delete the post altogether.

Hilton’s original post has been deleted (although the head image to the page still remains on the site) with a short article listing the celebrities whose photos were leaked going up in its place.

The U.K. publication Uni Lad also posted pictures of the leaked photos, but it has since removed the post and any subsequent tweets or Facebook posts promoting the article.

H/T Neetzan Zimmerman | Photo via Oscar Rohena/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)


You don't have to be a cannibal to want this 'Hannibal' cookbook

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Have you ever found yourself watching the TV show Hannibal, and getting kind of... hungry?

That’s a serious question. Because while cannibalism tends to be frowned upon in polite society, the food in Hannibal is designed to look as a delicious as possible. The show’s “food stylist” even has a blog where she explains how she created every one of Hannibal’s meals, including research on what meats can be used to represent different parts of the human body.

Fans of that food blog will be excited to hear that there’s going to be an official Hannibal cookbook as well. In an interview with Crave Online, showrunner Bryan Fuller said the Hannibal recipe book is “in development.”

“Yeah, there’s a cookbook in development,” he said, “and there’s also a fantastic ‘Art of Making of Hannibal.’ I saw some pages from it. It’s a gorgeous book.”

Each season of the show focuses on a different food theme, with season 1 being French cuisine, season 2 being Japanese, and the upcoming third season introducing some Italian recipes. As a result, the Hannibal cookbook will probably have variety, although we assume everything will involve a lot of red meat. Last time Hannibal cooked for a vegetarian on the show, he gave her a leafy salad served alongside a bird skull.

Most of Hannibal’s meals involve unappetizing ingredients like liver and heart, but they’re always so beautifully displayed that they have inspired fans to hold fannibal dinner parties and even create miniature sculptures of his recipes. That cookbook, whenever it comes out, will probably sell like the proverbial hotcakes.

Photo via NBC

Bill Murray pulls a total Bill Murray at a baseball game

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Bill Murray is already a master actor and master crasher of big life events, but his latest appearance involves him partaking in America’s favorite pastime.

As a co-owner of the St. Paul Saints (along with several other minor league baseball teams), he was front and center as people entered Midway Stadium for the team’s final game Thursday; the Saints are moving to a new stadium next season. Instead of taking that figuratively, he was almost the first person fans saw upon reaching the stadium as he collected tickets for people watching the game.

And when it came to the first pitch of the game, there was something of a role reversal. Instead of throwing the first pitch, he caught it and threw it into the stands.

It’s nowhere near the first time that Murray has done something that sounds like it came straight out of an Internet tale; it’s not even the first time he’s done something at one of his stadiums. Long are the days when those hard-to-believe Bill Murray stories were only just stories. There are the pictures and video to prove it, and if it makes the day of a few people, then all the better.

H/T Vulture | Photo via Katie Schutrop/Twitter

Media mogul Oprah sets her sights on YouTube

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Oprah Winfrey set the standard for modern daytime talk shows and what it means to be a media mogul, so it's no surprise she's taking aim for digital dominance with Web content aimed to replicate her tried-and-true style.

Who Am I is the second attempt to corner the digital market since OWN relaunched its online presence in March. The series is filmed at the YouTube Space L.A. and builds on access to emerging digital talent like Michelle Phan together with more traditional celebrities like LaToya Jackson. These celebrities sit down and open up about their success and what defines them as people.

So far the series has profiled Brandy and Nicole Richie in short, easily digestible digital videos that clock in under three minutes each. The series will live both on Oprah.com and Oprah's YouTube channel, which boasts more than 300,000 subscribers. 

H/T NewMediaRockstars | Screengrab via OWN TV/YouTube

Radiohead drops new music in psychedelic smartphone app

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On Monday, legendary British rock band Radiohead released a collection of new original music—albeit in an unlikely format. The band put out a bunch of snippets of previously unreleased ambient works in an update to its PolyFauna smartphone app.

The app, which was originally released in February, is a collaboration between the band, long-time producer Nigel Godrich, and U.K.-based design studio Universal Everything. The newly reworked version boasts reimagined visuals as well as the new music.

A description on the app’s download page reads:

Your screen is the window into an evolving world.
Move around to look around.
You can follow the red dot.
You can wear headphones.
You can get some pretty strange looks on the train.

In execution, the app is similar to ambient music pioneer Brian Eno’s 2008 app Bloom, which allows users to generate randomly created soundscapes through general parameters set by tapping on the screen. The band has said that the app was inspired by the the opening track from its 2011 album King of Limbs, which is also called ‟Bloom” and features sounds much like those produced by Eno’s app.

In an essay published in The Guardian, a spokesperson for Universal Everything noted that the company intentionally omitted any directions in how to use the program from PolyFauna itself. ‟Many apps and games begin with tutorials, but we intentionally omitted any explanation and kept the instructions to a minimum,” Universal Everything explained. ‟This added to the app's sense of discovery, giving the user a feeling of satisfaction that you wouldn't get from just following commands on-screen.”

The new music itself, however, harkens back to the most spaced-out, ambient sections of the band’s 2000 masterpiece Kid A. There are hazy synths holding gradually evolving tones, consciously lo-fi electric drum noises, and the occasional whisper of Thom Yorke’s distinctive falsetto softly harmonizing over the woozy instrumentals.

Rolling Stone speculates that the musical sketches appearing on the app might be the band tipping its hat toward what its next full-length might sound like.

Here are some YouTube videos of the revamped app in action:

Radiohead are slated to head into the studio later this month to record their ninth full-length album, but guitarist Johnny Greenwood told NME that the creation of the album is a ‟slow-moving animal.”

H/T Pitchfork | Photo by Matthew Hickey/Wikimedia Commons (CC BY 2.0)

Online dating meets 'Gilligan's Island' in 'Love Prison'

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It’s refreshing to know that the programmers at A&E can greenlight ideas that have nothing to do with pawn shops, storage lockers, and duck decoy barons. 

But as we’re about to find out with the Sept. 8 debut of Love Prison, it might have been wiser for A&E, along with production partner Leftfield Productions, to stick to reality shows that bear some semblance of reality. Love Prison is a sad mashup of numerous cinematic predecessors built on the premise that opposites attract, absence makes the heart grow fonder, or objects on the screen appear far more wonderful than they do in real life.

The concept is rather shaky: A couple who has been dating online for months is put on an island for a week to get to know each other while we, the viewing audience, play voyeur, hoping for titillation, verbal skirmishes, or any sort of conflict that will lead to a large audience and social media buzz. Episode one features a middle-aged slacker from Long Island and a hopeless romantic from California in search of heart-stopping love. The duo have to spend 23 hours a day indoors (for maximum audience torture) which allows the producers to pull off such dumb human tricks as remotely turning on a TV that reveals somewhat juicy details about the love prisoners’ past. (On second thought, even "somewhat juicy" is a bit of an overstatement.)

On top of the tired premise and boring subjects, Love Prison is a rather cheesy production. While most reality shows (now affectionately called “unscripted”) take place on exotic islands off the coast of Madagascar or in the South Seas, this program is shot on picturesque Belden Island, a long swim off the coast of Branford, Conn. One wonders if the dude from Long Island took the bus or train to this deserted isle.

While it isn’t much of a spoiler, the show’s cliffhanger comes when, after their week together, the female of the pair has to decide whether she will go ashore in a boat with her online guy or return to land solo. Beyond that, I’d hate to ruin a rather predictable ending for the pilot episode.

Love Prison could benefit from following one of A&E’s popular new shows, Brandi and Jarrod: Married to the Job, a spinoff of the network’s iconic Storage Wars series. But truth be told, not even the best lead-in can salvage this sad piece of reality fluff.

Photo via A+E Networks

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