Quantcast
Channel: DailyDot Entertainment Feed
Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live

Bill Hader and Kristen Wiig troll a morning show host who hasn't seen their movie

$
0
0

Denver news anchor Chris Parente may have won several regional Emmys for his work, but during a recent interview with comedy veterans Kristen Wiig and Bill Hader, he made an amateur's mistake.

He mentioned the wrong film, with hilarious results.

Parente's gaffe sent Wiig and Hader—who were on news channel KWGN's live morning segment Daybreak to talk about their new film The Skeleton Twins—into hysterics, after they recovered from their stunned shock when Parente asked Wiig to talk about going full frontal for the role.

It quickly became evident that Parente, who'd just raved about what a "great film" The Skeleton Twins was, had been asking Wiig about a totally different film.

The film Parente was referring to is Welcome to Me, which, like The Skeleton Twins, was recently screened to acclaim at the Toronto International Film Festival. Parente claimed to have attended TIFF, but apparently didn't see either film. 

Once he realizes what's happened, Hader milks the moment. "I'm nude in this movie," he joked, "and I'm upside down the whole film. The movie takes place on Mars."

The fun starts around 1:40, when Parente, seemingly out of nowhere, asks Wiig for advice on doing his news program in the nude.

The Skeleton Twins enters wide release this weekend. Despite Wiig's lack of nudity, the film has received mostly positive reviews so far. We think Parente will like it when he finally gets around to seeing it.

H/T The WrapScreengrab via YouTube


For Vimeo, the secret to success is the human touch

$
0
0

Vimeo believes the human touch is its secret weapon in the battle to win the hearts, minds, and dollars of online moviegoers.

As Vimeo's Vice President of Content Strategy and Business Development Sam Toles explains, instead of algorithms and educated guesswork, his online network replies on a group of dedicated staff curators to ensure the the company’s pay video on demand service has the same quality as its free side of the house—the difference being, Toles told the Daily Dot, that when curating films for the pay side of the house, “we always think of the commercial possibilities.”

Among the staff picks current on Vimeo’s VOD side are The Lady in Number 6 ($4.99 rental), the story of a Holocaust survivor and how music saved her life, and Beauty is Embarrassing ($5 rental), a documentary featuring the life and current times of one of America’s most celebrated  artists, Wayne White. The Lady in Number 6 is the 2014 Academy Award winner for Best Documentary – Short Subject. While these films are available on other platforms, Vimeo’s secret sauce is its mix of genres, broad selection, and an expectation that content made available for rentals or purchase has received the site’s seal of approval. Toles said Vimeo will shoot for exclusive deals (for fixed amounts of time) for some films, especially those in which it invests money up front for marketing. Many of those are selected from prime film festivals.

After launching in 2004 as an alternative to YouTube, Vimeo became a home for creators in search of a hosting or distribution platform focused on delivering higher quality. The company was the first consumer-facing online video service to offer HD playback in 2007, later adding premium accounts that delivered up to 1080p streams for an optimal viewing experience. As an alternative to the crowded YouTube marketplace, not to mention Google’s less-than-favorable monetization scheme, Vimeo became the clean, well-lit place for filmmakers to showcase their wares. A symbol of that commitment and branding can be seen in Vimeo’s sponsorship of film screenings at South by Southwest, which brought the premieres of such such films as DamNation and The Internet’s Own Boy.

As Vimeo grew to be the go-to network for discerning digital moviegoers, the company saw the opportunity to reward filmmakers with commerce platforms to make money from their projects. Toles said the goal is to create a cycle in which digital creators earn money which allows them to invest that funding into new projects. The first initiative, launched in September 2012, was the Vimeo Tip Jar. That initial foray into crowdfunding allowed anyone to give tips before, during, or after watching a video. Unlike its commercial competitors, which offer one-time licensing fees or 50-50 splits, Vimeo paid 85 percent of the gross revenue to the creator. 

Fitting with its goal of becoming the connection point between creators and consumers, Vimeo launched its full-blown video on demand service at SXSW 2013. Vimeo On Demand offered creators a 90 percent share of revenue with the ability to set pricing as well as  country-by-country availability and easy syndication with embed codes and social linking. In the year following its move into the on-demand business, Vimeo said it had 6,000 uploads to its new commercial distribution platform, and it celebrated that achievement by announcing at SXSW 2014 a new, $10 million fund geared to help filmmakers who went the popular crowdsourcing route. It also formulates exclusive distribution deals with films that debut at any of the top global film festivals. 

With all the commercial pieces in place, it is the human touch—the careful review and selection—that separates Vimeo from such competitors as iTunes, Amazon, and Netflix. “The staff picks on our VOD platform have important human touchpoints,” Toles said. “When you see a Staff Picks badge, you can be assured a certain level of quality.”

While each filmmaker is free to select his or her own price, Vimeo does offer some suggestions. Often, what to charge is a function of subject matter and topic demand rather than length of film. Toles says that iTunes, for example, lumps short films films together so that a compelling 40-minute documentary goes for $1.99 even if it is tailored to an audience willing to pay more. 

While it took a while for its competitors to catch on, Vimeo’s market for carefully selected films of varying lengths is on the verge of becoming more crowded. Netflix, for one, is circling around the short film business by experiment with short clips such as film trailers on its mobile platforms. Amazon announced the addition of a Video Shorts section to its instant video service with a mixmash of trailers, vlogs, and YouTube-like content. With its Amazon Studios in place, however, the company could easily pivot into offering a VOD section featuring movies from emerging auteurs. New Form Digital, backed by Ron Howard and Brian Grazer, believes it can turn YouTube stars into serious filmmakers and has created New Form Incubator, a program that will develop and fund 14 short films, three to 10 minutes in length, from such personalities stars such as Joey Graceffa, Joe Penna of MysteryGuitarMan, and Sawyer Hartman. New Form is working with Discovery Networks and AOL for distribution.

With Vimeo’s success, there could be a feeding frenzy to purchase smaller online networks that feature short films. Included in that mix are Film Shortage,Short of the Week, The Smalls, and Focus Forward, which is partially funded by General Electric. Some of these sites include in their features films that are curated from a number of sites, including Vimeo.

Stoles is undaunted about the rise of competitors and feels the current market resembles the early ’80s with the rise of niche cable networks that appealed to targeted audiences. “If there is room for 1,000 cable channels,” he stated, “then there is room for a wide variety of voices. I see us being well-positioned for the future.”

Illustration by Jason Reed

Here's what's new on Netflix in October

$
0
0

Congrats, lovers of Netflix Instant. The network's October lineup of new releases offers more treats than tricks, including beloved classics like Rain Man and cult hits like Galaxy Quest and Team America: World Police

But the shocking twist is the number of amazing shows and films leaving us this month, including—gasp—every season of every series of Law & Order. Dude, Netflix. Not cool, man.

READ MORE: 

Don't miss these Netflix titles leaving Oct. 1

The Internet started celebrating one of this month's releases early: The online release of all seven seasons of Gilmore Girls seemed to be one heard 'round the world.

But there are plenty of other reasons to get excited in October. The lineup includes family favorites like the musical Annie, undoubtedly released as a precursor to the upcoming holiday release of the remake starring Quvenzhané Wallis and Jamie Foxx. Also released just before its holiday sequel is The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. 

The list also includes another Foxx vehicle—Django Unchained, along with other acclaimed dramas like Kramer vs. Kramer

TV lovers have plenty to celebrate with new seasons of several series already on Instant, like season nine of Supernatural, season two of Arrow, and, at long last, the delayed release of season six of Sons of Anarchy. And although it's technically debuting on Sept. 30, we can't go without mentioning the Netflix premiere of Peaky Blinders, the BBC period gangland drama starring Cillian Murphy and Tom Hardy.

The full list of arrivals is below.

Oct. 1

Annie (1982)

Annie: A Royal Adventure (1995)

Bad Johnson (2014)

Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle (2003)

Chicken Run (2000)

Domestic Disturbance (2001)

Ernest Saves Christmas (1988)

Finding Forrester (2000)

Galaxy Quest (1999)

Gilmore Girls: The Complete Series

Hit! (1973)

Hostages: Season 1

Jimmy Neutron: Boy Genius (2001)

Kramer vs. Kramer (1979)

My Father the Hero (1994)

Paths of Glory (1957)

Please Subscribe: A Documentary About YouTubers (2013)

Rescue Dawn (2006)

Romeo + Juliet (1996)

Shadow of the Vampire (2000)

Shane (1953)

Sleepless in Seattle (1993)

Shivers (1975)

The Phantom of the Opera (1989)

Team America: World Police (2004)

Three Fugitives (1989)

Tombstone (1993)

The Wedding Planner (2001)

Oct. 2

Carrie (2013)

Reign: Season 1

Under the Electric Sky: EDC 2013 (2014)

The Vampire Diaries: Season 5

Oct. 3

The Originals: Season 1

Oct. 4

The Boxcar Children (2013)

Oct. 6

Little Man (2006)

Oct. 7

Hart of Dixie: Season 3

In a World... (2013)

Raising Hope: Season 4

Supernatural: Season 9

The Following: Season 2

Oct. 8

Arrow: Season 2

Jay Mohr: Funny for a Girl

Oct. 9

A Long Way Down (2014)

The Tomorrow People: Season 1

Oct. 10

Chelsea Handler: Uganda Be Kidding Me (2014)

Oct. 11

Breathe In (2013)

Heatstroke (2013)

Swelter (2014)

Why Stop Now (2012)

Oct. 14

Witching and Bitching (2013)

Oct. 15

Stay (2013)

Tim Minchin and the Heritage Orchestra Live (2011)

Oct. 16

Cowgirls 'n Angels (2012)

Oct. 18:

Last Man Standing: Season 3

Liberal Arts (2012)

Oct. 21

Wyatt Cenac: Brooklyn

Oct. 22

E-Team (2014)

The 100: Season 1

The Hunger Games: Catching Fire (2013)

Oct. 23 

Freakshow: Season 2

Oct. 25 

The Carrie Diaries: Season 2

Django Unchained (2012)

Sons of Anarchy: Season 6

Oct. 28

Bound by Flesh (2012)

Oct. 31

Before I Go to Sleep (2014)

Rain Man (1988)

H/T Business Insider | Photo via Wikimedia Commons (CC-BY-SA 3.0)

Infamous 'Kitchen Nightmares' couple allegedly threatened a customer with a knife

$
0
0

The charming owners of Amy's Baking Co.are under fire yet again—and it’s not for their cooking.

Amy and Samy Bouzaglo, whose appearance on Kitchen Nightmares caused host Gordon Ramsay to walk out on them and gained the fury of the Internet multiple times, are accused of threatending a customer with a weapon.

According to a video from TMZ, Samy appears to be wielding a knife towards a drunk customer whom an enraged Amy asked to leave. The customer did leave the premises, but Samy still ran after him while Amy tried to hold him back.

Police were called to investigate a disturbance at Amy’s Bakery Co. Saturday, but the man in the video left by the time authorities arrived. KPHO reported that no arrests were made in the incident, but charges could be pending once police find and interview everyone involved.

When news outlets contacted the Bouzaglos, they insisted that Samy had a pen on him in the video, not a knife.

H/T Gawker | Photo via FOX/YouTube

Jason Viohni is the latest YouTuber facing allegations of sexual abuse

$
0
0

After seeing the support for the women coming out against Sam Pepperthe U.K.-based prankster who united the community after many saw the video in which he grabbed women’s butts for a “social experiment” as sexual assaultmultiple women have accused another YouTuber of sexual abuse and soliciting nude photos.

Jason Viohni, better known as VeeOneEye among his fans, is a pit reporter on Warped Tour and is known for his wacky hair just as much as his videos. The 22-year-old YouTuber has a respectable following with more than 429,000 subscribers watching weekly. And now, he joins Pepper and more than a dozen creators on YouTube who are being accused of abusing and taking advantage of fans.

Ania Magliano-Wright finally got the courage to tell her story after she saw the support that Dottie Martin and the other women who alleged Pepper harassed or violated them received. When she was 15 and Viohni was 20, they met in London, where he got her drunk and slept with her—and then a message revealed that he wanted to get her drunk again.

In the U.K., the age of consent is 16.

After posting the video, Magliano-Wright told her Twitter followers that if any of them had similar stories about Viohni, they could share them with her (even anonymously), and she hoped that telling her story would prevent similar things happening to other people.

With her story out there, more people started coming forward, and the support started pouring in, with many of them telling their followers that Viohni committed a crime. The people coming forward wrote that Viohni made them feel uncomfortable, got another girl drunk and had sex with her, and asked girls for nude photos. One of his friends felt betrayed after finding out that Viohni had lied to him about the rumors and allegations.

As with Pepper last week and many before him, some of Viohni’s fans tried to stand up for him and proclaim that “everyone makes mistakes,” but it appeared to be a vocal minority.

Pepper has essentially disappeared from social media after being dropped by Collective Digital Studio last week, but Viohni addressed his allegations full-on. He made an unlisted video and tweeted it towards Magliano-Wright.

In it, he admitted that her allegations were true. He blamed his actions on his Mormon upbringing and his dependency on alcohol when he was younger, and he said that he’s learned from his mistakes. Many in the YouTube community didn’t accept his apology and thought he was putting the blame on things other than himself.

While Magliano-Wright hasn’t responded to Viohni directly, she has seen the video and denied that he tried reaching out to her while pointing out that he only really meant for her to see the video. In a post where she thanked her supporters, she included several screenshots to show how little Viohni “changed,” and pointed out that he brought condoms when he met up with her.

“Please realise that what Jason did was not a ‘one-off’ thing,” she wrote. “And it was not during a ‘bad phase’. These events did not all happen around the same time; there have been reports of recent cases and some from years ago (some of these overlap with the period in which he apparently ‘changed’).”

This is far from the first time that women have come forward with allegations against YouTubers. Back in March, Tom Milsom, Alex Day, and close to a dozen other creators were accused of sexually abusing their fans. Ed Blann, who's also faced allegations, received backlash for returning to YouTube. Mike Lombardo was arrested for child pornography and is currently serving a five-year sentence.

The Daily Dot has reached out to Viohni’s management and we’ll update if we hear anything back.

Photo via VeeOneEye/YouTube

Tim & Eric directed a GE commercial starring Jeff Goldblum

$
0
0

Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim have been on the road recently, promoting their new show, Tim & Eric's Bedtime Stories. I got to see one of the clips at their Austin stop a few weeks ago, and it featured Bob Odenkirk as a doctor who can’t stop eating toes.

So everything seems to be in order.

The comedy duo also recently directed a video for GE’s new Link light bulb, which is apparently going to revolutionize lighting via energy conservation and allow users to “wink” at the bulb to turn it on and off, via the Wink smartphone app. Yes, this sounds just like a Tim & Eric sketch. 

This is all demonstrated by beautiful person Terry Quattro, played by none other than Jeff Goldblum, who has appeared in Tim & Eric sketches before. The short spot also features an array of Tim & Eric-approved characters helping Goldblum with his sexy-man lighting.

Enjoy Goldblum’s feathered hair and marvel at his jacket.

Screengrab via General Electric/YouTube 

John Oliver goes after America's drone program

$
0
0

Drones are everywhere right now. They’re also, according to John Oliver, the “third most annoying thing in the sky after mosquitoes and plastic bags caught in the breeze.”

Last night, he aimed his vitriol at America’s drone program, and the strikes reportedly launched at Waziristan and Yemen last week, which only one news outlet reported. But since drones are everywhere, what’s the big deal, right? Remember when Obama joked about using predator drones on the Jonas Brothers if they made a move on his daughters, and everyone laughed?

Oliver attempts to suss out the basics of how, why, and when the U.S. uses drone strikes, but he ultimately comes to the conclusion that “our rules for drone strikes are a little like Harvey Keitel’s balls. We’ve all seen them in The Piano, Bad Lieutenant, or on Snapchat. And from a distance, you think, ‘Oh, I understand the contours of those. But if you were to really examine them, you’d discover that they’re actually lost in a haze of fuzziness and gray areas.”

Even more frightening than involuntarily visualizing Harvey Keitel’s balls are the number of civilian casualties from drone strikes, and the fact that U.S. officials don’t have an accurate count, or even really know who they’re killing.

Oliver says the constant threat of drones overhead has to mess with your head. That's an understatement. 

Screengrab via Last Week Tonight with John Oliver/YouTube 

This video explains the 'Pixar Theory' of interconnected movies

$
0
0

The world’s most insane-yet-plausible theory about the Pixar universe has been brought to life.

Jon Negroni’s theory about how every single Pixar movie takes place in the same universe is well worth reading on its own merits, but if you haven’t got the time for it, you can easily watch it.

Encompassing every single Pixar movie to date, we follow the theory from its humble Brave beginnings to the dystopian future of A Bug’s Life and Monsters Inc. and how it manages to go full circle. It’s just as impressive as the first time we read it with the added bonus of seeing the clues hidden even deeper than Pixar’s constant A113 references.

At this point we can only guess where Inside Out will fit into the theory.

H/T Uproxx | Photo via Bloop Animation/YouTube


The Ohio State marching band's 'The Wizard of Oz' cover is a must-see

$
0
0

The Ohio State University may not have the best damn football team, but at least the band still has a perfect track record.

While most of us will never make it to a game where Ohio State’s marching band takes the field, we’ve gotten to see them play in all of their glory every week on YouTube. This time around, they’re paying homage to a classic.

Celebrating its 75th anniversary this year, The Wizard of Oz is still beloved by many, and the Best Damn Band in the Land are big enough fans that they went and devoted their entire show to the film. Every iconic scene is present (and the little dog, too) as the band expertly transitions to the next scene and produces a cyclone worthy of the movie.

They’re just reaffirming that there’s no place like the home field.

H/T Viral Viral Videos | Photo via The Ohio State University/YouTube

Racist 'Twilight' fans are trolling Robert Pattinson's girlfriend on Twitter

$
0
0

The cult of Twilight is a curious one, and its two main starsRobert Pattinson and Kristen Stewarthave become flesh-and-blood vessels for fans’ own romantic, often obsessive fantasies. So when they found out Pattinson was dating British singer FKA Twigs, they were not happy.

FKA Twigs (real name Tahliah Barnett) is a rising pop star. Her videos are gorgeous visions of empowerment and sexuality, which is mirrored in her soulful music. She is also a black woman. Twilight fans have been harassing her via Twitter, lobbing racist invective and slurs her way, because she’s NOT K-STEW.


 

On Sunday, she posted two tweets addressing this abuse.

Her label also stepped in:

In a recent interview with Dazed, the singer discussed being the only mixed-race girl in her Catholic school, and dealing with racism as a kid:

Half of my life I’ve had people staring at me because they think I’m funny-looking and ugly. The other half of my life 
I’ve had people staring at me because they think I’m fascinating. Everything neutralises. It’s more of a statement on society and how weird it is.

Society is weird, yes, but this is unacceptable. It's already been pointed out over and over how Twitter's abuse-reporting system, especially for women, is frustratingly broken. 

H/T Pitchfork | Screengrab via FKA Twigs/YouTube

‘The Simpsons’ ventures into the far future with a surreal and sorrowful new intro

$
0
0

How long until The Simpsons is nothing but an empty shell—a soulless, money-spinning franchise that bears no resemblance to the cartoon that spawned it? That’s the question a new “couch gag” put together for the show hopes to answer.

In an unusually candid intro to the cartoon, designed by the Oscar-nominated animator Don Hertzfeltdt, the notion that The Simpsons might be betraying its roots is taken to its logical conclusion. A malfunctioning device throws Homer both backwards and forwards in time, ending in an unsettling future in which almost all memory of a loving family is gone from the world.

The couch gag aired in the premiere of Season 26, "Clown in the Dumps," on Sept. 28. There's as yet no sign as to when the "Dark Lord of the Twin Moons" will make his debut on the show, however.

Screengrab via Animation Domination / YouTube

 

Does YouTube have a blackface problem?

$
0
0

YouTube prankster Sam Pepper has spent the last week embroiled in controversy. He's been accused of sexually assaulted multiple members of his fanbase, not to mention crossing similar lines in a so-called prank video. 

The YouTube community responded with swift condemnation of Pepper, who sparked the controversy just as he was making the leap from YouTube to film. He was rapidly dropped from his network, and VidCon founder Hank Green made a Tumblr post stating that Pepper was "not welcome at VidCon."

But to vlogger Franchesca Ramsey and other bloggers, a piece of the conversation was missing. While the mostly white community of YouTube vloggers rushed to distance themselves from acts of sexist comedy like the kind Pepper claimed to be engaged in, there seems to be no similar standard of condemnation for comparable acts of racist comedy on the platform.

On Wednesday, the blogging community spoke out against one YouTuber specifically who had repeatedly engaged in examples of what they felt were racist humor: popular YouTuber Shane Dawson. Dawson came under fire in 2012 after an uncomfortable VidCon segment in which he invited teen girls onstage and encouraged them to engage in what he called "ghetto pranks," which included jokes about chicken and booty dances. 

Before and since then, Dawson has also been a longtime adopter of blackface for various YouTube skits. Witness this tweet from 2009:

Black Tumblr and YouTube members wanted to point out that Dawson had yet to suffer any real repercussions for his incidents of blackface. The posts made about Dawson came as a wake-up call, if not a total surprise, to many fans and prompted a huge cross-community discussion about what blackface actually is, and why it is culturally appropriative and harmful. "Caricatures of black people were literally CREATED by white people to justify our mistreatment and oppression," Ramsey wrote on her own blog.

"We were portrayed as stupid, aggressive and over sexualized to influence how people perceived all black people. White people weren’t doing blackface and portraying teachers, doctors and lawyers ya’ll. If you’ve never met a black person or don’t regularly interact with black people and the MAJORITY of representations of black people you’ve ever been exposed to are negative….you’re going to believe it’s true." 

Ramsey called out the community's apathy over Dawson's actions, as well as his own:

"Sam was banned from Vidcon over ONE video. Shane has done his modern day minstrel show act AT VIDCON and faced no repercussions. It’d be nice if he’d acknowledge why these thing are problematic, apologize to his audience and stop doing them."

On Friday, Dawson removed most of the controversial videos and apologized, but not before he mocked bloggers on Twitter and minimized the criticisms he was hearing. Ramsey also felt Dawson had encouraged his fans to be combative with her and other bloggers.

Dawson seems to have moved on, tweeting about the success of his new prank film, Not Cool. But Ramsey has been continually embroiled in arguments with fans angry at her and others for what they see as attacks on Dawson. On Friday, Ramsey uploaded a video in which she discusses the harassment she received and also attempts to educate fans on why Dawson and others need to be called out for using blackface as an element of their comedy:

Today, Ramsey tweeted that she had been subject to death threats and racial slurs, along with a threat to have her fired.

Meanwhile, black bloggers and vloggers are still debating the ethics of Dawson's comedy, as well as breaking down Dawson's apology. YouTuber Tay Zonday argued that since the overall point of Dawson's performance art is to be socially disruptive and "ugly," his use of blackface shouldn't overshadow his other messages. But others insist that rather than attempting to challenge racial societal norms, Dawson has spent years willfully ignoring the voices of black critics whose lives are directly impacted by racist comedy.

"The point is you made no effort to learn what you were doing, learn why it was harmful, and amend it a long time ago," explained YouTuber Lee Williams. Although Dawson said in his apology video that he wanted to use this incident as "a learning experience," Williams pointed out that Ramsey had been calling out Dawson's use of blackface for "years" before this month's events, to no avail. It wasn't until Pepper's career was "demolished" over the backlash, as Williams noted, that Dawson was ready to pay attention.

So far there appear to be no plans to drop Dawson from his agency, United Talent.  VidCon declined to comment to the Daily Dot on whether Dawson would be invited to appear at future conventions.

Screengrab via YouTube

How Taylor Swift surprised a leukemia patient with an unforgettable duet

$
0
0

Taylor Swift’s shown that she’ll go out of her way for her fans. She’s crashed a bridal shower, made a surprise visit to one of her younger fans, and gone on Instagram commenting sprees to share words of encouragement.

Back in August, YouTube user SuperGlue65, who had leukemia, was at Boston Children’s Hospital while he recovered from a bone marrow transplant. When Swift came to visit, he had about a five-minute warning before she stopped in his room.

A month later, posting on Reddit, SuperGlue65 wrote about how it all went down.

He had a piano brought into his room to pass the time previously, which Swift noticed, and she asked him to play a song for her. What transpired was a sweet version of “Someone Like You,” and while they may flub a couple of times, it didn’t need to be perfect. It works just fine the way it is.

“She told me that she flew over from her Rhode Island home just for the purpose of visiting everyone in Boston Children’s Hospital (where I was staying),” he wrote on Monday night. “Apparently she spent around 3 hours visiting. I just think it’s so awesome and nice that she came especially for that purpose.”

How did it come about? “It was a spur of the moment thing,” he wrote. “She commented on the piano and asked if I played, and when I said, ‘Yes,’ she asked me to play something for her. The only song I knew with lyrics was this song, so I asked if she would sing along, to which she kindly obliged.

“She actually didn't even bring anyone with her except her body guard (who stood outside the room). There were no cameras except the one my sister used to videotape this. Yes, she was awesome and definitely seemed to care!”

H/T Reddit | Photo via SuperGlue65/YouTube

Miranda Sings will appear in new season of Jerry Seinfeld’s webseries

$
0
0

BY SAM GUTELLE

On Sept. 25, Jerry Seinfeld made a guest appearance on The Late Show with David Letterman, where he discussed the seven comedians who will star in the fifth season of Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee. There are a lot of exciting names on the docket, but for YouTube aficionados, no name is more exciting than Colleen Ballinger, the alter ego of YouTube personality Miranda Sings and the first YouTuber to ever get invited onto Seinfeld’s webseries.

As Seinfeld explains, he discovered Ballinger through his daughter Sasha, who is a Miranda Sings fan. “I watched it, I started laughing, I think this girl is fantastically talented, and so I’m going to introduce her to America on my show,” Seinfeld told Letterman. On her personal Twitter account, Ballinger shared an unlisted clip from the Late Show episode, calling it “a crazy thing to wake up to.”

In addition to Ballinger, Seinfeld’s season five guests will include Fred Armisen (who will join Seinfeld in a special episode taking place in Portland), Jimmy Fallon, Bill Burr, Kevin Hart, Amy Schumer, and Ali Wentworth. Previously, Seinfeld revealed that he was planning on having Joan Rivers as a guest on his show, but the acerbic comedienne passed away before her Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee episode could be filmed.

The new season of Comedians In Cars Getting Coffee will debut on Nov. 6 via Crackle. We’re excited for Ballinger’s episode, the other six installments of season five, and the 24 future episodes that will keep Seinfeld’s classic cars fueled up through 2016.

Screengrab via MirandaSings/YouTube

The 'Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon' sequel is coming—and it's premiering on Netflix

$
0
0

Netflix has already changed how we view TV, and now it’s aiming for the silver screen.

The streaming video giant announced Tuesday that it’s teaming up with the Weinstein Company’s Harvey Weinstein to release its first major film, Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon: The Green Legend. The movie will premiere on Netflix and show in IMAX theaters starting on Aug. 28, 2015.

The Netflix movie is a sequel of-sorts to the 2000 filmCrouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, directed by Ang Lee. Yuen Wo-Ping will direct the film, based on Silver Vase, Iron Knight—the fifth book in the Crane-Iron Pentalogy—by Wang Du Lu, with Michelle Yeoh reprising her role in the original film as Yu Shu-Lien. Donnie Yen will also star.

According to Deadline, The Green Legend probably isn’t the only film Netflix is working on right now, but it’s highly likely it will be the first one viewers will see.

Netflix hopes the release of feature-length films will help spread its worldwide appeal.

“Fans will have unprecedented choice in how they enjoy and amazing and memorable film that combines intense action and incredible beauty,” Netflix Chief Content Officer Ted Sarandos said in a statement. “We are honored to be working with Harvey Weinstein and a world-class team of creators to bring this epic story to people all over the world and to partner with IMAX, a brand that represents the highest quality of immersive entertainment, in the distribution of this film.”

Netflix, Weinstein, and IMAX are betting that The Green Legend will do well with Chinese audiences and believe giving audiences the ability to choose how they view their content, whether it be on a television screen or in a theater, will help the film's appeal.

“In territories where we simultaneously release with Netflix, we are excited to offer consumers the option of deciding how, when and where they want to view the film, and exhibitors the opportunity to participate in this alternative form of content in a new and innovative way,” IMAX senior executive Greg Foster said.

Update 5:05pm CT, Sept. 30: A new Deadline report states that two of the leading names in American IMAX cinema—Regal and AMC—are protesting the simultaneous release. Europe's Cineworld chimed in as well: "We bring our customers the IMAX experience as the complete opposite of home entertainment… We believe that the theatrical experience and IMAX, as one of its cornerstones, should be kept apart from home entertainment." IMAX CEO Richard Gelfond counters that the last weekend of August is traditionally weak at box offices, and he's encouraging critics to try something different.

H/T Deadline | Photo via MOVIECLIPS/YouTube


Adam Levine stalks a woman as 'prey' in a new Maroon 5 video

$
0
0

Maroon 5 singer Adam Levine has a new video out for the song “Animals,” in which he plays a butcher who stalks his real-life wife, model Behati Prinsloo, breaks into her house and watches her while she’s sleeping, and plays around with animal blood while fantasizing about her. It’s basically your normal, modern-day love story, right?

“Baby I’m preying on you tonight, hunt you down eat you alive,” are the first words in the song, and it only gets worse from there. We see Levine obsessing over surveillance photos of Prinsloo in his meat locker serial killer bunker, following her as she walks down the street, standing outside her apartment in the rain and taking photos of her, walking into her apartment while she sleeps and taking photos of her. She rebuffs his advances at a club, then we see them having sex under a fountain of blood (in Levine’s mind, I think; consent isn’t really addressed here).

This is not an episode of Law & Order: SVU.

Another poetic lyric in the song: “You think that you can hide. I can smell your scent for miles.”

Levine has a lot of young female fans, and on Twitter, many of them commented on how “hot” and “sexy” the video is, and how they “wouldn’t mind” having a stalker as hot as Levine. 

But others have zeroed in on how troubling this reaction is, and how it normalizes and romanticizes the stalking, voyeurism, and violent sexual fantasies Levine’s “character” indulges. As Lainey Gossip explained in a blog yesterday:

When a guy is obsessed with you to this extreme, it should never, EVER be sexy. And if there’s any hint of sexy in that message, any whisper of it, any chance that someone could interpret it that way, any sliver of a chance that someone could possibly think that STALKING IS BAD BAD BAD, isn’t the message fundamentally wrong? Why do we keep condoning it, especially if that guy is – allegedly – good looking and a rock star?

There’s little in the way of edge or creativity here. A rich pop star wanted to make a video where he has sex with his wife. He gets to play a “character,” and act out obsessive fantasies. He gets to compare a woman to prey, as an object to be taken without consent. Are we giving him an out because he's the Sexiest Man Alive

And on top of that, this song is a hot piece of Auto-Tuned garbage.  

Screengrab via Maroon5VEVO/YouTube

Lil Bub overcomes osteopetrosis, can now walk, jump, climb stairs

$
0
0

BY BREE BROUWER

Though YouTube is littered with cat videos, Lil Bub has managed to catch the eye of the online video masses. Now, a new video reveals her struggle during her pre-Internet fame days with what was assumed to be an incurable disease.

According to her official website, Lil BUB was born as the runt of a feral litter in a tool shed in Indiana. Her owner, Mike Bridavsky, discovered she had, among other genetic mutations, a rare bone condition called osteopetrosis which rendered her immobile by the time she was one. At that point in 2012, Lil Bub could barely stand up properly and specialists claimed there was little that could be done.

Bub underwent a series of therapy treatments, complete with a lot of love from Bridavsky and a huge batch of perseverance on her end. Though the odds were against her, Byb finally learned how to stand up and walk (or waddle) around. And by the end of 2013, Bub could run, jump onto surfaces, and climb up and down stairs.

First appearing at the Walker Art Internet Cat Video Film Festival, Lil Bub’s rise to fame has been steady and impressive. In April 2013, Vice Media created an award-winning documentary based on her called Lil Bub and Friendz, which is now available on their site and involves other popular internet cats like Keyboard Cat and Grumpy Cat. Bub also has a book coming out through Penguin’s Gotham Books division, and she’s currently the “host” of her own talk show Lil BUB’s Big SHOW, sponsored by Revision3.

Bub is one of those internet cats who deserves the attention she’s getting. If anything, her struggle with osteoporosis has just made her a more permanent fixture in the online cat world and in the hearts of her fans.

Photo via sayhedgehog/Flickr (CC BY ND 2.0)

Here's Aretha Franklin's stunning cover of 'Rolling in the Deep'

$
0
0

Aretha Franklin has a new album of covers out on Oct. 21, and last night she debuted one of them on the Late Show with David Letterman: “Rolling in the Deep.”

Franklin starts the performance with the Adele song, then segues perfectly into Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell’s “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough,” backed by a full band. Adele’s version already shakes the walls, but Franklin packed her own soulful punch.

Her upcoming album, Aretha Franklin Sings the Great Diva Classics, will also feature covers of Sinéad O’Connor’s “Nothing Compares 2 U,” a mashup of “I Will Survive” and Destiny’s Child’s “Survivor,” and Etta James’s “At Last.” André 3000 and Babyface helped out as producers on the album; Franklin was supposed to work with Danger Mouse, but the scheduling didn’t work out. Please, someone make an Aretha Franklin-Danger Mouse album happen.

Some have wondered if Franklin was Auto-Tuned or overproduced on her new album, but last night’s performance was very much a raw, passionate delivery.

H/T The Wrap | Screengrab via Late Show with David Letterman/YouTube

Lorde is on fire with new song for 'The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1'

$
0
0

The mockingjay has arrived, and she’s sounding pretty killer. 

Lorde shared the first song from The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1 on her Tumblr Monday to celebrate the first anniversary of her debut album, Pure Heroine, coming to the U.S. The preview track, “Yellow Flickered Beat,” gives a clue as to what the singer-songwriter has planned for Katniss Everdeen.

“It’s my first offering from what I hope will be a soundtrack you love,” Lorde wrote on her Tumblr. “It’s my attempt at getting inside her head, Katniss’.” 

The 17-year-old songstress has actually been talking about the song for awhile, using Twitter to keep everybody on their toes about the track. Lorde started teasing “Yellow Flickered Beat” on Sept. 4, by tweeting the occasional lyric scrawled into random places, including on her own body.

The track definitely hints at a new direction for the bow-wielding heroine. The first film’s soundtrack featured Taylor Swift with some folksy banjos singing “Safe & Sound,” and the second had Coldplay crooning “Atlas” over a soft piano. “Yellow Flickered Beat” picks up the pace and gives “the Girl On Fire” a chance to really burn, with lyrics like “the fire’s found a home in me” and “people talk to me, and all the voices just burn holes.”

Some of the lyrics were turned into a small poem, courtesy of fellow Hunger Games alumna Taylor Swift. It’s not surprising the Swift was the first person to get a glimpse of the preview track. Not only does she shares music credits for the film franchise—she’s also Lorde’s real-life BFF. 

In July, the Lordes announced that she not only was going to be featured on the lead single for the latest in the Hunger Games franchise, but she was also picked to curate the entire soundtrack. Since then, she’s been getting the soundtrack ready before the film’s Nov. 21 release date, although there haven’t been any announcements over what artists will on the soundtrack, besides Lorde herself. 

“I work from midnight until late on the soundtrack, singing into my computer, listening to demos and final mixes,” Lorde wrote. “We are almost at the end, the point where this soundtrack gets taken away from me and becomes something real.” 

No word whether “Yellow Flickered Beat” is the lead single for The Hunger Games: Mockingjay Part 1. The song is available to download on iTunes, and is also on Spotify.

Photo via Liliane Callegari/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

You need to follow these 8 hilarious ladies on Vine

$
0
0

Vine can often feel like a playground overrun with braying teenage boys with millions of followers, but dig a little deeper beyond the "popular now" page, and you’ll find a lot of ladies doing funny and creative things.

Last month, we pointed you to eight people who are doing comedy right on Vine, like Alicia Herber, Aparna Nancherla, and Stacey Nightmare. A new BuzzFeed video points you to eight women you should be following on Vine, including Stacey Nightmare and popular Vine stars Manon Matthews, Marlo Meekins, and Mackenzie Stith. Ummmheather might be our favorite, though.

Follow these ladies:

Illustration by Jason Reed 

Viewing all 7080 articles
Browse latest View live




Latest Images