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Where did all of David Letterman's YouTube clips go?

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Feeling the urge to get nostalgic with some old David Letterman clips? You won’t be able to do it anymore.

All of the clips and full episodes from The Late Show’s run have been taken off of CBS.com and The Late Show’s YouTube channel, leaving empty pages in their wakes; as with CBS getting rid of the Late Show set, that didn’t take long. Anything and everything you loved (or hated!) about the show is no longer online.

If you want to watch something from an older episode, you’ll have to hope that someone uploaded a mirror copy of the clip somewhere. Otherwise, for now, you’re out of luck.

Initially, some thought it had something to do with the emergence of Stephen Colbert’s new Late Show site and YouTube channel and not letting the older era get in the way of the new regime. But like many things, it just turned out to be something less personal: It’s just business.

Now that Letterman is no longer on The Late Show, the digital rights to all of his clips and episodes go from CBS to Worldwide Pants, Letterman’s production company, which likely took them down. But it’s possible the clips might see the light of day again.

“As you might imagine, there is significant interest in the Worldwide Pants-owned content,” the agency that represents Letterman and Worldwide Pants told BuzzFeed. “We are currently considering a range of options.”

H/T Vulture | Photo via Mass Communication Specialist 1st Class Chad J. McNeeley/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)


'Orange Is the New Black' season 3 explores motherhood, bedbugs, and boner killers

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This story contains spoilers for Orange Is the New Black.

Season 3 of Orange Is the New Black started with a meta-joke: Instead of going live at midnight, the show was “early released” Thursday evening, a play on the early release narrative of the first few episodes, and some synergistic promo for Orange Con, a fan event that took place last night. That’s a smart move on Netflix’s part; it gave fans (and media) a head start on crafting their takes.

Indeed, the takes on OITNB have been hot and plenty. The Netflix original has inspired conversations about race, feminism, queer and transgender issues, female friendships, and prison reform. Those elements all return in episode 1, “Mother’s Day,” which uses a family visitation day at the prison as a narrative door into several inmates’ relationships with their mothers, and a means of getting viewers reacclimated at Litchfield.

We drop into the backstories of Nicky (Natasha Lyonne), Pennsatucky (Taryn Manning), and Boo (Lea DeLaria), and a scene in which Pennsatucky has a faux funeral for her unborn children leads to a conversation with Boo, who is dressed as a clown, about Freakonomics and the societal and economic upside of her abortions. Elsewhere, the visiting kids try to dismantle a piñata without sticks. When it’s found to ultimately be empty, Soso (Kimiko Glenn) remarks, “This is such a metaphor for their lives.” The episode’s best joke, however, comes from Chang (Lori Tan Chinn), who asks a young black girl visiting her mother, “What are you in for?”

And of course Alex (Laura Prepon) is back, though her relationship with Piper (Taylor Schilling) has become a bit tedious in season 3. The second episode, “Bed Bugs and Beyond,” causes the inmates to have to strip down to their undergarments, which is the perfect opportunity for Piper and Alex’s newly minted humiliation-based relationship to bloom. However, their sex scenes are cringeworthy, and one over-the-top romp in particular features a cheesy metal soundtrack that just feels out of place. (This misstep is somewhat corrected with the inclusion of 2 Chainz’s “Boo” at the end of episode 4.)

As we’re told in episode 1, the prison environment is different now; it’s a kinder, gentler place. As one inmate relates, “Wiccans get a night walk” now. This is juxtaposed against the threat of budget cuts and the dismantling of the prison’s structure as a bedbug infestation takes hold. 

That change in tone is palpable. Vee (Lorraine Toussaint), season 2’s dead-eyed antagonist, is “gone”—though Crazy Eyes (Uzo Aduba) still can’t forget—and the first few episodes are light on heavy emotional turmoil. In episode 3, “Empathy Is a Boner Killer,” the inmates even do improv.

Creator Jenji Kohan said last month that the new season would focus on faith and motherhood, a way to balance the scales after they “went to Oz” in season 2. After the highs and lows of the first two seasons, this new era feels like the comedown after the binge. And perhaps that’s where it needs to be in season 3. 

Still, OITNB is best when it’s telling us something about women’s identities. Piper is no longer the focus of the series: She was the channel into the other characters’ stories, and as we wade into season 3, her absence is hardly even noticed. The plight of actual mothers is the focus. In “Mother’s Day,” Sophia (Laverne Cox) attempts to give her son advice about girls, encouraging him to find an “insecure girl” to practice with so he’ll be experienced when he meets someone he really likes.

“You really want to be a lady in a world where men do that?” he asks.

“God help me, I do,” she replies.

Photo by JoJo Whilden/Netflix 

Weird gets weirder in this David Lynch–'The Shining' mashup

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If you’re a fan of David Lynch’s blue-hued universe of dreamy songs, creepy characters, and mysterious acts of violence, the Internet has a strange treat for you.

Richard Vezina has created a Lynchian mashup of Stanley Kubrick’s The Shining. The result, Blue Shining, is one heck of a trippy dreamscape.

The video loosely follows the narrative of The Shining but splices key scenes with nuggets from Twin Peaks, Mulholland Drive, Blue Velvet, as well as a whole slew of other Lynch masterpieces. But the video doesn’t just cut away to seemingly connected scenes. Rather, it’s a dazzling collage of sound and imagery, layering scene onto scene and world onto world.

And if you’re wondering, well, why? The creator of the video has a simple explanation.

Offers Vezina: “The only goal of this mash-up is to entertain people. David Lynch has his own unique style, and I integrated excerpts from his movies to the Shining for fun only. Kubrick and Lynch are both geniuses, and their movies are self-sufficient. I'll say it again: do not take this mash-up seriously!”

Or as Lynch might put it, the owls are not what they seem.

Screengrab via Richard Vezina/Vimeo | H/T BoingBoing

Amazon's debuting new series 'Catastrophe' on Facebook for free

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As we enter an era where Facebook video is slowly closing in on YouTube views, Amazon Studios is no doubt sniffing the winds of change. The pilot for its new comedy, Catastrophe, will debut on Amazon’s Facebook page on June 15, for 48 hours.

Catastrophe—which stars Twitter favorite Rob Delaney and Sharon Horgan (Pulling) as two people who collide for a weeklong fling and then try to make a relationship work after she gets pregnant—isn’t part of Amazon Prime’s traditional pilot structure. It was picked up through a licensing deal with the U.K.’s Channel 4. In the past, viewers could watch Amazon’s new slate of pilots and leave feedback, and Amazon Prime subscribers got access to all the green-lit series, the most successful of which has, so far, been Transparent. In putting Catastrophe on Facebook for free, Amazon could rope in some non-subscribers. The pairing of Horgan and Delaney is certainly a good incentive.

The streaming starts at 4pm PT on June 15. The show debuts in full on Amazon June 19.

H/T Hollywood Reporter | Screengrab via Amazon Studios/YouTube 

PewDiePie will be the next YouTube star to author a book

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BY BREE BROWER

PewDiePie is going to be an author. The Swedish gamer, whose real name is Felix Kjellberg, has announced his upcoming book This Book Loves You, which will be released on October 20, 2015, from Penguin Random House.

In a release reported by The Hollywood Reporter, Kjellberg’s This Book Loves You is described as an illustrated piece of “indispensable advice and inspirational quotes.” Kjellberg, who is part of the Maker Studios network, certainly has plenty of people who will want to read this advice. The 25-year-old YouTuber is one of the most prominent internet figures of this time, boasting over 37 million subscribers and more than 9 billion total video views.

“This book is a great chance for me to reach my audience in a new way,” said Kjellberg. “The original idea actually came from my fans via Twitter, so I really think they’re going to love it. I’m excited to finally share it and it’s been great to collaborate with Penguin to make this a reality.”

Kjellberg certainly isn’t the first YouTube celebrity to get a book deal. The Swedish gamer will join the ranks of other video creators (including Tyler Oakley) who have upcoming book releases with publishers. Some YouTube stars already have released their works, like ZoellaGrace HelbigConnor FrantaShane Dawson, and iJustine.

You can currently pre-order Kjellberg’s This Book Loves You through Amazon.com.

Screengrab via PewDiePie/YouTube

Smosh's new movie takes them inside YouTube, literally, for a whirlwind adventure

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The guys of Smosh are coming to the big screen, by taking a deeper dive into the small screen.

In the trailer to the forthcoming Smosh: The Movie, Internet superstars Ian Hecox and Anthony Padilla play two dudes who are hoping to get YouTube to take down an embarrassing video. The only way to make the change, however, is to jump through a portal into the world of YouTube. There they encounter Web celebrities, video games, and exploding kittens on their quest to return home.

While other YouTubers are using films to leap them into new genres, Smosh puts YouTube front and center of their story, while adhering to the classic structure of two friends, on dare we say an "excellent adventure" just trying to get things back to normal in a fantastical world. 

Smosh: The Movie premieres July 24, with a special screening in Anaheim during VidCon on the 23.

Screenrgab via Smosh/YouTube

Dave Grohl fell off stage and broke his leg—but that didn't stop him from playing

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New rule for those who surround Dave Grohl before he takes the stage: Nobody mention anything about breaking a leg, because the Foo Fighters lead singer/guitarist might just go ahead and do it.

It all started as a regular Friday evening in Gothenburg, Sweden. The Foo Fighters were rocking, and the band had launched into "Monkey Wrench," its second song of the set. Then, with an amped-up Grohl roaming near the front of the stage, this happened.

So, that looked painful. Perhaps even more hurtful, the band kept right on playing after its leader fell to earth. There was good reason for the pain, because Grohl ended up breaking his leg.

But then, something amazing happened. Grohl told the crowd that he'd return to the gig after he went to the hospital to check his leg.

"I think I just broke my leg again. I think I really broke my leg," Grohl told the stadium crowd before he was stretchered away, according to Blabbermouth. "So you have my promise, right now, that the Foo Fighters, we're going to come back and finish the show. But right now… I'm going to go to the hospital, I'm going to fix my leg, but then I'm going to come back, and we're going to play for you again."

And he did.

The original problem, according to Grohl, was that he was just too damn excited.

Then the band ripped into "All My Life," with Grohl sitting on a chair with his leg propped up and his little toes poking through the bottom of his cast.

It's unclear how his leg will affect upcoming shows—the Foo Fighters are scheduled for a Dutch festival on Sunday, and the band is set to play two Wembley Stadium shows in London next week. But major kudos to Grohl for coming right off the disabled list and finishing the show. The dude is a true rock star.


Screengrab via jontebus/YouTube

Controversial sports writer Jason Whitlock out as head of new ESPN website

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With the success of ESPN's Grantland—a sports and pop culture site that has produced strong ideas and great writing since it was established in 2011—the sports media behemoth announced last February that it would unveil the Undefeated, a site that would "provide in-depth commentary, long-form storytelling and insight on race and urban culture through the prism of sports."

Basically, it was seen by some as the African-American version of Grantland, and much in the way that Grantland was a vanity site for media star Bill Simmons, the Undefeated was to be a pet project for Jason Whitlock, long one of the most controversial sports writers in this fair land.

As of Friday, though, Whitlock was out as editor-in-chief, as reported by the New York Times, and the site's future is in doubt: 

In a statement, ESPN did not cite any recent incidents that prompted the change but implied that he did not have the management skills to run the site.

The company “decided to make some structural adjustments that will maximize the skill sets and strengths of our team,” ESPN said. The statement also said Whitlock “will now be entirely focused on what he does best: creating distinctive and compelling content, which will live across various ESPN platforms.” ESPN praised his work building the site’s editorial team.

Asked in March how he felt he was evolving as a manager, Whitlock replied, “I think it’s going well because I’m taking it seriously.” He added, “You’ve got to have enough self-awareness to know that you’re going to make mistakes. You can’t let your ego tell you, ‘I’m smarter than everyone, so I don’t make mistakes.’ I’m not smarter than anyone. I’m still the guy with a 2.3 G.P.A.”

Ever since the site was officially announced, Deadspin has taken square aim at Whitlock and the apparently shoddy way he was running the buildup to the site.

As Deadspin wrote in April, "Whitlock and ESPN were nevertheless able to cobble together a staff of talented, ambitious writers and editors, but the story of his site so far is about his complete inability to work with them... Before it’s even launched, this site is already doomed."

Somebody should tell the site's homepage. As of noon ET on Saturday, the website still proudly declares that it's presented by ESPN and Whitlock.

Whitlock has had problems with ESPN management before. He was fired in 2006 but rehired to run the new site that would help merge race and sports together, much in the same way Grantland does with sports and pop culture. 

Though Grantland's traffic isn't especially impressive, there's little doubt that it's a site that enhances sports media because of its aim to add intellect to the conversation. Adding more turmoil to the ESPN brand, Simmons is no longer running his own website as he waits for his contract to run out in September.  

And now Whitlock is out as well. Hopefully, the loss of Simmons and Whitlock doesn't mean these kinds of sites are doomed, because when they're done well, they add so much intelligence to a medium that sometimes dearly needs it. 

H/T New York Times | Photo via ESPN MediaZone


Seth MacFarlane covers Cyndi Lauper hits as Stewie and Peter Griffin

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Family Guyby itself is great. Cyndi Lauper's "Time After Time" is great. What happens when you put them together? Comedic genius.

While on The Graham Norton Show, Seth MacFarlane showed off the amazing singing abilities of Stewie and Peter Griffin. While channeling the Stewie voice, MacFarlane put an obnoxious spin on Lauper's "Time After Time" while sitting next to her. Then he shifts into Peter's voice for a stunning and nasal rendition of "True Colors."

Lauper looks proud of the soulful performance:

Stewie Griffin, psychic and cover artist.  

Photo via The Graham Norton Show/YouTube

Rob Bell and Pete Holmes want to bring wonder back to spirituality

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Never have the digital and spiritual intersected as appealingly as they have for Rob Bell and Pete Holmes’s Together At Last tour.

The tour saw Bell, a former pastor and bestselling religious author, and Holmes, a standup comedian and podcaster, hit a number of U.S. cities to talk about what it means to be alive in the world today. This is a pitch right over home plate for Bell—the brand-name spiritual thinker hosts a show on Oprah Winfrey’s television network and might as well have a black belt in talking about the spiritual implications of human consciousness. 

Holmes, on the surface, is the less obvious half of the bill. He’s released two standup albums and hosted a late-night comedy show, but his many podcast listeners know that he thrives in a theophilosophical context. His podcast, You Made It Weird, regularly sees him probe the metaphysical with his guests, which have included Judd Apatow, Noel Gallagher, Weird Al Yankovic, and a prominent Franciscan monk named Richard Rohr. Holmes established himself as a guy ready to investigate, entertain, and dissect all order of spirituality, which is what first got him talking to Bell for a podcast in May 2013. That’s when the pair cemented a friendship that planted the seeds for this tour.

“Pete is fantastic, I immediately liked him,” Bell told the Daily Dot. “We started hanging out together and it was really fun. I think we kept discovering that we were trying to get in the same house from different doors.”

Both men are drawn to the spiritual in a way that doesn’t gel with conservative dogma, and they confirm that their onstage banter is pretty much how their conversations go when they hang out privately. These guys are eager to kick the tires of existence.

“I’m trying to uncover what all the great myths and traditions are pointing to,” Holmes said. “I feel like the zealots are all owning or disowning the same thing, which is a literal interpretation of these stories that point to something greater than literally true.” 

Put another way, to cling to the tellings of various faith-based stories as inerrant fact is to miss the point of these stories entirely; they are metaphors for something deep in the human psyche. The Together At Last tour aims to answer the question: What is this? 

There are those who will have followup questions when confronted with the scientific realities of existence—that we are sentient beings living on a planet suspended in outer space, rotating around a giant ball of gas that will burn for the next 5 billion years. Humans are “factories of meaning desperate to make sense of things,” said Bell.

Holmes expressed this sentiment another way during the tour’s recent Boston show: “Terence McKenna, who I love, talks about claiming that you understand the world because you understand science is like trying to claim you understand Los Angeles because you understand the phonebook. I’m not satisfied. I’m left aching. Which is why I have this new passion of rescuing babies from bathwater.”

To Holmes, the bathwater is the dogma and baggage that can come along with fundamental spiritual beliefs. The baby—the thing worth saving—is the wisdom in which religious teachings are rooted.

This is hardly the way we’re used to hearing standup comedians talk about matters of faith, especially when they’re on stage next to a well-known man of the Lord—it’s a refreshing change of pace. “We want our pastors to be holy and our comedians to be secular,” said Holmes. “When you bring these things together that might not make a lot of sense together, [our audience is] hopefully left with [the] impression that it does work.”

Bell doesn’t see a distinct line between comedy and religion. “To me, everything is connected with everything else,” he said. “If you are going to talk about the divine and you don’t begin by laughing at its absurdity, then you don't have much to say. The people who can be serious are the ones who acknowledge the silliness of it all.”

He cites Holmes's bit below as a great example of what he means—it’s standup material, sure, but there’s wisdom and wonder built right into it.

Holmes’s and Bell’s holistic spiritual thinking often echoes the ideas of famed mythology scholar Joseph Campbell. Holmes especially is a fan: “[Joseph Campbell] talks about how something as wonderful as the story of Christ has been reduced to ethics and fundamentalism, meaning your beliefs in God are equated to your literal beliefs in a man from Nazareth who lived a sinless life and experienced a death and resurrection.

“Why do we want to drag God into reality? The whole thing is that it’s transcendent. Leave that where it is.”

The best standup comedians seem to be naturally drawn to the verboten. This instinct is just as alive in Bell as it is in Holmes, though he takes it a different direction. His writing has earned him heaps of criticism from the fundamentalist corners of the Christian community—he questions common religious assertions, perhaps most famously the existence of hell

“A comedian parks himself on the boundary and says, ‘Why is this here?’” said Bell. “That’s a beautiful, divine impulse. There are all these topics in church where you can’t actually talk about them, so there’s something redemptive to the work of a comedian.” After all, comedians get to talk about whatever they want as long as it’s funny, and the funniest stuff ought also to be true.

The tour’s anecdotal evidence reveals that there is a market for comedy shows of this depth—some 1,200 people came to the gig at Boston’s Wilbur Theatre, despite only having a hazy idea of what to expect. Indeed, the first few minutes of the show were set aside for explaining how the evening would go—Holmes and Bell would discuss the importance of cultivating three things in one’s life: joy, honesty, and wonder. It was thought-provoking and inspirational without feeling like a self-help convention, and it was funny as hell.

“I have to imagine that when my agent would call and book us at venues, it was mostly a discussion of numbers,” said Holmes. “‘Pete draws this many, Rob draws this many.’ There was probably very little discussion of what the show is. Right now every venue that booked us was taking a chance.”

“I’m still not sure how to explain it,” Bell said. “Not that it’s so hard to explain. It’s two guys on stage using comedy to talk about spirituality.”

Whether you’re looking for a laugh, trying to scratch a spiritual itch, or both, this tour is perhaps the only one that can satisfy them all. 

Screengrab via Pete Holmes/YouTube | Remix by Max Fleishman

5 Seconds of Summer guitarist suffers facial burns after walking into pyrotechnics

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5 Seconds of Summer guitarist Michael Clifford suffered burns to his face after accidentally walking into a pyrotechnic display on stage at the Wembley Arena in London on Saturday night.

Fans captured the dramatic moment, which shows Clifford fleeing the stage during a performance of their hit, “She Looks So Perfect.” 

Bandmate Ashton Irwin then told the crowd that the show had to be stopped because of the accident.

“Michael has hurt himself so we will not be continuing the show right now,” Irwin said. “Just want to say thank you so much for coming. He is OK. You guys have been the best crowd we could ask for tonight. Thank you so much.”

Clifford took to Twitter to assure fans that he's OK, and to show them the extensive bandages that kept him from doing an encore.

H/T MTV | Screengrab via 5 Seconds of Summer Subs/YouTube

Singer makes impossible beer catch during concert

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This moment could be a perfect beer commercial.

David Achter de Molen, the lead singer of the band John Coffey, was crowdwalking during a set at Holland's Pinkpop Festival when a rowdy fan sent a cup of beer flying through the air.

Totally unfazed, Achter de Molen casually caught the cup without spilling a drop, and then drank the remaining beer.

There has of course been discussion about whether the video is real or fake, but now we have indisputable proof that the Dutch are cooler than the rest of the world.

Screengrab via 3voor12/YouTube

Download Festival attendees allegedly subjected to mandatory facial recognition scans

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If you attended Download Festival in England this weekend, the police likely scanned your face in order to compare it with a database of known criminals. And no, you don't get any say in the matter.

Some 90,000 festival attendees had their faces scanned by "strategically placed" cameras using NeoFacefacial recognition technology. According to Leicester police, this surveillance technique will help them catch criminals at the festival. It also means 90,000 people just paid to have their faces added to a police database while partying along with their favorite bands.

Some people are already pointing out the irony of Muse playing at a festival with such intense police surveillance. The band's latest album, Drones, has a political message that, while characteristically ambiguous, would definitely not agree with this kind of surveillance tactic.

U.K. police forces have been testing this technology since April 2014, but this is the first time it was used at a mass public event. Once collected, the photos of festival attendees will be compared to images from a European database of custody photographs.

The U.K.'s own facial recognition database is thought to include more than 18 million people

Luckily, a music festival is probably the only place where you can get away with wearing makeup and hair styles designed to trick facial recognition software. These act as a kind of cyberpunk dazzle camouflage, and can often look pretty cool, too.

H/T Motherboard | Photo via Kash/Wikimedia (CC BY SA 3.0)

These Taylor Swift superfans got the best wedding gift ever

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For a diehard Taylor Swift fan, there's no better wedding guest than Swift herself, though it is stacking the deck when you hold your wedding at a Taylor Swift concert.

Katy Harris and Chris Eisenman had planned their wedding for Swift's 25th birthday, but put off the occasion. When Swift's Philadelphia tour stop rolled around, they decided since they already had the outfits, why not say their vows at the most sacred of Swiftie locations: her concert.

The duo exchanged vows in the parking lot in front of family and friends, then headed into the concert in full wedding regalia to watch Queen Swift perform.

During the concert, Swift's mom found the couple and invited them backstage to meet Swift for a post-nuptial photo. 

If Swift gets ordained, she could make a nice side gig of conducting marriage ceremonies for her biggest fans.

H/T Uproxx | Screengrab va ktswift1122/Instagram

4 amazing 'Game of Thrones' substitutes you can stream for free right now

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Game of Thrones wraps up its fifth season this Sunday, sending fans of HBO’s epic fantasy back into another year of sobbing and hair-pulling until it returns in 2016. Sure, anyone suffering Westeros withdrawals could always read (or reread) George R.R. Martin’s excellent books that inspired the show, but those tomes aren’t exactly a small time commitment, and we know you people are busy, what with your jobs and your families and your social media fiddling. (Other former fans of the show have given up on watching it after a few highly controversial scenes in this most recent season.)

Thankfully the streaming landscape is vast and full of possibilities, and those possibilities include several suitable Game of Thrones substitutes. We can’t promise you dragons, but we can promise you all the intrigue, violence, and sex you can stomach … and four shows you really ought to watch regardless of whether Game of Thrones is even on your radar.

1) Rome (2005-2007)

Along with Deadwood and Carnivale, Rome was the byproduct of an era when HBO was on a tear producing ambitiously budgeted historical dramas—before HBO’s accountants noticed that ambitiously budgeted historical dramas were really damn expensive. Like Game of Thrones, Rome involves a huge cast of characters, byzantine political machinations, and all the betrayal and double-crossing you’d expect from a show about the glory days of the empire. The two seasons unfold during Julius Caesar’s civil war and in the aftermath of his assassination, with a pair of soldiers named Lucius Vorenus (Kevin McKidd) and Titus Pullo (Ray Stevenson) serving as the show’s narrative anchors. Their lives wind through and provide context for all the pseudo-historical shenanigans.

The show’s production values are lush and gorgeous, serving up a Rome that’s every bit as convincing as any incarnation of the empire ever put to the silver screen. The scripts nicely balance the political scheming against the more personal stakes, and there’s plenty of the good old-fashioned sex and violence HBO has made its staple for several decades now. The real stars of the show, however, are the stars of the show: McKidd and Stevenson are hugely entertaining, and it’s their Forest Gumping through the background of history that gives Rome its heart and soul. Sadly, only two seasons were produced, and although there were rumors of a spin-off movie, it never materialized.

Where to watch: Both seasons of Rome are available on Amazon Prime.

2) The Tudors (2007-2010)

Showtime spent a long time alternately trying to rise out of the shadow of HBO or beat it at its own game, and The Tudors was a case of the former. Right as HBO’s Deadwood/Rome era was drawing to a close, Showtime stepped up to the plate with The Tudors, focusing on the lusty and turbulent reign of King Henry VIII of England (played with scenery-chewing glee by Jonathan Rhys Meyers). The show was created by Michael Hirst, who knows a thing or two about crafting addictive historical drama: He’s also responsible for both of the excellent Elizabeth films that starred Cate Blanchett as Queen Elizabeth I, and he later went on to create Showtime’s The Borgias (also worth your time and available on Netflix).

If you remember anything at all about Henry VIII from history class, it’s likely his six wives and their tendency to meet unfortunate ends. Unsurprisingly, Henry’s love life plays a major role in The Tudors, and part of the fun is getting to meet each new wife—especially the ones you know are on a collision course with tragedy (Game of Thrones’ own Natalie Dormer plays the infamous Anne Boleyn). Meyers himself is a riot, making Henry a love-to-hate-him figure who wouldn’t know a moment of true introspection if it was coming at him with a headsman’s axe. And hey, there’s future Superman Henry Cavill as Charles Brandon, 1st Duke of Suffolk!

Where to watch: All four seasons are available on Netflix Instant.

3) Spartacus: War of the Damned (2010-2013)

Starz’s Spartacus presents a very different, much more stylized take on the empire than HBO’s Rome, but it’s no less entertaining. If you’ve never seen the show, do yourself a favor and don’t let the mediocre first episode drive you away; this is a series that becomes exponentially better in its second episode and just keeps improving throughout its outstanding first season. The show follows the betrayal, capture, and enslavement as a gladiator of the man who would come to be known as Spartacus, and how his personal quest of vengeance eventually ignites a fire that burns into the very heart of Rome.

Spartacus features easily the best action of any show on this list, with gladiatorial combat sequences that unfold as beautifully choreographed ballets that just keep one-upping themselves in creative ways to destroy the human form. More importantly, the entire series is anchored by a stellar cast, headed in the first season by the late Andy Whitfield, a magnificently talented and charismatic actor who was felled by cancer just as he was poised to become a huge star. He brings a such a sense of vulnerability and humanity to Spartacus that it’s hard not to feel bad for his eventual replacement, actor Liam McIntyre, who does a solid job but simply can’t compare to Whitfield’s performance.

Thankfully, there’s plenty of reason to stick around for the full series run, not least the brilliantly John Hannah and Lucy Lawless as one of the most entertaining on-screen couples you’ll ever encounter. The show also does the cycle of betrayal and comeuppance better than just about any other, and it’s enormously satisfying when justice finally catches up with some of its more delightfully despicable characters.

Where to watch: All three seasons and the prequel miniseries Gods of the Arena are available on Netflix Instant. (N.B. Watch Gods second, in the order it was originally aired. It takes place before the first season, but also contains some spoilers you won’t want spoiled.)

4) Vikings (2013-present)

And The Tudors’ Michael Hirst makes a second appearance on this list with Vikings. What can we say? The guy gives good historical drama. Vikings is based on the sagas of the legendary hero Ragnar Lothbrok, who pops up repeatedly in Norse poetry. He made England and France’s lives miserable with his raiding/pillaging acumen, and eventually he became the king of freaking Denmark. He was also, according to the tales, killed by being tossed into a pit of snakes. (I’m going to assume those snakes were all on fire, and that he ate at least 90 percent of them before finally succumbing to his wounds. Also, if this show doesn’t eventually end with that pit of snakes, I’m going to be very disappointed.)

Similarly to Spartacus, Vikings introduces us to its main character long before be became the subject of folklore and tall tales. Travis Fimmel’s Ragnar starts as a farmer, but destiny calls after success as a raider puts him at odds with his Earl (Gabriel Byrne), setting off an exercise in penis measurement that can only end in violence. Fimmel is devilishly likeable in the lead, but just as compelling is Katheryn Winnick as Lagertha, Ragnar’s first wife and a shieldmaiden destined for power in her own right. Game of Thrones has no shortage of strong, badass female characters, and Lagertha would undoubtedly enjoy swapping notes with Daenerys Targaryen if given the chance. (Another standout is George Blagden as Athelstan, an Anglo-Saxon monk Ragnar takes as a slave and whose embattled faith while immersed in Viking culture is one of the more interesting elements of the show.)

Where to watch: Amazon Prime has exclusive streaming rights to the show’s first three seasons. A fourth season is due on the History Channel in 2016.

Screengrab via elf holbrook/YouTube


Watch Ed Sheeran surprise a fan with a mall duet

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One Ed Sheeran fan’s solo mall gig turned into a duet when she got a visit from someone she did not expect.

Last Sunday, Sydney Bourbeau was performing Sheeran’s “Thinking Out Loud” at a fundraiser for the Edmonton Humane Society at the Edmonton, Alberta, Canada when Sheeran stopped by. He had been shopping when he came across Bourbeau’s performance.

Once he appeared onstage, he joined in and let her take the lead while he backed her up. Murray Cummings, a director and Sheeran’s cousin, filmed the entire thing.

Needless to say the encounter made Bourbeau’s day.

Photo via Murray Cummings/YouTube | Remix by Jason Reed

Rapper Mykki Blanco just made a courageous confession on his Facebook page

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Rapper and performance artist Mykki Blanco, best known for tracks like "Wavvy" and "Haze.Boogie.Life," has come out as HIV positive. 

"Ive been HIV Positive since 2011, my entire career," Blanco wrote on Facebook. "f**k stigma and hiding in the dark, this is my real life. I'm healthy I've toured the world 3 times but ive been living in the dark, its time to actually be as punk as i say I am."

Blanco, who identifies as multigendered and currently uses male pronouns, has always been open about being a queer artist in the rap scene, though he eschews being labeled a "queer rapper." He was similarly open about his HIV status, discussing the topic at length on Twitter and viewing it as the final step toward achieving total freedom and openness in his career: 

Screengrab via Mykki Blanco/YouTube

Smash Mouth singer goes ballistic after being pelted with loaves of bread

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Smash Mouth is at a point in its career where it’s playing food festivals, and on Sunday at the Taste of Fort Collins festival, some brave attendees finally did what we’ve all wanted to do for years. 

As the band was attempting to play its insufferable hit “All Star” at the family-friendly event, lead singer Steve Harwell took the opportunity to lash out at an audience member (or members) who’d thrown bread at him. Vendors at the event were apparently giving out free loaves. 

“You throw one more piece of shit on the fucking stage, I’m gonna come find your ass,” Harwell said. “And I’m gonna beat your ass.” Harwell then invited the bread-thrower onstage, ostensibly so he could beat their ass without having to find their ass. 

Harwell continued lobbing obscenities at the crowd as the band awkwardly riffed the backing track to “All Star,” and to be honest, this new version of the song is an improvement on the original. 

Then he jumped into the crowd, but security stepped in. In this clip, you can see several children in the crowd, and this was likely their introduction to the band. Well done! 

You could whine about people throwing things at you onstage, or you can handle it like this guy

H/T Vulture | Photo via Eva Rinaldi/Flickr (CC BY SA 2.0)

Hands on with Spotify's new 'Taste Rewind' feature

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A new Spotify feature aims to walk you down memory lane. 

Taste Rewind asks you to pick three of your favorite artists, then it rewinds through the decades and presents you with a curated playlist of what you might have been listening to “back in the day.” According to Venture Beat, a Spotify employee based in Sweden posted about Taste Rewind on Sunday, encouraging users to try out the new feature, which has only been soft-launched at this point. 

First I chose Rihanna, Kanye West, and the Weeknd, and Taste Rewind walked backwards through the aughts to the ’60s. My ’90s playlist was especially on point. 

Then I got a little more obscure and chose Butthole Surfers, Scratch Acid, and Lil’ Keke. This time it rolled all the way back to the ’20s. Apparently the musical connection between Edward Elgar and Scratch Acid frontman David Yow goes deeper than I thought. 

Since this is a very new feature, the pool of artists to choose from was rather small. The feature asks you to choose three, but the same ones showed up several times. I’ve been listening to Scritti Politti’s Early collection for the past month, but it was nowhere in my artist options. 

It’s an interesting avenue into offering users some musical history—and an interesting feature to debut after last week’s Apple Music announcement—but so far it’s only scratching the surface of Spotify’s massive catalog. 

H/T Venture Beat | Illustration by Max Fleishman

Here's the 'Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt'–'Game of Thrones' mashup you've been waiting for

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Taking a cue from Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt, the comedic masterminds at Practical Folks took Titus Andromedon’s ode to black penis and turned it around to give a Man the music video he deserves.

Game of Thrones’ Faceless Man and all-around mysterious personJaqen H’ghar always comes with more questions than answers, and when it comes to his own version of “Peeno Noir,” it’s no different; he’s just doing his thing in the Boudoir of Black and White. The final shot is particularly on point.

Along with being stuck in your head for the rest of the day, it also serves as a fairly decent primer of the Braavos and Faceless Men plotline this season.

H/T Digg | Screengrab via GameofThrones/YouTube

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